Bruichladdich "Port Charlotte" "SMWS 127.31 - Rite of passage", 10 yo. (d: 2002,b: 2012)
 
Style & Origin
styleScotch Single Malt Whisky
region Islay, Loch Indaal
age10 yo.
strength64.2% (128.4 proof)
peatedyes
casksrefill bourbon cask
distilled2002
bottled2012
price$105
availabilityexclusive (SMWS)
bottler Scotch Malt Whisky Society
distillery Bruichladdich
Bar Log
Fri., Oct. 25, 2013bottle #735 added to stock
Fri., Oct. 25, 2013feature presentation of bottle #735 by
Wed., Mar. 19, 2014bottle #735 killed
Release Notes
Release 127.31 from the Scotch Malt Whisky Society. Distilled on 21st of June 2002. 1 of 198 bottles.
from the bottle
3rd Party Tasting Notes
Nail varnish remover, fire lighter and gun powder initially followed by the inside of a wooden tea chest. To taste like walking on hot bubbling tar. Water brings out maritime characters and a good "Old Fashioned" cocktail garnished with an orange slice and a lemon twist.
SMWS
Regular Tasting Results
# Taster Date Nose Taste Finish Balance Total
1 Andrew Pilgrim 8 8 7 8 31
2 Dmitry Shklyar 9 9 9 9 36
3 Douglas Yoshida 7 7 7 7 28
4 Garrett Jones 6 8 8 8 30
5 Jason McDade 7 9 7 8 31
6 Jim Leuper 8 9 9 9 35
7 Jim Leuper 6 8 9 8 31
8 Kai Wang 9 10 8 9 36
9 Kathleen Toth 8 6 7 7 28
10 Kolja Erman 9 9 9 9 36
11 Kolja Erman 9 8 9 8 34
12 Kolja Erman 9 9 8 8 34
13 Scott Churchman 9 8 10 7 34
14 Sean Cole 8 10 10 9 37
15 Stuart Campbell 8 9 9 8 34
16 Stuart Campbell 8 10 9 9 36
17 Tom Harris 8 8 9 8 33
18 Tom Owens 8 8 8 8 32
Nose: sweet caramel and spice, most inviting
Taste: powerful! monster peat and flavor and alcohol
Finish: long and good
Balance: great, among the best of the PCs so far
Andrew Pilgrim
Balance: no surprises in a good (?) then bursts at the end with something
Garrett Jones
Nose: maple notes
Taste: super great and tasty
Finish: smooth
Balance: I like it a lot
Jason McDade
Nose: flowers over peat
Taste: this whisky is gods way of saying he loves you
Finish: lingering smile at a lovely lass
Balance: wonderful
Jim Leuper
Nose: subtle but nice
Taste: chewy caramel
Finish: amazing build and duration - peat memories
Jim Leuper
Nose: great nose, very smokey and peated. it has a little bit of sweet and woody.
Taste: smoky cereal and floral, has very earth taste
Finish: smooth with a small alcohol taste at the end
Balance: it is well balanced from the beginning to the end. Very woody and smoky.
Kai Wang
Nose: very smoky
Kathleen Toth
Nose: thick smoke with a sweet center, lovaly, water brings chocolate, charred chocolate
Taste: strong hit, nice across the tongue, a few off notes in back, water helps here
Finish: a little charred or ashy, just enough to take it down a point, rises back to a 9 after some time and H2O
Balance: very nice and intense, a little off balance, struggles connecting taste and finish
Kolja Erman
Nose: classic PC nose with some charred edge. Ashes and burnt wood embedded in Bruichladdich dough
Taste: Pow! Burn almost overwhelming flavor at first. Intense
Finish: intense flash on swallow, then flavor cuts off half way down. But smoky fire breath remains
Balance: a bit jumpy and explosive. Like a chain of firecrackers. Tasmanian devil in a box. It is fighting me but I like it.
Kolja Erman
Nose: smokey, peaty, slightly grainy, cereal
Taste: woody, earth, burn but nice feeling, spice
Finish: vanilla, bittersweet, slight raisin, peat
Balance: nicely balanced with both sweet and spicy notes
Scott Churchman
Nose: peat, what can I say
Taste: peat, what can I say
Finish: yup
Balance: uh huh
Stuart Campbell
HOLY SHIT
Stuart Campbell
Nose: minty, spicy, really nice
Taste: really a departure from the smell, very surprising, smoky and chocolatey!
Finish: disappears quick (cask strength) a lot of spice on the back of the tongue
Balance: a lot of neat things going on but do not mingle well
Tom Owens
The Bottler: Scotch Malt Whisky Society
Established: 1983
Silent since: False
Address: Scotland
→ website
The Scotch Malt Whisky Society (SMWS), founded in Edinburgh in 1983, is a membership organisation which bottles and sells single cask, single malt whisky. It purchases individual casks from more than 125 malt whisky distilleries in Scotland and throughout the world, bottles them and retails directly to its members. It also runs three private members’ rooms in the UK and in several international locations.

The origins of the Society lie in Phillip “Pip” Hills’ travels around the Scottish Highlands in the late 1970s, during which he sampled several whiskies drawn straight from the cask.

Hills was so affected by what he tasted that, in 1978, he persuaded several acquaintances to share in the cost of a cask from the Glenfarclas distillery. Over time, the group of friends expanded to become a small syndicate and more casks were purchased, bottled and distributed to subscribing members.

Coinciding with the decision to open membership to the wider public in 1983, the Society purchased its first property, The Vaults, in Leith; a building, whose vaulted wine cellars reputedly stretch back to the 12th century.

The Society created a set of members’ rooms there.

In 1996, the Society launched a share scheme for its members, the proceeds from which were invested in the purchase of a London venue.

