Talisker 25 Years Old 1975 Limited Edition

Talisker 25 Years Old 1975 Limited Edition

$1,950 AUD

59.9% ABV 
70 cl

Possibly the first limited official Talisker release of 6000 bottles, distilled in 1973 and bottled in 2001 at 59.9% ABV.

Tasting Notes.

Colour: full gold.

Nose: it seems that there's kind of a fight between the spirit and the sherry here, at least for a while, but both mingle together pretty nicely after a few seconds, and do create an 'extra-dimension'. Something like peated and peppered Seville oranges. After that it's all on orange cake, vanilla fudge and chestnut honey (a very aromatic honey), with the maritime side coming out but not too much. Lovely anyway.

With water: more sherry, of the beefy kind.  Barbecued steak, stout beer and smoked ham as well as dried kelp. More complex indeed.

Mouth (neat): ultra-big, starting more on bitter oranges and something like icing sugar than on the expected peat-pack.  Something slightly 'unbalanced' (orangeade) but let's try it with water. Great news, these disturbing 'chemically orangey' notes vanished and we're all on dried mushrooms, Havana tobacco and dried ginger now. Something like lychees and guavas as well - yes, that was unexpected. It got truly beautiful.

Finnish: long, balanced, sort of 'appeased', both fruity and peaty/peppery.

90 points (Whisky Fun)

 

This product is located in Australia.

Distillery

Talisker Distillery

One of Scotland’s more remote distilleries, it can best be described by some historical extracts from “The Whisky Distilleries of Scotland and Ireland” (1987).

“The approach to Talisker is through rather bleak countryside which eventually opens up into a green, fertile valley which leads down to Loch Harport, on whose banks the distillery stands.

Talisker – also known for a time as Carbost – has had a colourful history…… It was built in 1830 by the brothers Hugh and Kenneth MacAskill……. The distillery was purchased in 1868 by J.R.W. Anderson, who was later imprisoned for accepting payment from customers for whisky which he claimed had been distilled and placed in bond for them, but which, in fact, never existed”.

 The MacAskill brothers, who were said to have been active in the clearances of small tenant farmers from the Talisker estate, were bankrupted in 1848. Volatility and uncertainty seem to have been the order of the day for the next 50 years until a merger took place in 1898 with other whisky interests to form Dailuaine-Talisker Distilleries Limited. However, even that venture had its problems until it was eventually acquired by a consortium of major Scotch whisky blenders in 1916 and through that route became part of the DCL empire in 1925.

Its island location on Skye’s Minginish Peninsula, remote even by today’s standards, has ensured that the Talisker make has a very distinctive character. It has been bottled as a single malt for many years and is now one of the leading players in Diageo’s Classic Malts collections. I recorded the fact that at the time of my visit in 1985 the then manager, Mr Derek Bottomer, a keen mountaineer, set me on the road with “… a 1972 whisky straight from a sherry wood cask at 64.2% ABV. A magnificent dram, which has been described as halfway between an Islay and a Highlander”. There is nothing to suggest that that is still not the case today!