Caol Ila "A.D. Rattray", 21 yo. (d: 1991,b: 2012)
 
Style & Origin
styleScotch Single Malt Whisky
region Islay, North Shore
age21 yo.
strength55% (110 proof)
peatedyes
casksBourbon Hogshead #8192
distilled1991
bottled2012
price$130-140
availabilityvery rare
bottler A.D. Rattray
distillery Caol Ila
Bar Log
Wed., Oct. 30, 2013bottle #738 added to stock
Wed., Oct. 30, 2013feature presentation of bottle #738 by
Wed., Jul. 23, 2014bottle #738 killed
Release Notes
An independent bottling of a 21 year old Caol Ila by A.D. Rattray. One 269 bottles filled from Bourbon Hogshead #8192 on the 8th of October, 2012. The whisky was distilled on the 2nd of July, 1991.
Yours Truly
3rd Party Tasting Notes
The stonefruit-laden, rounder profile of Caol Ila is on full display here. The smoke comes after the fruit and helps to wash down one tasty, mature Islay single malt. Yum!
K&L
Regular Tasting Results
# Taster Date Nose Taste Finish Balance Total
1 Alex Gurevich 9 9 7 7 32
2 Alex Powell 8 7 9 8 32
3 Dan Bunn 7 8 7 7 29
4 David Drell 8 7 5 6 26
5 David Lawson 7 9 7 8 31
6 Dmitry Shklyar 7 8 9 8 32
7 Jason McDade 6 6 8 6 26
8 Jason McDade 7 7 8 7 29
9 Jayee Borcar 8 10 8 9 35
10 Jim Leuper 8 8 8 8 32
11 Josh Richards 9 10 9 10 38
12 Josh Richards 7 9 9 8 33
13 Kolja Erman 8 9 10 9 36
14 Kyle Milardo 7 5 5 4 21
15 Maureen Coleman 7 7 6 8 28
16 Richard Ramazinski 6 9 8 8 31
17 Rob Mauk 7 5 7 6 25
18 Scott Churchman 9 9 8 9 35
19 Scott Churchman 8 7 9 9 33
20 Scott Churchman 5 8 7 7 27
21 Sean Looper 5 7 7 5 24
22 Stuart Campbell 7 9 8 8 32
23 Tim Sexton 7 8 8 8 31
Nose: a good kind of burn
Taste: tar and marker, sesame
Finish: good length, forest fire
Balance: wonderful!
Alex Powell
Nose: caramel, mellow, nice
Taste: sweet
Finish: smooth, long
Balance: excellent
Dan Bunn
Nose: sweet, a faint flowery nectar scent, a hint of peat, very nice balance of fragrances
Taste: a bit spicy, smooth, the hint of peat continues but not overbearing, sweet and peppery, a little lemon
Finish: a nice burn on throat, a spiciness on the tongue, peat leaves a little funk
Balance: balances pretty well up until the end where the pat ruins it a bit (SACRILEGE!!! The Editor)
David Drell
Nose: bit musty, bready, grassy, then again I am stuffed up
Taste: lovely, warm, peaty glow; bracing
Finish: roundness of a cordial (sherry) but overpowered by pepper
Balance: a bit uneven but a great exemplar of how big peat can seem refined
David Lawson
Nose: strong, burning, peaty, hint of something sweet, honey? Nice and leathery on hands
Taste: warm and satisfying, peaty
Finish: sweet and mouth filling, nice linger
Balance: gets better with each dram
Dmitry Shklyar
Nose: a bit mediciney
Taste: a bit harsh
Finish: smooth
Balance: surprisingly harsh, not as good as I thought it would be
Jason McDade
Nose: floral, river trout cooked on an open campfire
Taste: deliciously smokey, playful like fly fishing on the Colorado river
Finish: smooth and pleasant like a ride in a 66 Thunderbird through the desert
Balance: I dig
Jason McDade
Nose: very peaty
Balance: the peatiness weighs down the volatility
Jayee Borcar
Nose: for peats sake that is nice
Taste: whisky
Finish: a bright flash, and then a long rumbling of thunder
Balance:well-crafted
Jim Leuper
Nose: A
Taste: Maz
Finish: Ing
Balance: Yeah
Josh Richards
Nose: mild, smooth, clean peat
Taste: super yummy, big peat
Finish: warm, mouth coating, lingering peat. Awesome
Balance: this is great. I willl have another please!
Josh Richards
Nose: ashy first hit, cola, slowly widens, lovely, a touch of cloying sweetness floats on top
Taste: wood, honey, sharp, builds nicely to rich peaty cloud of awesome
f; sweet fried meat, bacon, pork fried rice actually, peat
Balance: lovely!
Kolja Erman
Nose: sweet, sugary, nose like a bourbon but I do not mind it
Taste: (?) like bourbon, sugary candy, not getting a ton else but I do not hate it
Finish: nice at first, sours up at the end
Balance: I think the bourbon overtook more than it should
Kyle Milardo
Nose: light
Taste: complex, hits different parts of (?)
Finish: woody, strong, lasts
Richard Ramazinski
Taste: liked the before and after better
Rob Mauk
Nose: peaty, campfire, (?) (grilled), spent logs, fireplace, grain
Taste: honey, vanilla, toffee, caramel, leathery
Finish: tobacco, smooth, smoke, musty, woody
Balance: amazing whisky, nutty, just great
Scott Churchman
Nose: peat, smoke, slightly sweet
Taste: honey, vanilla, toffee
Finish: smoke, smoke, oak, honey, good burn
Balance: great from nose to finish, beautifully strong but not overpowering
Scott Churchman
Nose: peaty and slightly fruity
Taste: peay and floral
Finish: woody and a bit of peat
Balance: beautiful and very nice, well balanced
Scott Churchman
Palate: mild butterscotch, a bit hot
Finish: a little tinny
Sean Looper
Nose: my kind of nose, smoke and a hint of fruit
Taste: beautiful front, tangy, strong and smoky
Finish: hangs around tingling at the back of throat, warm on the chest
Balance: fits together satisfactorily
Stuart Campbell
Taste: not too peaty but enough to distinguis it
Finish: warm
Tim Sexton
The Bottler: A.D. Rattray
Established: 2004
Silent since: False
Address: Kirkoswald
→ website
In 2004 Tim Morrison, formerly of Morrison Bowmore Distillers, revived the Dewar Rattray company first established by his ancestor Andrew Dewar Rattray. His aim was to bottle single cask, single malt whisky. The firm also developed Stronachie, a single malt sourced from Benrrinnes distillery on Speyside, and intended to replicate whisky produced at the now long lost Stronachie distillery, located on the old Perthshire/Kinross-shire border.