2004 saw the Society purchase a second venue in Edinburgh – a Georgian townhouse on Queen Street. In the same year, the Society was acquired by Glenmorangie PLC.

To mark the 25th anniversary of its foundation, the Society redesigned its bottles, to include more information and a full tasting note on the front of the bottle.
from Wikipedia
The Distillery: Bruichladdich
Established: 1881
Silent since: False
Address: Bruichladdich, Islay, Argyll, PA49 7UNI, UK
→ website
In the new Millenium
The Bruichladdich distillery lies on the north shore of Lochindaal (directly opposite Bowmore), which made it the westernmost distillery in Scotland until Kilchoman was officially opened in 2005.
The overwhelming succes that Mark and Jim have had with the bottlings they released from these old stocks is a perfect illustration of the crucial role of careful cask selection; Bruichladdich was transformed from an ugly duckling into a swan. Well, I"m sure clever marketing also helped.
Apart from the traditionally lightly peated spirit that is still produced under the name Bruichladdich, two more heavily peated malts are being produced at the distillery. A heavily peated (40 PPM) malt under the name "Port Charlotte" (the name of the village two miles south of the distillery) is being produced since October 2002 and they also have an even more heavily peated (80.5 PPM) malt with the name "Octomore". This is the name of another silent Islay distillery in the area, situated in a farm next to the warehouses of the old Lochindaal distillery. The original Octomore distillery was closed in 1852, three decades before Bruichladdich was built. However, a link with the past remains; Bruichladdich uses spring water from Octomore farm.
The Bruichladdich distillery was mothballed again in January 1995 and sold in 2000 to a consortium of twenty five different shareholders that operated under the name "Bruichladdich Distillery Co. Ltd.".
Driving force behind the purchase was Murray McDavid"s Mark Reynier. Together with other seasoned professionals like Jim McEwan (formerly of Bowmore) they managed to get the production started again in May 2001. Although that new spirit probably won"t be widely available until well after 2010, the new owners also acquired a lot of maturing stocks that were laid down by Invergordon and JBB / Whyte & Mackay.
Bruichladdich was constructed in 1881 by Robert, William and John Gourlay Harvey. Members of the Harvey family remained owners and shareholders until 1929 when the Bruichladdich distillery was mothballed.
In 1938 Bruichladdich (also known as Bruichladdie) was sold to Hatim Attari, Joheph W.Hobbs and Alexander W.Tolmie. And the distillery kept changing hands like a hot potato. In 1952 it was sold to Ross & Coulter Ltd, who in turn sold it to A.B. Grant in 1960. Invergordon Distillers acquired Bruichladdich in 1968 and expanded the number of stills from two to four in 1975, before selling it on to JBB / Whyte & Mackay.
Until recently Associated Scottish Distillers also offered a so-called "bastard" bottling of Bruichladdich under the name Loch Indaal or Lochindaal. This bottle was named after the old Lochindaal distillery located East of the village of Port Charlotte, which used to have its own distilleries. Lochindaal operated until 1929 when it was dismantled. Its warehouses are now used to store the Port Charlotte malt. Until recently Bruichladdich was the only surviving distillery on the Western peninsula, but since the new Kilchoman distillery was opened in 2005 by proprietor Anthony Willis the number of western Islay distilleries doubled.
And the future looks bright for the friendly people of Bruichladdich. With the new bottling plant that was opened in 2003, Bruichladdich can now bottle its own malts on site, providing some much needed employment opportunities on this relatively remote part of Islay in the process. It"s much more convenient for Bruichladdich as well; before they opened the bottling plant they shipped tankers full of spring water from James Brown"s farm at Octomore to the mainland to dilute the whisky from the casks to 46%.
2000 - At the start of the new millennium the Bruichladdich distillery is bought by bottler Murray McDavid. Reports say that the price of the distillery was 6,500,000 GBP at the time - including maturing stocks.
2001 - The driving force behind the purchase of the distillery was Murray McDavid"s Mark Reynier. Shortly after the distillery was obtained by the new owners, Bowmore"s Jim McEwan was called in as production director.
2006 - The first bottling of Port Charlotte is released; a more heavily peated brand of the Bruichladdich.
2012 - On September 3rd the distillery is sold to Rémy Cointreau.
Trivia:
  • For their first new bottlings the new owners used extremely lightly peated barley of 2 PPM.
  • William Harvey (the father of the Harvey brothers that built Bruichladdich in 1881) was the owner of two other distilleries; Yoker and Dundashill.
  • Bruichladdich distillery is open to visitors all year, Monday to Friday. Tours are available at 10.30am 11.30am and 2.30am (and at 10.30am on Summer Saturdays).
  • Bruichladdich is one of almost two dozen malt whisky distilleries that were founded over a century ago during the "whisky boom" of the late 19th century and which have managed to survive until this day. The other survivors include Aberfeldy, Ardmore, Aultmore, Balvenie, Benriach, Benromach, Bunnahabhain, Craigellachie, Dalwhinnie, Dufftown, Glendullan, Glenfiddich, Glenrothes, Glentauchers, Knockandu, Knockdhu, Longmorn, Tamdhu and Tomatin.
from Malt Maniacs
The Owner: Rémy Cointreau
Established: 1724
Silent since: False
Address: Avenue de Gimeux
→ website
Rémy Martin, a wine maker from the Cognac region founded the business in 1724. It was acquired by Andre Renaud in 1924. Through various acquisitions the company took ownership of champagne brands such as Charles Heidsieck and Piper Heidsieck, Mount Gay Rum. In 1991 the company changed name to Rémy Cointreau. Since then the group as acquired the Bols and Metaxa brands. On September 3rd the group acquires Bruichladdich distillery on Islay.
from Various