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A true warrior – Highland Park 50 year old

Apparently, the schoolchildren from the Orkney isles have a bit of trouble understanding that they are Scottish. They do know they are British, but it troubles their minds to comprehend they are Scottish such is the uniqueness of this cluster of islands just 10 miles off the north east coast. I suppose it is easily understood, after all it has had it’s fair share of ownership via Norway and the vikings using it as a bit of a stop-over for raids into Scotland and Ireland. It is certainly a checkered and interesting past with plenty of folklore and factual history to draw upon which is why the Highland Park distillery in Kirkwall is such an interesting one. Yeah sure, there are countless sites on the mainland with tales to tell but it seems to me that this wee corner of “Scotland” ticked along quite nicely without much interference from the mainland. Perhaps the ferry was too expensive for the excise man?

Nice then, that I got the chance to taste a bit of Orcandian history for myself in the form of the Highland Park 50 year old. It’s not a new release by any stretch, as the first bottles were available early last year- but at £10,000 per bottle there are few in the world lucky enough to taste it. I was happy to wait till now.

The oldest ever release from the distillery was given to us by Daryl Haldane, Highland Park brand ambassador and general nice guy- which is surprising as he is from Fife, which is not know for many happy people.

Highland park 50 yr old.

Vatting of two refill European ex-sherry cask

44.8% ABV

1 of 275 bottles.

Bottled designed by Maeve Gillies

Price: £10,000

Appearance: Deep burnished copper with rose gold

Nose: First notes are of heavy honey and rich maple with well polished leather, dried orange peel and new hide. A more perfumed element emerges of light clove and polished woods such as mahogany with a hint of brandy butter. Beyond all of this, a leafy green oil note emerges, similar to hop heads.

Palate: As expected, the palate is huge. Rich and chewy with those leather elements turning peppery then waves of the more prominent hop leaf again. The mid palate is nutty (almonds and brazil) with rich marzipan and a note of burnt plum. Surprisingly, the palate lifts towards the end with peppermint and fennel followed by liquorice.

Finish : Sweet and juicy soft liquorice takes over now allowing this massive dram to remain entertaining and offering a supreme lingering finish.

Normally a whisky of above average age is really hard to pull apart with the aromas and flavours so well integrated that they just merge into one. But the amazing thing with this is that even a couple of days after writing my initial notes and going back to try the last remaining dram the notes stand out incredibly. Every element is in there and each note rolls up to say hello in the most eloquent of fashions.

Only two venues in London stock a bottle, Dorchester Bar at the Dorchester and the newly opened Bulgari hotel, the latter of which is where we were fortunate enough to try this whisky. The bottle itself is said to be worth around £2,500, designed by jeweller Maeve Gillies, the solid silver casing that wraps around the bottle like a sinuous web of precious metal depicts all that is Orcadian. A visitor to the beautiful Orkney islands since a child, Maeve conveyed a natural and nautical theme in her Sterling silver bottle, evoking ropes, twisted seaweed and a metal finish that looked like it could have been a very old and precious object, discovered washed up on the beach. Set on the front is a disc of genuine Orcadian pink sandstone carved with Highland Park’s logo, sourced from the original quarry that built the incredible 12th century St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall. Behind this disc, viewable through the glass when the whisky has been finished, is an ethereal silver replica of the beautiful rose window inside the Cathedral.
The bottle is presented in a hand-carved Scottish oak box, also shaped to feel worn by wild elements, and set with a silver and glass porthole, through which the Highland Park logo on the bottle inside can just be viewed.

Each bottle is stamped with a silver hallmark, and in keeping with Highland Park’s policy of non sequential numbering, this one simply states 1 of 275 rather than bottle number one or two of 275.

So is it worth it? Well if you deduct the bottle price and look at the value of the liquid, then it isn’t an outlandish price for such a fabulous whisky. There are plenty others out there commanding far higher. Remember though, my rule for bottles with this kind of price tag, if you are going to buy it make sure you buy two- one to keep and one to share.

Now, at the end of the tasting session, (we also tried 12, 18, Thor and 21) I took a tour of the hotel and stopped off in the cigar room. This room is London’s only internal cigar room (its a loophole I can’t be bothered going into now- basically as shop) which is run by Davidoff cigar merchants on St James. I sat with Eddie, the son in the “father & son” operation and chatted about the comparison of whisky and cigars. Eddie then presented me with two beautiful cigars, which were hand rolled just two weeks prior. Alas, I couldn’t enjoy them in the lush surroundings as I had another tasting to dash off to- and I knew I might not give the other whisky a chance with HP 50 and a cigar on the palate. But I did ask about the cigars to add to the enjoyment later.

Eddie told me that they were the “Beaujolais” of cigars- to be enjoyed young and fresh. They had in fact been hand rolled just two weeks prior by Señora Dilia Hernandez who had arrived in the UK in May and was scheduled to attend various events and Habanos Specialists until her return to Cuba at the end of July. To enjoy them at their peak, they would have to be smoked within a week. I certainly wasn’t about to test that 7 day limit.

Señora Hernandez began her career in the cigar industry 20 years ago and has achieved the highest grade of cigar roller within the Cuban industry. Not only is she well respected, but Señora Hernandez also rolls cigar leaf in a traditional manner known as “entubado bunch” or entubar – a bunching technique which rolls each filler leaf into itself, almost like a small scroll. Each individually “scrolled” leaf is then placed together to form the bunch. This skillful rolling technique creates a more firmly packed cigar which allows air to travel between all of the leaves, carrying more aromatics/flavors to the palate. Entubado rolling is the most difficult and complex bunching method and is therefore rarely employed in large scale manufacturing.

I was now the proud possesor of two of these freshly rolled beauties and I can tell you, by the time the weekend was over, both had died a graceful death.