Dewar Rattray also operates the Whisky Experience and Shop in Kirkoswald, Ayrshire, which offers a variety of sampling experiences as well as a wide range of whiskies for sale. Additionally, the firm has received planning permission to develop a distillery and visitor centre beside the River Clyde in Glasgow.

Andrew Dewar Rattray set up in business in Glasgow during 1868, trading as an importer of French wines, Italian spirits and olive oil, as well as blending and retailing Scotch whisky. Ultimately the firm was sold to the whisky broker William Walker, but was brought back into family ownership by Tim Morrison, who created the ‘new’ Stronachie in 2002. Back in the late 1800s A Dewar Rattray had acted as agent for Stronachie distillery, so there was already a historic connection.

Morrison also established the Cask Collection label for single cask bottlings, and in 2011 the peated blended malt Cask Islay was released, being transformed into a single malt two years later. 2012 saw the release of a five-year-old blend named Bank Note, a year after the Whisky Experience and Shop opened in Kirkoswald. Plans for the new Glasgow distillery were approved during 2014.

The company name is derived from the older family history of the Morrisons. In 1868 Andrew Dewar, an ancestor of the Morrisons, founded a wine and spirit trade company called Andrew Dewar Rattray Ltd. Beside trading, the company also exclusively distributed the products from the Stronachie Distillery. During the economic crisis of the 1920s the company had to be broken up. In 1928 also Stronachie was closed for good. Some decades later T. Morrison bought the rights to the names Rattray and Stronachie.

