Glenlivet 1954 Private Collection 55 Year Old Sherry Hogshead by Gordon & MacPhail

Glenlivet 1954 Private Collection 55 Year Old Sherry Hogshead by Gordon & MacPhail

$7,800 AUD

50.6% ABV 700ml

This is a 55-year-old bottling from casks acquired by Gordon & Macphail. Distilled in 1954 and bottled in the year 2010 at a nice drinking strength of 50.6%. It came from a single cask number #2736 which produced a mere191 bottles for worldwide distribution, hence its incredible scarcity.

This expression is all the more special because it was matured in a first fill Sherry hogshead barrel. Since it was a fresh cask that hadn’t previously been used to age scotch, it imparted an extraordinarily rich, intense profile of European oak and dark Oloroso Sherry characteristics without turning the liquid overly bitter or astringent given its 55-year maturation.

What is even more remarkable is that despite over five decades in wood, it has maintained a natural cask strength of 50.6% ABV. Typically, the “angels’ share” causes the alcohol percentage to drop drastically over such a long time. Keeping a strength this high after 55 years ensures a full bodied, unadulterated result.

Tasting notes.

Nose: heavy, concentrated aromas of dark dried fruits (figs, dates, prunes), dark chocolate, old, polished oak, leather, and warm baking spices like nutmeg and cinnamon.

Pallet: rich, viscous and coating. Expect layers of bittersweet orange marmalade, roasted coffee, beans, dark cocoa, and complex rancio notes.

Finish: long, warming and dry with lingering wood spices, resinous oak, and a faint hint of herbal menthol or liquorice.

This product is located in the United Kingdom.

Distillery

The Glenlivet Distillery

The Glenlivet distillery must remain a shrine to be visited by every true devotee of the amber liquid and any serious student of whisky lore. Its pre-license history is well known and reflects the romance and dramas of the illicit distilling years of the early 19th century.

From illicit smuggler to one of the first ever licensed distillers in 1824 following the passing of the Excise Act the previous year, George Smith of Upper Drummin, with a little help from his powerful landlord, the Duke of Gordon, quickly established himself as the premier distiller of the glens. A new distillery was built at Minmore in 1858 called Glenlivet and that has remained its home ever since.

Such was Glenlivet’s reputation that many Speyside distilleries hyphenated their own names with the Glenlivet suffix, and so the Smiths adopted the definite article as a prefix to create The Glenlivet. The latter remained in the hands of the Smiths until the company merged in 1952 with an equally illustrious enterprise, J and J Grant of Glen Grant fame. Together, they formed The Glenlivet and Glen Grant Distilleries Limited, only to merge in 1970 with Hill, Thomson to form The Glenlivet Distillers Limited, the entire enterprise becoming part of the Seagram empire in 1977. When Pernod-Ricard picked over the Seagram Scotch whisky assets, which they acquired in 2001, they quickly gave Glenlivet flag ship status within their extensive distillery inventory. This was underlined in 2009 with a major expansion, which saw capacity increased by 75%.