GlenDronach "Cask Strength Batch 2",
 
Style & Origin
styleScotch Single Malt Whisky
region Speyside, Deveron
strength55.2% (110.4 proof)
casksOloroso and Pedro Ximenez Sherry
price$80-170
availabilityrare
distillery GlenDronach
Bar Log
Fri., May. 22, 2015bottle #933 added to stock
Fri., May. 22, 2015feature presentation of bottle #933 by
Wed., Mar. 30, 2016bottle #933 killed
Release Notes
'Cask Strength' simply means that the whisky is bottled at the natural strength, straight out of the barrel. Each batch is unique, and the batches will continue to be released as long as this expression remains popular with consumers. The second batch has been personally selected once again by Master Blender Billy Walker. At 55.2% vol, non chill-filtered and bottled at its natural colour, it has been matured as before in a combination of the finest Oloroso and Pedro Ximenez sherry casks. Mr Walker's tasting notes show how time, wood and whisky mystically interact to create another richly-sherried expression that's true to the GlenDronach style.
GlenDronach
3rd Party Tasting Notes
Appearance: Rich golden amber with a crimson heart.
Nose: Wonderful rich aromas of honey-drenched raisins and sultanas. Candied ginger and orange peel are spiced with a beautifully delicate back note of warm oak.
Palate: A perfectly balanced traditional sherried character. An explosion of chocolate-coated raisins and zest of orange mellowed with sweet warm oak spices, hints of soft toffee and gentle sugared almonds.
Finish: A uniquely balanced classic finish.
GlenDronach
Regular Tasting Results
# Taster Date Nose Taste Finish Balance Total
1 Adam Lippert 9 8 9 9 35
2 Andrew Pearce 8 9 7 7 31
3 Andrew Pilgrim 8 9 9 9 35
4 David Drell 9 8 7 8 32
5 David Lawson 8 10 8 9 35
6 David Lawson 7 8 7 8 30
7 David Lawson 9 9 6 8 32
8 David Lawson 7 9 8 8 32
9 Jim Leuper 8 10 9 9 36
10 Karen Jeffers 9 9 9 10 37
11 Kolja Erman 9 9 9 9 36
12 Kolja Erman 8 9 8 8 33
13 Nathan Boehme 5 7 7 6 25
14 Rick Hromadka 9 9 9 9 36
15 Robert Crawford 8 8 8 8 32
16 Stuart Campbell 8 9 8 8 33
17 Tim Sexton 9 8 7 8 32
18 Unknown Donor 9 9 9 9 36
19 Unknown Donor 9 8 9 9 35
Nose: sweet, caramel
Palate: fat, it sits heavy on the tongue
Finish: looooooong
Balance: friendly
Andrew Pearce
Nose: reminiscent of Hepburn's Choice Craigellachie 17 in all categories - awesome!
Andrew Pilgrim
Nose: grapes, pralines, chocolate, big, great nose! Like fancy rich folk candy
Palate: soft, sweet, honey, chocolate continues, lovely but not complex
Finish: spicy on the tip of the tongue, reasonable length
Balance: doesn't strike as a cask strength. Extremely friendly
David Drell
Nose: nougat, under-ripe peaches, the wayward thoughts of lesser angels
Palate: stone fruit. Fruit without stones but a friend with a hookup. Istanbul. Vintage Triumph Moto. Ejaculate.
Finish: long, slow, occasionally violent make-up sex. With distant thunder.
Balance: The leather jacket you're glad you wore the day you got evicted. All you really need.
David Lawson
Nose: roasty caramel, slight oak but no distinct overtones, only pleasure
Palate: campfire marshmallows with a side of perplexed girl scout
Finish: a long goodbye without too many new fanfares
Balance: lovely, welcoming and warm if lacking in anything terribly profound
David Lawson
Nose: caramel with secondary sweet clover? Faint, but enticing. Actually, wow.
Palate: powerful hit of pan-melted caramel, toffee. Wonderful!
