Glenturret 10 year old Amarone Finish Lady of the Glen Cask 303
Lady of the Glen
Regular price £75.00
Glenturret 10 year old Amarone Finish Lady of the Glen Cask 303
Glenturret distillery produces a peated whisky and it is usually called Ruadh Maor. This release by Lady of the Glen was aged in traditional hogsheads and was then finished in a wine barrique. The whisky was bottled at natural cask strength (61.8% ABV) and with no added colouring nor chill-filtration involved. Just 315 bottles were released.
Lady of the Glen Independent Bottlers
Lady of the Glen is an independent bottler bringing international whisky enthusiasts an exclusive taste of Scotland’s traditional spirit. This means they are part detective and a bit magician as they seek, source, and look after rare single malt whiskies from distilleries across Scotland, turning them into something special through traditional bottling techniques.
All Lady of the Glen brand releases are hand bottled at natural cask strength, without any chill filtering or colouring which means the original taste remains unaffected and the end flavour is pure, full, and always unique.
Glenturret distillery
This distillery claims to be Scotland's oldest. It is located at The Hosh, Perthshire. Its location had plenty of illicit distilleries in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Rogue distillers wanted to earn extra cash by selling their spirit and dreaded the idea of paying taxes on their product. They also perceived the new UK government as a 'foreign government'.
A legal distillery was founded very close to the site of the current Glenturret site in 1818. That distillery started operating under the name The Hosh but changed its name in 1875. The distillery suffered during the Pattison crisis and the WWI restrictions. Mitchell Brothers, the owners at the time, used the site as a warehouse for whiskies from other distilleries. The parent company did not survive the economic ripples caused by the prohibition in the US in the 1920's and went bankrupt. Glenturret was dismantled in 1928.
The empty site was acquired by a brand new company headed by James Fairlie. The new company was unrelated to the Mitchell Brothers and to the previous Glenturret distilelry. Using second hand equipment from Tullibardine distillery, this new company used the old buildings of Glenturret. This new distillery enjoyed the high demand for whisky in the 1960's.
With the increased popularity of whisky tourism around the country, the founders of Glenturret decided to open a visitor centre. The distillery changed hands just a couple of times between the 1980's and 1990's and today the current owners are The Edrington group who in 2002 created The Famous Grouse Experience.
The style of Glenturret is light, delicate and has acidic notes. This is achieved by a long fermentation period, and an unusual shape of pot stills. Single malt bottlings are not very common.