Glenfiddich "Vintage Cask",
 
Style & Origin
styleScotch Single Malt Whisky
region Speyside, Dufftown
strength40% (80 proof)
peatedyes
caskssherry, first fill bourbon
price$95-145
availabilityexclusive (Travel Retail)
distillery Glenfiddich
Bar Log
Sat., Aug. 1, 2015bottle #958 added to stock
Sat., Aug. 1, 2015feature presentation of bottle #958 by
Wed., Feb. 17, 2016bottle #958 killed
Release Notes
Following the success of the innovative Solera Vatting for their 15 Year Solera Reserve, Glenfiddich has created three new Solera Vats. The Vintage Cask is the 3rd release in this series and all are sold exclusively for Global Travel Retail. This vatting contains whiskies aged in either European Spanish sherry casks or 1st fill bourbon casks, but what makes this whisky unique is the use of heavily peated whisky (25 ppm). That comprises around 50% of the vatting and as it is blended with other whiskies is brought down to about 10-15 ppm in the glass.
DrinkDistiller.com
3rd Party Tasting Notes
Smoky bacon and Walker's Chocolate Shortbread cookies (you know, the ones shaped like Scottie dogs) sprung to mind. There's a bit of dried fruits associated with sherry-aged whiskies, but it doesn't overwhelm the malt. The finish continues with smoky sweet notes and a touch of vanilla. It is enjoyable to have a peated whisky without any medicinal or saline notes and I hope they release further peated bottlings at both an older age and at a higher proof.
Stephanie Moreno, DrinkDistiller.com
Regular Tasting Results
# Taster Date Nose Taste Finish Balance Total
1 Andrew Pearce 8 7 7 7 29
2 Andrew Pilgrim 5 4 4 5 18
3 David Drell 8 6 7 6 27
4 Gary Trousdale 9 8 7 7 31
5 Jason McDade 5 8 6 7 26
6 Jim Leuper 9 6 7 7 29
7 Kolja Erman 9 8 7 8 32
8 Robert Crawford 9 7 6 5 27
9 Stuart Campbell 8 7 7 7 29
10 Tom Owens 8 6 6 6 26
Nose: wool sock drawer, cedar
Palate: smooth, subtle pear, friendly!
Finish: hot, tongue-slapping
Balance: admirable, non-offensive
Andrew Pearce
Nose: mild with a hint of wild mint
Palate: water, alcohol and a trace of peat
Finish: alcohol and a trace of peat
Balance: consistently vague
Andrew Pilgrim
Nose: light, peaty, but also a bit of damp dirty in the morning, like a morning at summer camp
Palate: subtle and smooth, chilled grapefruit emerges subtly, very little of the peat
Finish: a pleasant faint burn lingers on the back tongue like a fading campfire
Balance: the interesting subtleties of the nose are lost as it continues, very smooth, somewhat boring
David Drell
Nose: nice peat promise, almost loamy
Palate: not strong peat, but it's there. Bright and full.
Finish: Nice burn and a bit of pleasant numb-tongue. Flattens out a bit, but still really nice.
Balance: Great front end promise (Nose!) but gets flat towards the end. Subtle peat is lovely though.
Gary Trousdale
Nose: really refreshing - the scent of the great outdoors
Palate: too gentle after that nose, like a lamb after a ram
Finish: builds gradually
Balance: quite lovely and makes a great first impression
Jim Leuper
Nose: peat, minty fresh peat, meadow flowers behind the curtains, later wood, a refreshing spring day
Palate: soft start like a Prius but quickly ramps up to highway speeds
Finish: mostly wood, hint of peat, not enough heat
Balance: lovely, lovely nose but a bit of a ramp-down
Kolja Erman
Nose: peat, fresh ozone, warm
Palate: very little on the front
Finish: sharp
Robert Crawford
Nose: like a beautiful Islay breeze, open air freshness with nice peat note, very slight hospital smell
Palate: minty at the front, almost airy, the peat sits at the back but not heavy, flavours build as you go
Finish: warm glow at the back of the throat, tapers off slowly
Balance: maybe a touch light at the front but nice as you go through and warm at end
Stuart Campbell
Nose: Wow. Never would peg this as Glenfiddich (obviously). Nice, leaves and wood smoke. A bit "band aid" medicinal smell but nice smell.
