Mortlach

Mortlach 13 Year Old Diageo Special Releases 2021 Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky 70cl

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SKU: 5000281067421
Mortlach 13 Year Old Diageo Special Releases 2021 Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky 70cl The first of the Seven Stills of Dufftown, Mortlach was established in 1823 by James Findlater....

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Mortlach 13 Year Old Diageo Special Releases 2021 Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky 70cl
£125.00 GBP

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Mortlach 13 Year Old Diageo Special Releases 2021 Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky 70cl

The first of the Seven Stills of Dufftown, Mortlach was established in 1823 by James Findlater. After a string of various owners, the distillery's situation did not improve until railway surveyor and engineer George Cowie structured production and distribution.

It is one of the great iconic distilleries for its unique combination of stills and the fact that its spirit is distilled 2.81 times. Described by Dave Broom as, "the beast of Dufftown" its muscular and beefy style has won an army of followers over the years as the distillery recently shifted production from twelve to sixteen mashes per week.

A mighty Mortlach single malt from Diageo's 2021 Special Releases! This expression from the distillery affectionately known as the Beast of Dufftown is a 13 year old whisky, matured in a combination of virgin and refill American oak casks, resulting in a particularly powerful flavour profile. The theme for 2021's Special Releases is Legends Untold, inspired stories real and imagined around each distillery, and this one features a howling wolf on its label. Wolves are great.

Tasting Notes 

Nose : Peach, honey, western pear, blackberry, cutgrass, herb, lemon, vanilla, mango

Palate : Ginger, pepper, honey, apple, vanilla, herbs, smoke, peppermint, tannins of oak

Finish : ginger, peppermint, mango, western pear, nuts, crispy rice crust, blackberry

About Mortlach 

Mortlach’s main claim to fame, production wise, is as the home of the most fiendishly complex distillation regime in Scotland.

The wash (from clear wort and long fermentation) is split between three wash stills; No. 3 wash still and No.3 spirit still work in tandem and as per normal.

The low wines from wash stills No. 1 and 2 is, however, split into two parts. The first 80% of the run is collected as the charge for spirit still No. 2. The remaining 20% (called weak feints) forms the charge for spirit still No.1 otherwise known as ‘The Wee Witchie’. This distils the weak feints three times with only the heart of the final run being collected. It all adds up to the new make spirit having been distilled 2.81 times.

In addition to this, all the stills are run relatively speedily with no air rests to rejuvenate the copper and all lyne arms running into cold worm tubs. The result of this complex regime in a copper-starved environment is a building up of sulphur and ‘meatiness’ in the new make spirit, with the ‘dud runs’ on the Wee Witchie providing an extra meaty boost. Although it is aged in a mix of casks, Mortlach’s weight makes it an ideal partner with ex-Sherry casks.

While other meaty spirits are made [most notably Benrinnes and Dailuaine] none have Mortlach’s weight, meaning that this is a highly-prized base note for blends. As a result, there has been little stock available for single malt bottlings bar the occasional independent bottlings (most notably with Gordon & MacPhail) and small batches of a 16-year-old in Diageo’s Flora & Fauna range. Mortlach seemed destined to remain a cult malt.

In 2014, however, that changed with the launch of a four-strong range: Rare Old, Special Strength, (both no-age-statement), 18-year-old, and 25-year-old.

Mortlach was the name of the original village which sprang up around the abbey of the name, founded by Saint Moluag in the 7th century. With the building of Dufftown in 1817 the old name fell in abeyance – apart from the distillery.

The distillery was the first to be licensed within Dufftown, being founded by James Findlater, Donald Mackintosh and Alex Gordon in 1823. It passed briefly into the hands of the Grant brothers of Glen Grant fame who gutted the buildings and used the equipment for their distillery in Rothes.

It was George Cowie and his son Alexander who, from the 1850s on, recommenced whisky production and steered Mortlach to a pre-eminent position as a blending malt.

Although no-one is sure where the unique distillation regime originated, its adherence to richness and weight singles Mortlach out as one of the distilleries with a robust belief in the older ways of making whisky.

It remained in the Cowie’s hands until 1923 when it became part of John Walker & Sons and from there via DCL into Diageo.

In 2014, it was announced that a mirror image of the existing distillery would be built which, when completed, will double total capacity

55.9% ABV
70cl

 

Product specifications table
Specification name Specification Value
Country Scotland
Region Speyside
Whiskey style Single malt
Whiskey variety Scotch

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