Banff 1975 37 Years Old Rarest of the Rare by Duncan Taylor

Banff 1975 37 Years Old Rarest of the Rare by Duncan Taylor

$1,495 AUD

45.1% ABV 70 cl

Distilled in August 1975 and bottled in September 2012 from cask no 2232. This is one of only 155 bottles and comes at cask strength with no chill filtering or colouring of any kind.

Tasting Notes

Nose: Surprisingly fresh given the cask age. There are notes of freshly cut fruit salad, hints of apple peel, soft oak and manuka honey. Dried grass.

Palate: Nutmeg, hazelnut and pepper. Spent match heads and more of those apple notes. Very malty with beautiful spices from the cask.

Finish: Dessert wine and hints of crisp citrus. Peppery finish. (Master of Malt).

This product is located in Australia.

Distillery

Banff Distillery

The opening paragraph of my rewrite of the Barnard classic said it all – “The journey back to Banff had a sad purpose, which was to see the remains of what was once a fully operational distillery of the old-fashioned kind, which had out-lived its usefulness and which had recently been demolished – save for the offices and warehouses”.

Banff had had a somewhat chequered history. The original distillery dated from 1824 when it was located at the Mill of Banff. However, a new Banff distillery was built in 1863 at Inverboyndie, which for a time gave its name to the new operation.  A severe fire in 1877 caused the distillery to be rebuilt but it seemed to prosper thereafter until DCL acquired it in 1932 and promptly shut it down. It thus remained inactive until it was brought back to life after the Second World War, but finally closed its doors forever in 1983.

A rather sad end to a distillery which once practised triple distillation and whose “Old Banff” brand of single malt used to be supplied to the House of Commons. Not surprisingly, we have none of the latter but we do have a few private bottlings of this increasingly rare malt whisky from the surviving stocks which I noted at the time of my visit came to no more than 8000 casks “which were now destined only for blending”.