Bowmore 26 Year French Oak Barrique ‘The Vintner’s Trilogy’

An absolutely lovely Bowmore.  Loads of lovely notes from the oak, wine, and peat that really compliment one another.  I enjoyed the bit of decaying vegetation and rot that came through with the stewed fruits and the dark chocolate.  The prominent aroma of chestnuts gave the dram a real unique edge, the note was so unusual I had to check and make sure I was not imaging it.

Cooley 14 Year; The Exclusive Malts

The hints of smoke and caramelization gave the dram some depth, though too much of the spice remained faint and subdued in the background.  Adding water to the dram only seemed to bring out the honeyed sweetness and leave many of the other flavor notes sunk in the background.  It was an interesting dram— I would happily accept a pour of it, but I do not think I will be hunting a bottle any time soon.

Suntory Ao

Ao, one of Suntory’s latest product launches, leverages the monolithic size of the company to blend together whiskies from every corner of the globe (where Suntory at least partially owns a distillery).      According to Suntory, in Japanese Ao means blue and blue is the color of the water that connects each of these distilling regions to one another.  In Tahitian one meaning of the word Ao is world, so in my opinion the label makes more sense if we just pretend as though Suntory intended it to be read in Tahitian.

Bladnoch 21 Year; The Exclusive Malts

My notes became far more positive in each subsequent tasting session.  Some time resting in the bottle, remembering to add a bit of water, and perhaps the nature of the day’s weather all changed the experience just a bit and allowed additional complexity to come through in the glass.

Compass Box No Name 1st Ed.

No Name is a salty maritime dram laced with tar and coal soot.  It is definitely peatier than the Peat Monster, but is still restrained— far from being a peat bomb— the teenage peat and additional of creamy highland malt round off some of the phenolic bite.