So from the oldest of whiskies to the freshest of cigars. Some would say it was quite a nice way to start the weekend.

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Posted by on June 22, 2012 in Reviews, tasting

 

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HP saucy

Another day here in Dramatic Towers and it seems things have eventually settled into some sort of pattern after the busy few months i have been experiencing. A well overdue meeting with my accountant went rather better than expected which is always a good way to start the weekend I think.

 

Then, upon arriving home, there before me was a “little” package from Highland Park . Well, when i say little, I mean 4 lovely cartons of 12 and 18 yr old! just arriving in time for some sessions this weekend. Now i just need to find the room to securely store it!

 

Its been a busy week of reviews also as I try to get 5 years worth of tasting notes up on my web-site - I can see how web designers are paid well…it is certainly a skill creating something that not only looks good but holds interesting content. However, it does seem like I am doing something right as the stats are looking quite good.

I took a wonder around my garden to get a bit of fresh air and watched a spider, of thumbnail size, capture a wasp type flying thing and consume it before my eyes. what amazed me was the time, skill and patience it seemed to have. Now, don’t worry, I’m not about to link that event with how well HP is crafted and draw analogy to the care, time, patience and dedication they have with making that most glorious of amber drops. (oops, i just did)

 

 

 

anyway- here is said spider! and what a beauty she is! (i think she is female, don’t they always grow bigger than the males?)

 

 

 

So back to the Highland Park- as I said, I have been a fan for quite some time and been fortunate enough to try some of the really old and rare bottles that are seldom seen. But I have to say it is the 12, 18 and 25 that I am most fond of.

Three quick tasting notes in a row-

Highland Park 12 yr old

That Glowing Amber

40%

 As one of my favourite distilleries, just about everything they do I love. So it’s not surprise to know that the 12-year-old

still makes me smile when in   my glass. The firey orange and amber colour is almost illuminated it is so bright.

Aromas of fresh fruit, honey, fudge and linseed oil dominate the nose. But it all seems to work perfectly. Some more cooking apple and vanilla running around and if you search deep enough, the faintest whiff of dying bonfire smoke in there.

On first sip, it’s that lovely combination of honey and oil that are introduced, but then all of a sudden a wallop of smoke followed by warming spice. Those latter two elements continue to dance around for a while before dissipating and allowing the sweet, fresh fruit to finish.

A smashing dram, worthy of its numerous world awards.

Now quickly onto the 18-year-old.
 

 

Highland Park 18 yr old

Every Improving

43%
A deeper gold than the ages prior, flecks of ruby come through.

A fuller nose altogether, still honeyed, but set honey now, less sweet. The fruit has also moved on with time, becomes ripe, even overripe apple and Dundee cake.

It’s all in such great balance, rich and fruity with tastes of salted butter, cinnamon, walnut and coffee cake. Smoke and dried fruits mingle but never overpower.

The lingering finish is all about that faintest of old, cooling smoke and dried fruit and nut- mostly walnut.

 

And finally, the 25-year-old…

 

Highland Park 25 yr old

Holy Smoke- it's a wopper!

48.1%
Golden amber

Rich and intriguing, the sweetness of dried fruit and set heather honey offered up in huge quantities. The influence of the sherry butt at its most apparent now with polished wood, baked nuts and drying peat

Perhaps sweeter than expected, good firm body of spice including nutmeg, mace, cinnamon with toffee/fudge and milky coffee. The smoke most apparent in younger expressions had drifted by and not nearly as pronounced.

Spices linger, warming and welcome with a drift of citrus infused smoke.

 Well, it did seem an odd way to link the whisky to the blog, and I could have picked Robert the Bruce and the Spider as a better spider story. But that was too obvious (and maybe too plitical at the same time) .

Enjoy.  

 
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Posted by on September 9, 2011 in tasting

 

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It’s all about the people

After a little R&R last week it was back to the grind stone again. But then again, I don’t think my stone gets much grinding these days. Confucius once said : find a job you love, and you will never work a day in your life. Or something like that. Well, that old man was right, despite the general running around and stressing behind the scenes trying to get a venue ready, ensure there is enough stock, or even enough places to seat people after last night mad crush at The Liberty Lounge, London- once the people are in and a drink in there hand everything seems to click and the night rolls on. And after it’s over and the venue is back into some kind of order, do I really feel like I have worked? I can’t say I do, although one of these days I am not going to be as fortunate as I have been so far and get a group who are ready to grill me!

And it is a constant reminder to me that this is what whisky is about. Not the rarity, not the marketing, but a gathering of folks, like minded and interesting, from all walks of life sitting together in a cosy environment and relaxing over a dram.

It must have been, as I often assume, the way it was when whisky was first created. A spirit to raise spirits, gather the clans to catch up on gossip about the days past or the winter ahead. I can also imagine that the styles of whisky grew from this also as villages would create a dram similar to the neighbours as they drank each others creations. With every crofter in every Glen possessing a wee still, the choice must have been fantastic- or not! Remembering that the whisky we all enjoy now, like our beer, is far removed from its origin in terms of finesse and flavour! Time and technique, as well as a bit of luck in some cases, has helped shape the beautiful liquid into something internationally celebrated.

A good illustration of this is the charring of oak. A process of heating the staves over a fire to help make the staves playable, aiding the cooper in creating the barrel shape. But by charring the wood, many things happen, including the release of vanillin which thankfully passes over into the spirit is it rests. The charcoal veil now surrounding the whisky also helps filter some of the harsher alcohols and adds finesse. Now you are not going to convince me that some wee drover sitting on a hillside in the cairngorms thought that up on his own!

Long may lady luck play her part!

 
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Posted by on July 27, 2011 in tasting

 

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