Sunday, 11 May 2014

Tasting at Highland Park



I participated in a tasting of seven whiskies at Highland Park Distillery on April 22nd 2014. The whiskies were the standard 12Y, 15Y, 18Y, 21Y, 25Y, 30Y and a 46Y cask sample of an American oak cask from 1968.  Highland Park is matured in sherry casks made of European and American oak. Some independent bottlers mature in bourbon casks. The Highland Park whiskies have a light sweet heathery smokiness about them, quite different from the wood flavour typical for Islay whiskies.
Highland Park is malting 20% of their malt on site. 80% is sourced from Simpsons.
Highland Park stores 80% of their whisky on site, while 20% is stored in the Glasgow area. The finished product has the same 80-20 mix. The oldest cask in the warehouses is more than 100 years old, and the oldest whisky in store is 56 to 57 years old.
The 12Y is a nice whisky with a pronounced sherry flavour by its own, but compared with the others the new make is overpowering the whisky. The 12Y has some vanilla and cinnamon.
The 15Y is light fruity and floral on a bed of vanilla. It’s the one closest to the 46Y in flavour.
The 18Y is like candy with a delicate combination of stewed fruit and floral notes. I got a dry aftertaste with light coco at the end. This is good value for money.
The 21Y is back at 47.5% with the 3rd filling, after a visit at 40% in the 2nd filling. Approximately 10% of the whisky is 30 years old and 10% 40 years old refill. The rest is 40-50% first fill. The 21Y has sherry nose with linoleum in the background and a dry finish.
The 25Y is a round balanced whisky with pronounced sherry nose. It has a floral and candy like background with a light dry aftertaste.
The 30Y is matured in 100% refill (2.fill and 3.fill) sherry casks. It is round and balanced with sherry, stewed fruit, candy and vanilla on the nose, with a dry aftertaste.
The last whisky was av 46 years old cask sample from a second or third fill American oak cask filled in 1968. It’s extremely round and balanced with vanilla and candy character, and some sherry and oak in the background. It is the best of the whiskies, but not commercially available.
Type
Alc.
Eur. wood
First fill
Colour
Sherry
Fav.
12Y
40%
80%
15-20%
2
5
7
15Y
40%
40%
20-25%
3
2
6
18Y
43%
80%
45%
4
3
4
21Y
47.5%
20%
15%?
5
3
4
25Y
45.7%
80%
50%
5
6
3
30Y
48.1%
80%
0%
7
7
2
46Y
40.1%
0%
0%
1
1
1

In the table, colour is ranged from light to dark and sherry flavour from light to heavy.
The percentages of European oak and first fill is not confirmed and is to be regarded as work in progress.
I tried, Harald, one of the travel retail whiskies in the Warrior series last night, and compared it to the 18 year old. They are priced at the same level, but there is a huge difference in quality. The 18Y is fruity, floral and candy like, while I find Harald to have a pronounced nose and flavour of decay. I find Harald to be just one more NAS whisky contributing to destroying the reputation of Scotch, but there are worse NAS whiskies out there.