After legal quarrels with the blend producer Dewar's, the bottling company was renamed A.D. Rattray.
from ScotchWhisky.com, Whisky.com
The Distillery: Caol Ila
Established: 1846
Silent since: False
Address: Port Askaig, Isle Of Islay PA46 7RL, United Kingdom
→ website
2009 - A ten years old version of the unpeated variety is released at an even higher cask strength than the 8yo.
The Caol Ila distillery on Islay is located near Port Askaig, on the northeast corner of the island. It"s quite isolated, it"s closest neighbor being the Bunnahabhain distillery. Caol Ila was built in 1846 by Hector Henderson who also owned the old Camlachie distillery in Glasgow.
Although the profile of Caol Ila as a single malt has been enhanced in recent years, the main function of the distillery is still the production of malt whiskies for the Johnnie Walker blends. It might surprise you to learn that part of that whisky is actually unpeated - while Caol Ila is known mostly for their peated whiskies. The distillery actually started with trial runs with unpeated whisky in the 1980"s; the so-called "Highland" Caol Ila. For circa two decades this whisky was used almost exclusively for blends, but in 2006 it was introduced as an 8 years old single malt.
In the new Millenium
The Caol Ila distillery became part of the United Distillers conglommerate in 1986. In 1989 the first "semi-official" bottling of Caol Ila was released in the "Fauna & Flora" range. This would be the only official bottling in a long time (not counting the releases in UDV"s "Rare Malts" series). Fortunately, official bottlings are widely available these days.
Caol Ila"s current "core range" was introduced in 2002. Apart from the standard 12yo, 18yo and Cask Strength bottlings, Diageo releases occasional single cask bottlings as well. When casks of Lagavulin and Laphroaig became harder to acquire after the year 2000, independent bottlers started to release more and more private and "bastard" bottlings too.
Consecutive owners included Henderson, Lamont & Co (1852-1854), Norman Buchanan (1863-1879) and Bulloch, Lade & Co (proprietors of Camlachie) who rebuilt and expanded the distillery. Caol Ila was liquidated and sold to J. P. O"Brien Ltd in 1920, who in turn sold it to Caol Ila Distillery Co Ltd. the same year. DCL took control in 1927 and transferred Caol Ila to SMD in 1930 who shut it down. Caol Ila was silent until 1937 and had to close down during part of WWII as well.
These were the only periods Caol Ila was silent; despite the many changes in ownership Caol Ila has been in production almost constantly since 1846. After World War II, things proceeded relatively uneventful at Caol Ila for a few decades before it was rebuilt and extended from two to six stills between 1972 and 1974. The distillery was completely rebuilt in order to meet increased demand from the blenders, only the warehouses (still filled with maturing whisky) were spared. After 1974 Caol Ila started to buy their malted barley from the Port Ellen maltings. Some connoisseurs make a clear distinction between the heavier "old" Caol Ila that was produced before 1972 and the lighter, cleaner spirit that was distilled after the expansion in 1974.
2002 - Caol Ila has been one of Diageo"s "volume" distilleries for quite some time. Consequentially, the only (semi-) official releases were a "Flora & Fauna" bottling and a few "UD Rare Malts" expressions. However, at the start of the new millennium Diageo decided that they wanted to strengthen the Caol Ila brand. They introduced a range of official bottlings; the "standard" 12 years old, an 18 years old and a cask strength version (no age statement).
2006 - The Caol Ila "Unpeated" (formerly known as "Caol Ila Highland" to blenders) is released as a 8yo.
Trivia:
  • The name Caol Ila (pronounced as "kul-eela" and easily misspelled as Coal Ila) is Gaelic for "Sound of Islay" and is probably inspired by the location of the distillery along the stretch of water between Islay and Jura.
  • Caol Ila is the largest distillery on Islay by far; with an annual production capacity of almost 4 million litres of pure alcohol per year - about a quarter of all malt whisky that is distilled on the island. As such, Caol Ila"s capacity dwarfs well known malt whisky brands like Longmorn, Glenfarclas, Highland Park, Laphroaig and Lagavulin.
  • Although there is a three storey warehouse on the distillery grounds, these days the entire production is sent to the mainland via tanker trucks. So, young Caol Ila is not filled and matured on Islay.
  • After the distillery was remodeled and expanded in 1974 to better suit the needs of blenders Caol Ila introduced a novel new whisky for blenders in the mid 1980"s: an unpeated malt whisky known as "Caol Ila Highland ". This product was intended for blending and most (if not all) casks would thus have gone to blenders for, erm... blending. However, in 1999 Caol Ila resumed production of unpeated whisky for the "single malt" market. These bottlings became available in 2006 or 2007 when Diageo released the first bottling of the Caol Ila 8 Years Old "Unpeated". Since most blenders were not in the habit of storing their casks for very long (with the exception of Douglas Laing, perhaps) there probably are not that many casks of the unpeated Caol Ila Highland around - if any at all...
from Malt Madness
The Owner: Diageo
Established: 1997
Silent since: False
Address: 8 Henrietta Place, London, W1G ONB, UK
→ website
Diageo also distributes Unicum, its lighter-bodied variant Zwack and Jose Cuervo tequila products in North America. However, Cuervo operates as a separate company in Mexico and is not owned by Diageo. Similarly Grand Marnier is distributed by Diageo in many markets, including exclusively in Canada, and a deal was reached in 2009 to significantly expand this partnership in Europe.
Furthermore, Diageo owns the Gleneagles Hotel.
Diageo was formed in 1997 from the merger of Guinness plc and Grand Metropolitan plc. The creation was driven by the two executives Anthony Greener and Philip Yea at Guinness plus George Bull and John McGrath of Grand Metropolitan. The product portfolios of Guinness and Grand Met were largely complementary with little overlap.
Diageo is the world"s biggest whisky producer with 28 malt distilleries and two grain distilleries.The company operates the Scotch whisky distilleries of Auchroisk, Benrinnes, Blair Athol (situated at Pitlochry), Caol Ila, Cardhu, Knockando, Glen Elgin, Clynelish, Cragganmore, Dalwhinnie, Glenkinchie, Glen Ord, Lagavulin, Oban, Royal Lochnagar, Strathmill, Talisker, Teaninich, Mannochmore, Mortlach and Glenlossie, which are sold not only under their own name but used to make the various blended scotch whiskies sold by the company, and owns the stock of many closed distilleries such as Port Ellen, Rosebank, Brora, Convalmore, Glen Albyn, North Brechin, Banff, and Linlithgow. The company have opened a new malt distillery adjacent to their maltings at Roseisle (1st new make spirit produced Spring 2009). This will be one of the largest malt distilleries in Scotland. The new building contains 14 traditional copper pot stills. An expansion programme is also underway at its Cameron Bridge Grain Distillery in Fife that will make it the largest grain distillery in Scotland. Diageo also owns the Port Dundas Grain Distillery in Glasgow, and jointly operates the North British Grain Distillery in Gorgie, Edinburgh, with The Edrington Group.
Diageo plc (LSE: DGE, NYSE: DEO) is the largest multinational beer, wine and spirits company in the world. The company is listed on the London Stock Exchange and has American Depositary Receipts listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The word Diageo was formed from the Latin dia (day) and the Greek geo (World), symbolising the use of the company"s brands every day, everywhere. Its head office is located in the City of Westminster in London. It is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.
Trivia:
  • In December 2003, Diageo provoked controversy over its decision to change its Cardhu brand Scotch whisky from a single malt to a vatted malt (also known as a pure malt) whilst retaining the original name and bottle style. Diageo took this action because it did not have sufficient reserves to meet demand in the Spanish market, where Cardhu had been successful. After a meeting of producers, Diageo agreed to make changes.
  • In 2006, the Cardhu brand quietly changed back to being a single malt.
  • In July 2009, Diageo announced that, after nearly 200 years of association with the town of Kilmarnock, they would be closing the Johnnie Walker blending and bottling plant as part of restructuring to the business. This would make 700 workers unemployed and caused outrage from press, local people and politicians. A campaign against this decision was launched by the local SNP MSP Willie Coffey and Labour MP Des Browne. A petition was drawn up against the Diageo plans, which also involves the closure of the historic Port Dundas Grain Distillery in Glasgow.
  • In February 2009 it was reported in the Guardian that the company had restructured itself so as to avoid paying tax in the U.K., despite much of its profits being generated in the U.K.
  • Diageo is engaged in a tax scheme in the United States of America, commonly referred to as the "Rum Bailout", which will guarantee it USD$3 billion in revenues and profits.
  • The National Puerto Rican Coalitionplans to run a series of ads in New York City and Puerto Rico urging a boycott of Diageo-owned alcoholic drinks to protest the giant British-owned corporation"s controversial production move of its Captain Morgan rum from Puerto Rico to the U.S. Virgin Islands.
from Wikipedia
The Owner: Morrison Glasgow Distillers
Established: 2012
Silent since: False
Address: 100 Stobcross Rd
Tim Morrison, formerly of Morrison Bowmore Distillers and owner of independent bottler AD Rattray, set up Morrison Glasgow Distillers (formerly Stanmorr) in 2012 with a vision to revive distilling in Glasgow. Morrison runs AD Rattray as an entirely separate entity.

