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Here you will find our collection of old and rare whiskies. Whiskies that went on cask far back in the the last century, whiskies that matured for an exceptionally long time, whiskies from closed distilleries ... Rare and with collector's value. Unique bottles that you won't find anywhere else. These are bottles for a special occasion or as an investment object. In any case: these are bottles of exceptional value in every respect!
The name Coleburn, in relation to single malt whisky, no longer means much to many people. The Speyside Distillery closed in 1985 and there have never appeared many bottlings of their whisky. That makes this 21-year-old Rare Malts edition unique! (59.4%)
Where can you come across bottles like this anymore? Well, with us! Some still mourn the closing of the Convalmore Distillery in 1985. Rightly so! This 26-year-old Convalmore single malt whisky can certainly soothe that sadness! (bottled at 46%)
After an eventful existence, the Dallas Dhu distillery closed in 1983, after which fewer and fewer bottlings of this single malt whisky were released in the following years. In 2007, there was this Jack Wiebers bottling, 32 years old, bourbon-aged, 51.1%.
This was already a very special bourbon whiskey in 2015 when this Four Roses bottling was released: the last of the Barrel Strength series under the watchful eye of master distiller Jim Rutledge. And now, 6 years later, it is also rare! At 54.3%.
New bottlings of Glen Albyn single malt whisky, the distillery of which closed in 1983, will hardly be released anymore. That's why this 26-year-old Rare Malts bottling from 2002 is worth attention alone. A Highlander with a character of its own. (54.8%)
You can't go wrong with a Glen Grant single malt whisky, but with this bottle you really get something exceptional! The spirit for this 21-year-old Speysider was vatted in a bourbon cask almost 75 years ago. It came out of that cask in 1984. (45%)
Next to Highland distillery Glen Ord there is a malting house for regional barley. This supplies the malt from which the Glen Ord single malt whisky is distilled. In 1997, a 23-year-old bottling of that whisky appeared in the Rare Malts Selection. (59.8%)
This is not just any 8 year old Glendronach single malt whisky. You can tell by the bottle (a Dumpy Green Bottle, 75 cl, with a withered, discolored seal). This is a bottling from perhaps the 1970s, maybe earlier. This is a real 'old skool' dram! (43%)
The distinctive, highly regarded character of Glendronach's sherried single malt whisky is perfectly expressed in this single cask bottling from 2019. The Highlander matured for no less than 26 years in a carefully selected Oloroso sherry cask. ( 59.8%)
In 1972, a new Glendullan distillery was built next to the old one from 1898. The spirit from both distilleries was mixed before being vatted until the old one closed in 1985. This Rare Malts bottle is an old/new mixed single malt whisky. (26 years, 56.6%
Glenfarclas is a topper when it comes to sherried single malt whisky. And then their single cask bottlings in The Family Casks series belong again to the top of this Speyside distillery. This edition matured for over 30 years in a large sherry cask. 55.6%
After being laid down in 1963, this Glenfiddich single malt whisky was bottled as a Vintage Reserve at the age of 35, just in the previous century. Distillery single-cask bottlings were still a rarity at the time, so this is a real collector's item! 47.6%
When this Jack Wiebers bottling was released in 2006, the Glenglassaugh Distillery had been mothballed for twenty years (only to reopen in 2008). The single malt whisky in this bottling matured for 20 years in a sherry cask and was bottled at 54.6%.
With this Glenlivet we have something special in our shop. It went into the cask in 1952 and was bottled by the Swiss Lateltin after an unknown period. The bottle has a screw cap, and whatever the label says, it's a single malt whisky!
If you really want something special in your liquor cabinet, this is definitely an option: A 25 year old Glenlivet unblended all malt Scotch whisky (what we now call single malt whisky) with vintage 1952! A Special Jubilee Reserve in a 75 cl bottle. (43%)
You don't come across Glenlossie single malt whisky very often, especially not a 40-year-old Glenlossie! What makes this bottling from Gordon & MacPhail even more special is the high cask strength of 60.2% after four decades in a bourbon cask.
In 1985, Highland distillery Glenury Royal closed permanently. Before and after, relatively few bottlings of their single malt whisky were released, but they almost always scored very high. This also applies to this 29-year-old Rare Malts edition. (57%)
Released by Duncan Taylor in 2008 in the Peerless series. And this Highland Park bottling certainly is unparalleled! The Orkney single malt whisky is no less than 40 years old and can now boast a Whiskybase score of over 92 points. (40.8%)
The Imperial Distillery, built in Speyside in 1897, closed a century later, in 1998. Of course, independent bottlings of the single malt whisky have continued to appear since then, but fewer and fewer. This one is from 2013. (17y, bourbon matured, 51.2%)
Almost all bottlings of Inchgower single malt whisky come from independent bottlers. This bottling is an exception because it was released in 2004 after 27 years of maturation as a Rare Malts Selection from distillery owner Diageo. (bottled at 55.6% ABV)
This 25-year-old, sherry-matured Lagavulin single malt whisky is one of the very first whiskies in the Whiskybase, so rightly a Golden Oldie! The label is signed by the then distillery manager G.A. Logie. A Diageo Special Release indeed! (57.2%)
Another stellar release in the Symington's Choice range. Laphroaig 1997 matured for over 25 years. Smoky, fat, medicinal and powerful. No subtle whisky here. The whisky aged in a bourbon hogshead, even though the colour would suggest a sherry influence.
The label shows that this is an older bottling from Gordon & MacPhail, but we don't know precisely from when. What we do know is that it is a Linkwood single malt whisky and that it has matured for 15 years. Now this will be a unique bottle. (40%)
A Littlemill single malt whisky where the emphasis is more on the wood than on the fruity notes. In this way this 22-year-old bottling by Berry Bros & Rudd shows us a different, surprising side of this Lowlander. Bottled in 2013, at 46%.
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