Palate: First impression = Thin! Not the punch I was expecting. Some dried fruit, not much else.
Finish: Pleasant, not exciting... interestingly the peat totally disappears...
Balance: Weird whisky
Tom Owens
The Distillery: Glenfiddich
Established: 1886
Silent since: False
Address: Dufftown, Banffshire, UK
→ website
Fortunately, the "90"s seem to have been a particularly difficult decade for Glenfiddich. Bottlings from the 1960"s and 1970"s that I"ve tried were much better than the generic stuff they bottled in the 1990"s. During the early noughties of the 21st century they"ve released more batches and bottlings that have convinced me that they have found the way up again. Well, they had to - for a long time Glenfiddich was the logical next step for people "upgrading" from blends, but these days there"s some serious competition in malts.
The famous Glenfiddich distillery isn"t just the birthplace of the widest known "brand" of single malt whisky. With an annual production capacity of 10,000,000 litres they are "the giant" of the industry. The second largest distillery measured by volume is Tomatin with (in 2006) some 7,000,000 litres per year.
As pictures show, the "still room" at the Glenfiddich distillery lacks the charm of those at some other distilleries, but the new buildings don"t lie about the basic function: a whisky factory.
The contrast with the Kilbeggan distillery in Ireland is striking, but admittedly that"s actually more of a "show pony" distillery for Cooley.
In 1960 Glenfiddich released their single malt as an official bottling for the first time (and probably the first distillery to actually do so). This turned out to be a massive succes; in 1964 they sold around 4,000 cases but just a decade later (1974) the sales had already grown to some 120,000 cases and Glenfiddich became a "brand".
By 1980 Glenfiddich had no less than 29 stills which didn"t operate in "pairs" like at many other distilleries. At the time Glenfiddich ran 11 wash stills and 18 spirit stills, both gas and coal fired. If my data is correct they have reduced the number of stills significantly since then. Around 2000 they ran 5 wash stills and eight spirit stills.
The distillery is located in the busling town of Dufftown in the heart of Banffshire. Other distilleries in the area are Balvenie (also owned by William Grant & Sons), Convalmore, Dufftown, Glendullan, Kininvie (the third distillery owned by W. Grant), Mortlach and Pittyvaich. Wow... that town runs on whisky!
Glenfiddich was founded in 1886-1887 by the company / family that still owns it; William Grant & Sons. When they first started production at Glenfiddich they didn"t use purpose built material; the old stills from Cardow distillery were considered good enough at the time.
The approach of William Grant & Sons has always been sensible and business-like. The distillery was still being built when Alfred Barnard published his book "Whisky Distilleries of the United Kingdom" in 1887. Within a century, Glenfiddich had managed to overtake more than a hundred competitors. They are Scotland"s #1 malt whisky producer, distantly followed by Glen Grant, Glenlivet and Macallan,
One of the main reasons for their success is arguably their world famous triangular bottle. It"s also used for their "Grant"s" blend and was first introduced in 1957 to distinguish the brand from other whiskies on the shelves of liquorists. Well, you can"t argue with results. That being said, when I tried my first Glenfiddich in the 1980"s it thought it was a good whisky - but that was because I was used to drinking affordable blends like Teacher"s. It took a Lagavulin for me to go mad about malt whisky in the early 1990"s. In those days Glenfiddich was still marketed as a "pure malt" and they paled in comparison...
In the new Millenium
2002 - Glenfiddich launches a number of noticeable new bottlings; including the 12yo "Caoran Reserve" (a vaguely peaty version) and the 21yo "Gran Reserva" (finished in Cuban rum casks). Because the 21yo had been influenced by the traces of Cuban rum, the American Customs Gestapo stopped these bottles at the border. Who said fascism is dead?
2005 - Glenfiddich invests almost 2 million GBP in a new visitor centre. Their first visitor centre was opened in 1969, and at the time it was also the very first distillery visitor centre in Scotland.