Finish: long and lean, but no new dispatches from the front
Balance: a bit uneven but a fine brew of disparate elements
David Lawson
Nose: vanilla and orange blossom but no creamsicle, yo.
Palate: spiky, angular, a many-armed idol, but not false. Water smooths out its fervor.
Finish: slow fade, unexpansive, gains flowers and spice with water and lingers warmly
Balance: really nice, powerful up front without water, long tail with
David Lawson
Nose: sweet and sour
Palate: OMG LOL WTF
Finish: this is a whisky that will bring a smile to your face
Balance: fantastic, love it!
Jim Leuper
Palate: but strong
Karen Jeffers
Nose: simple but good!
Palate: warm, strong, tough, but cuddly. A whisky like you'd want your dad to be
Finish: not as much as I'd hoped for. Water opens it up quite a bit
Balance: mostly about nose and palate. Great stuff.
Kolja Erman
Nose: dark rum, grain (whole), honey, caramel
Palate: big, bolgd & bulging, lingering pepper, chewy
Finish: all quiet on the western front, oddly subdued
Balance: water rounds it off, widens it an deepens int, but also shaves of its prickly beard
Kolja Erman
Nose: started off very unassuming
Palate: came on hot and loud. Evolved into a sharp, floral, ember-like flavor
Finish: with a drop of water the finish became much more interesting
Balance: a bit intense overall, but the drop of water really made a difference
Nathan Boehme
Nose: honey, maple
Palate: smooth!
Finish: excellent
Balance: great
Rick Hromadka
Palate: awesome
Robert Crawford
Nose: really simple, one note but very pleasant, very cookie dough note
Palate: like eating a cloutie dumpling, rich, thick, round, fruity, great
Finish: with a little water (I mean one drop) this is excellent, great without
Balance: again, with a single drop of water this is excellent. Great without.
Stuart Campbell
Nose: rich, caramel
Palate: noice
Tim Sexton
The Distillery: GlenDronach
Established: 1826
Silent since: False
Address: Forgue near Huntley, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, AB54 6DB, UK
→ website
The Glendronach distillery in the Deveron (Speyside) area of Scotland was founded in 1826 by Glendronach Distillery Co., a partnership headed by one James Allardes (or Allardyce).
2005 was an important year for Glendronch in another respect as well; its owners Allied Domecq were acquired by Pernod Ricard who became Scotland"s second largest whisky producer this way.
Glendronach by Murray McDavid
That was when the Glendronach distillery was mothballed for a few years by owners Allied Distillers - formerly known as Allied Breweries and later as Allied Domecq. For- tunately, the distillery went into full production again in 2002. Initially they resumed the traditional coal firing of the stills, but in 2005 the distillery shut down for a few months to be converted from direct coal firing to internal steam heating. So, one of the very last coal fired distilleries that was operational in the third millennium didn"t actually use the technique for more than three years after the re-opening in 2002. Just when the first of the "2002" spirit turned into whisky they abandoned coal.
Another significant change in the production process took place in 1996 when the floor maltings at Glendronach were decommissioned. Because they used a combination of peat and coal to dry the malted barley, spirit that was distilled before the distillery was mothballed was relatively peaty for a Speyside whisky. At a peating level of up to 14 PPM it wasn"t a "peat monster" like Laphroaig or Lagavulin, but the whisky was a little more potent than the stuff they produced at nearby distilleries like Knockdhu. Nowadays Glendronach buys unpeated malt.
Just one decade after it was founded, Glendronach was destroyed by a fire - a fate that was not that unusual for the whisky distilleries at the time. After the disaster several people from the whisky industry became involved, including Walter Scott (from Teaninich), Alexander Ross and "Captain" Charles Grant (younger son of William Grant of Glenfiddich distillery). Glendronach remained under control of that branch of the Grant family until 1960, when George Grey Grant sold it.
