Reviews of scotch and world whiskies by a history professor, his wife, bird, and three cats.

November 2022 Digest

November 2022 Digest

Welcome to a brief wrap-up of reviews from November 2022! Life has been a whirlwind of grading, spring preparations, and taking care of our herd of cats while my wife was away on business and family travel.  There were no over-aching themes to the malts reviewed this month as I haphazardly jumped from region to region and style to style.

Early in the month, I departed from scotch to review a trio of Irish whiskies.  Irish whiskey was where I got my first taste of what good whisky could be.  My preference has drifted in a different direction in the years since. Still, it is always great to return and, in this instance, sit with a few whiskies that I was always curious to try.

Beyond the Irish detour, I took three weeks off from drinking scotch this month. I used that time to reset my palate and clear out at least a portion of my whisky review queue— those reviews I had not gotten around to reviewing or editing previously. I did dabble in a bit of sake tasting during those weeks away, and while I am not planning to add another spirit to this website, if I ever do, it would undoubtedly be sake.

It was a busy month, but I still found time to relax with some whisky!  Let us begin with a few numbers.

  • 21 reviews

  • 6.19 average score

  • 15.9 Years average age

Here are a few standouts from the pack:


Best of the Month & Surprise of the Month

By rating alone, the best of the month was clearly Dramfool’s Bruichladdich 11 Year. This lovely unpeated Bruichladdich malt spent all 11 years in a Rivesaltes Barrique. The resulting whisky was unctuous and thick, simultaneously savory and sweet, with gorgeous notions of chili-infused chocolate and cream.

I am giving this bottle both Best and Surprise as I was not expecting to like this malt half as much as I did. I have not typically been a fan of Bruichladdich outside of their peated malts, and I have never been an enormous enthusiast for Rivesaltes maturations. I picked up the bottle with the idea of splitting it with friends and keeping a few ounces to at least taste it. When I finally got around to tasting it, I was bewildered but glad I shared it so others could enjoy it just as much as I did.

An honorable mention for best of the month goes out to the Ledaig 11 Year from Cadenhead. This bottle was a very close second, but that could be true of just about every Ledaig. There are few distilleries I find so consistently excellent.


Value of the Month

There was no competition for this— how in the world did K&L manage to sell this Caol Ila 8 Year from Thompson Brothers at only $50? Not only was the price unbelievable, but the whisky was also fantastic with a beautiful maritime and herbal profile. I expect from anyone else, this same bottle would easily have sold at twice the price.


Glenburgie 30 Year (1954), Gordon & MacPhail

Glenburgie 30 Year (1954), Gordon & MacPhail

Bunnahabhain 30 Year (1987), Hunter Laing Old & Rare

Bunnahabhain 30 Year (1987), Hunter Laing Old & Rare