Trivia:
  • Apparently, Glenfiddich was the first distillery in Scotland to open a reception centre for the public.
  • At the time, they were also the only malt distillery with its own bottling plant, but by the time I write this I know of at least one other distillery that has its own bottling plant as well: Bruichladdich on Islay.
  • Glenfiddich was also the first malt distillery to adopt the practice of "continuous mashing".
from MaltManiacs.org
The Owner: William Grant & Sons
Established: 1886
Silent since: False
Address: Phoenix Crescent Strathclyde Business Park, Bellshill, Lanarkshire, ML4 3AN, UK
→ website
William Grant & Sons Ltd. is an independent, family-owned Scottish company which distills Scotch whisky and other selected categories of spirits. It was founded in 1886 by William Grant, and is now run by the descendants of the founder. It is the largest of the handful of Scotch whisky distillers remaining in family ownership. "William Grant & Sons" is often abbreviated to "W. Grant & Sons" or just "Grant"s", after their leading blended whisky of the same name.
William Grant & Sons pioneered single malt Scotch whisky as until Glenfiddich, only blended brands were common In 1997 the Grant entered into a joint venture with the Robertson family (The Edrington Group) creating a new company, Highland Distillers.
The company"s leading single malt Scotch brand is Glenfiddich, the best-selling brand in the worldwide single malt Scotch market (700,000 cases/year and 17.37% market share). This is more than the sales of the next two single malts combined. Their leading blended Scotch brand is Grant"s, the 4th best-selling brand in the worldwide blended Scotch market and the Scotch market as a whole (4 million cases/year). Grant"s is also the 4th best-selling brand in the domestic United Kingdom Scotch market (420,000 cases/year and 14.6% market share).
William Grant was born in Dufftown in 1839. The young Grant worked at Mortlach Distillery and dreamed of one day running his own distillery. He worked hard and saved and in 1886 Grant and his 9 children laid the first stone of the Glenfiddich Distillery. It was Christmas day 1887 when the first spirit ran from the stills.
In 1892 William Grant & Sons bought a second neighbouring Distillery called Balvenie. In 1898 the two distilleries started blending their whiskies and Grant"s Whisky was "born".
The company is the 3rd largest producer of Scotch whisky (10.4% market share) after Diageo (34.4%), and Pernod Ricard. The company"s central headquarters are in Strathclyde Business Park, North Lanarkshire. Sales and marketing headquarters are in Richmond, London. The company is a member of the Scotch Whisky Association.
The master blender of Grant"s is David Stewart, who has been in his post for 47 years, the longest serving master blender with one distiller in the industry.
Core brands include: Glenfiddich, Grant"s, Balvenie, Hendrick"s Gun, Sailor Jerry Rum. Other brands include: Reyka Iclandic Vodka, Sailor Jerry Spiced Rum, Old Vatted Demerara Rum, Wood"s 100 Old Navy Rum, Vat 19 Rum, Gibson"s Finest, Clan MacGregor Blended Whisky, Monkey Shoulder Triple Malt Whisky, Taboo, Milagro Tequila, Solerno. The company also produces a number of rare whiskies such as Girvan First Batch (from 1964 casks) and Ladyburn (silent distillery closed in 1975) as well private vintage bottlings. Via Highland Distillers the company has a stake in the following brands: The Famous Grouse, The Macallan, Highland Park, Black Bottle and Gloag"s Dry Gin. The company has also co-developed Virgin Vodka with Richard Branson"s Virgin Group
The company owns several distilleries including Glenfiddich, Balvenie, Girvan Grain Distillery, Convalmore (only the bonded warehouse), Kininvie and Ailsa Bay Distillery.
Trivia:
  • allegedly the first company to market Scotch whisky abroad (this claim is very contentious - there are several, particularly Glen Grant and Glenmorangie, which would dispute it)
  • revolutionized bottle design in the 1950s, creating a triangular bottle
  • was the first to open up its distillery to visitors
  • introduced the solera concept to Glenfiddich to create Glenfiddich Solera Reserve
from Wikipedia