The board is led by Tim Morrison as chairman and his son Andrew Morrison, who serves as commercial director. Independent whisky consultant Glen Moore, who also once worked with Bowmore as a stillman, mashman and head of marketing, serves as managing director.

The company is currently overseeing the construction of Clydeside distillery on the banks of the river Clyde in Glasgow.

Morrison Glasgow Distillers started life in 2012 as Stanmorr Ltd, a company set up to oversee the building of a new distillery in Glasgow, one that would ‘celebrate the role whisky has played in shaping both Glasgow’s and Scotland’s heritage’.

The brainchild of Tim Morrison, the distillery was to be built within the historic Pump House, at the mouth of Glasgow’s Queen’s Dock.

Planning permission for the site was granted in early 2014, but complications surrounding the foundations of the plot – the dock had been in-filled in 1977 – forced the company to orientate the distillery. This meant submitting a new proposal to Glasgow Council for planning approval.

By 2015 the company had changed its name to The Glasgow Distilling Company, to reflect its intentions to revive whisky production in the city. However, just the year previously, the confusingly named Glasgow Distillery Company beat Morrison and co. to open the first new malt distillery in Glasgow for over 100 years, with the Glasgow distillery in Hillington.

On 1 August 2016, now with full planning permission for its newly positioned distillery – which is now named Clydeside – and a more unambiguous company name of Morrison Glasgow Distillers, the group broke ground at the Pump House.
from ScotchWhisky.com