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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!
This bottle is one of the first 500 bottles in the Whiskybase. This is also an exceptional bottle in other respects: it is a 32-year-old, sherried Springbank single malt whisky with a vintage year of 1971! And then it scores more than 91 points! (46%)
There are whisky enthusiasts who still regret the closure of the Lochside Distillery in 1992. The single malt whisky from the Highland distillery was highly appreciated! We hope to provide some comfort with this 19-year-old Lochside bottling from 2011.
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%)
About ten years ago, bottler Cadenhead released this special bottling for the Belgian market. It is a 35 year (!) old Tomatin single malt whisky that matured in a bourbon cask. Nearly 200 tasters gave this dram an average of 90 points! (46.5%)
A Bowmore bottling from 2005: the 12-year-old standard single malt whisky with the classic seagull label. Interesting, especially for many fans of the peated whisky from this Islay distillery, one of the oldest distilleries in Scotland. (40%)
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%
This very special bottling of a 30-year-old Islay single malt whisky appeared in the small-batch series A Marriage of Casks under The Single Malts of Scotland label. Which distillery is it exactly? Maybe you can taste it! (47.5%)
Fruit notes such as ripe apple, mandarin orange and raspberry, notes such as black pepper, cloves and, for example, beeswax, you'll find all this and more in this extraordinary Benromach bottling. The 40-year-old single malt whisky is bottled at 56.5%.
A unique The Family Casks bottling from Speyside distillery Glenfarclas. In 1985 the single malt whisky went into the cask, a refill sherry cask, and about 36 years later in 2022 it was bottled at a cask strength of 41.9% in an edition of 266 bottles.
Blair Athol is one of the oldest distilleries in Scotland. In 2003, a 27-year-old bottling of the single malt whisky appeared in the Rare Malts Selection series. Creamy, dark fruit, marzipan, oak, flowers, and chocolate are just some of the keywords.
This is a bottling from almost 30 years ago, not as old as the medieval-looking label seems to suggest, but still... It is a 10-year-old Linkwood single malt whisky with the vintage year of 1984. A real 'old school' whisky. It was bottled at 50%.
It is not possible today to determine exactly when this Glendronach single malt whisky was bottled. It must have been at least decades ago. This 'old school' Highlands malt is 12 years old and it was bottled for the Italian market, at 43%.
In 2011 and 2012, the BenRiach distillery bottled a number of special casks of its single malt whisky especially for the Belgian Asta Morris. This edition, the 1977, matured for 33 years in a refill bourbon cask and was bottled at 45.7% cask strength.
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 cask from which this Connemara single malt whisky was bottled in 2008 was selected by Guy Boyen of the Belgian Tasttoe. The Irish peated single malt had matured for 15 years in that (bourbon) cask and was bottled at a cask strength of 58.5%.
Very popular are those old Macallan single malt whiskies like this one. With its 1979 vintage and its maturation in an old-fashioned sherry cask, this 18-year-old Speysider, bottled in 1997, scores very high in the Whiskybase with almost 93 points. ( 43%)
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%)
In their top series Private Collection, bottler Gordon & MacPhail has released this 34 year old Miltonduff single malt whisky. The bottler allowed the spirit for this whisky to mature in an own, carefully selected refill bourbon cask. (48.7%)
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%)
The longer the distillery was closed, the fewer Littlemill bottlings hit the market. We now have a bottle of a Malts of Scotland bottling from 2010. With its 20 years of aging in a bourbon cask, it is really something for the Littlemill enthusiast! 53.9%
Bottler Gordon & MacPhail released this very special Glen Grant in 2005: the Speyside single malt whisky is no less than 50 years old (with vintage 1955). It matured in first -fill sherry casks. And now, in 2022, it scores over 92 points on Whiskybase!
A 1975 Macallan! The lovers of 'old school' sherried single malt whisky are now immediately alerted! This is a 25 year old Anniversary Malt, bottled in the year 2000. And of course matured in classic ex-sherry casks. A rare bottle now. (43%)
Remarkable: it was only after it closed in 2002 that The Caperdonich Distillery released bottlings of its own single malt whisky. This is a 21 year old one in the Small Batch Release series. Also special: it is a peated version! Bottled in 2019 at 48%.
Not often do we have a whisky that is almost half a century old in the store. But now we do! This Glenlossie single malt whisky went in a bourbon cask in 1966 and was bottled by Cadenhead in 2014! A real old school dram, fruity with a hint of smoke. 43,5%
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