The Glendronach distillery was sold to William Teacher & Sons Ltd. - who themselves became part of Allied in 1976. Teacher"s expanded the number of stills from two to four In 1966 and "67. The (almost) unique thing about those stills was the fact that they were all coal fired - as opposed to the "indirect" heating (often by steam) that is used at most other malt whisky distilleries. In fact, together with the Glenfarclas and Springbank distilleries, Glendronach was one of the very last coal fired distilleries that were operational in the third millennium. That"s quite amazing, if you think about it - well at least to a whisky nerd like myself. Until recently coal was used to dry the malted barley on Glendronach"s own floor maltings as well (along with peat), but those floors were decommissioned in 1996.
Pernod Ricard isn"t threatening Diageo"s position as Scotland"s largest producer of malt whisky, but they managed to produce 2/3 of Diageo"s output with less than half the number of distilleries; 12 as opposed to 27.
But in that respect, the #3 malt whisky producer is doing an even better job. With only three distilleries (Balvenie, Glenfiddich and Kininvie) William Grant manages to produce roughly half of the malt whisky that Pernod Ricard makes with its dozen distilleries.
2002 - After Glendronach was mothballed in 1996 by Allied Distillers, it was re-opened again on May 14, 2002.
2005 - Pernod Ricard / Chivas Brothers buys Allied Domecq and acquires the Glendronach distillery this way. In the same year, Glendronach is the last malt whisky distillery in Scotland to be converted from direct coal firing to indirect steam heating. In the same year a new 33 years old official bottling is launched.
2008 - Billy Walker and partners (owners of the BenRiach distillery) acquire the Glendronach distillery.
2009 - The old core range of 12yo, 15yo and 18yo is relaunched, along with several single cask bottlings.
But now I"m getting side-tracked again - the topic was Glendronach... The distillery has been on my purely personal distillery Top 10 for quite a few years, thanks to the excellent yet affordable 15yo "100% Sherry" malt whisky that was available in the 1990"s. However, most official releases from the early noughties were vattings of sherry and bourbon casks, that didn"t tickle my fancy quite as vigourously. Pernod Ricard has only used bourbon casks since they re-opened Glendronach distillery in 2005, but fortunately Glendronach was purchased by The Benriach Distillery Company Ltd. in 2008. Based on the great job they did when they put the Benriach distillery on the map again, I had high hopes for the release of some exciting new bottlings after the take-over - and I was right. In 2009 the new owners of Glendronach released a new "core range" of three different expressions; a 12yo, a 15yo and an 18yo.
I"m a sucker for a heavily sherried or peated single malt whisky with lots of character. The often subtle differences between the hundreds of different single malt whiskies from ex-bourbon casks that are released every year don"t excite me quite as much as they once did. So, after the take-over of the Glendronach distillery by Pernod Ricard it soon disappeared from my top 10.
However, after Billy Walker and his gang took control of Glendronach, they soon released three new standard OB"s that were all matured in sherry casks. The release of these beauties brought the Glendronach distillery right back in my personal distillery top 10 - and on one of the top positions. And as long as they have sufficient stocks of ex-sherry casks to keep releasing these sherried whiskies at fairly fair prices, they could very well stay on that top 10 forever...
In the new Millenium
Trivia:
  • In 2009 the new owners announced a total investment of 7 million GBP in the Glendronach distillery.
  • Glendronach distillery aimed to produce over 1,000,000 litres of alcohol in 2010.
from Malt Madness
The Owner: BenRiach Distillery Company
Established: 2003
Silent since: False
Address: Glenbervie Business Park, Larbert, Stirlingshire FK5 4RB, UK
→ website
In 2008 BenRiach Distillery Co.Ltd. purchased Glendronach distillery once again from Pernod Ricard"s Chivas Brothers.
The company also produces 2 export-only blended Scotch Whisky brands: Clan Murray and Glen Bervie.
BenRiach Distillery Co.Ltd. was founded by Scotch whisky industry veteran Billy Walker and South African Intra Trading (Geoff Bell and Wayne Keiswetter). The consortium bought the mothballed Benriach distillery from Pernod-Ricard"s Chivas Brothers in 2004 and reopened it under the slightly tweaked name "BenRiach".
from The Internets