Tamdhu

Tamdhu 30 Year Old 1989 Hunter Laing Old & Rare Platinum Single Cask Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2019) 70cl

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SKU: 5060354271650
Tamdhu 30 Year Old 1988 - Old & Rare Platinum (Hunter Laing) Whisky 70cl A rich and fruity whisky from a distillery known for producing big drams – Tamdhu. Distilled...

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Tamdhu 30 Year Old 1989 Hunter Laing Old & Rare Platinum Single Cask Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2019) 70cl
£599.00 GBP

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Tamdhu 30 Year Old 1988 - Old & Rare Platinum (Hunter Laing) Whisky 70cl

A rich and fruity whisky from a distillery known for producing big drams – Tamdhu. Distilled in 1989 and aged for 30 years before bottling by Hunter Laing for the Old & Rare range, it's picked up sweet and sticky notes, as well as developing layers of fruit and spice over the years in cask.

The Old & Rare Range from Hunter Laing contains whisky that it believes deserves greater recognition due to the unique and remarkable qualities the whisky possesses. Bottled in distinctive squat bottles, this range of single cask whiskies offers relatively few examples due to the angels' share taken during the maturation process.

Distilled: 1989

Bottled: 2019

Age: 30 Years Old

Cask Type: Sherry Butt

Bottle Number: 16 / 193

About Tamdhu

A major player in blends such as The Famous Grouse and Cutty Sark, Tamdhu was also the spiritual home of the lesser seen (but high quality) Dunhill blend.

Although a few official single malt bottlings appeared, including a light-bodied 10-year-old, Tamdhu could hardly be regarded as a frontline player. It has a fragrant fruitiness with notes of honey and apple but sufficient weight to cope with ageing in ex-Sherry casks.

Like neighbouring Knockando, this is another late 19th century railway distillery which has quietly provided fillings for blends ever since. It was built in 1897 by a group of blenders headed by William Grant who was both a director of Highland Distillers and, handily enough, on the board of the Elgin bank. The famous distillery designer Charles Doig was the architect. ‘[It is] perhaps the most efficient and designed distillery of its era,’ wrote Alfred Barnard in 1898.

Highland Distillers (now Edrington) purchased it outright in 1899, but like many sites it had a rocky time, closing from 1927 and remaining silent for two decades. Soon after its reopening, the old floor maltings were replaced with 10 Saladin boxes, each capable of holding 22 tons of malt. This would become the last site in Scotland to retain this method of malting and was one of the few distilleries in the modern era to malt all of its own requirements (the others being Springbank, Glen Ord and more recently, Roseisle). As well as its own needs, it supplied all of the malt for Glenrothes and the unpeated component of Highland Park’s.

Tamdhu grew substantially in the 1970s with four stills added to the original pair, while a change in wood policy in the 1990s saw it being filled exclusively into Edrington’s bespoke ex-Sherry casks.

Somewhat surprisingly, Edrington mothballed it in 2010, but two years later, Ian MacLeod stepped in. The firm has since installed new washbacks, built new warehouses, opened a visitors' centre (in the old Dalbeallie station) and released a 100% Sherried 10-year-old. Older releases are planned.

54.4% ABV

70cl

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

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