Strathisla 1957 by Gordon & MacPhail

Strathisla 1957 by Gordon & MacPhail

$3,250 AUD

43% 70 cl

Distilled in 1957 and bottled 50 years later in 2007, this Speyside delight comes with a healthy fill well into the neck and a handsome presentation box.

Independent bottlings have been rare, most coming from Gordon & Macphail, and mostly of considerable age, such as this example.

Tasting Notes

Nose: Sweet with soft fruit aromas - brambles and blackcurrants. Hints of menthol and spearmint with toasted oak. Nose with water: Rose petals with almond oil and nutmeg. A creme brulee and orange peel aroma lingers.

Palate: Black cracked pepper and rich Sherry influences initially with orange peel and grapefruit flavours. An aniseed and cinnamon edge develops. Taste with water: Sweet with white pepper initially. Green apple and strawberry flavours combine with a touch of charred oak.

This product is located in the United Kingdom.

Distillery

Strathisla Distillery

A distillery with a great history and a few name changes over the years, this is Scotland’s oldest operating unit. It is also one of the most attractive distilleries anywhere in the country and has one of the most carefully documented histories of any of them.

My visit took place at a significant time as the then owners – Seagram – were preparing to celebrate the bicentenary of the founding of the distillery in 1786, as Milltown distillery, by George Taylor. He did so on the basis of a charter granted by the Earl of Findlater and Seafield and was licensed to distil from the start although some illicit activity had no doubt taken place at some time.

Milltown eventually became Milton but the whisky itself had long been known as Strathisla, recalling the wide lush valley in which the distillery and the town of Keith lie. In 1951 the distillery’s name was changed again to the more distinctive Strathisla, no doubt to take advantage of the reputation which the product had built for itself. That was a year after Seagram had acquired it following a number of ownership changes including one that had let to bankruptcy and jail time for the previous owner for tax evasion!

The make became closely associated with Chivas Regal, as continues to be the case following Pernod-Ricard’s purchase of Seagram’s whisky interests in 2001.