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

“Secret Grain Distillery” 47 Year (1973), Nectar of the Daily Drams

“Secret Grain Distillery” 47 Year (1973), Nectar of the Daily Drams

Whisky: “Secret Grain Distillery” 47 Year (1973), Nectar of the Daily Drams

Country/Region: Scotland/Unknown

ABV: 48.2%

Cask: Oak

Age: 47 Years (Distilled 1973, Bottled 2020)


Nose: Toasted oak with hints of cream and vanilla, light caramel and caramel flan, traces of coffee and candied nuts.

Palate: Medium to full-bodied, vanilla, coconut cream, toasted oak, cardamon, vanilla extract, hints of almond and caramel, peppery spice toward the end.

Finish: Medium-length and drying with sawdust and vanilla.


Score: 4

Mental Image: Mint Condition Trojan Horse

Narrative & Notes: I poured this as dram #17 on a “Holiday Mystery Whisky Advent Calendar” and guessed it was an older Armagnac or Cognac. The tight texture of the dram and the closed-up nature of the flavor profile all had me thinking that this must be a spirit that underwent a long maturation, as oak seemed the dominant force on the flavor profile.

I was wrong, yet I feel at least partially vindicated as this was quite old, and after 47 years in oak, I am not surprised that this mystery single-grain whisky felt oak-dominant. After the reveal, I returned a few days later and poured this a second time. There was not much to the whisky beyond a heavy dose of oaky vanilla. Spice and caramel were fleeting, no more than hints, between the dominant notion of toasted or sun-drenched curing white oak and vanilla.

Overall, single-grain scotch rarely suits my fancy; Strathclyde is a major exception. Like most single-grain whiskies, this lacked a lot of depth, though it is not hard to understand why blenders might prize vanilla-tannic heavy casks like this as components or ingredients for making something else. While I did not fancy this, plenty of other reviewers on Whiskybase were fans, and I do think there is something to be said for how the romance and intrigue of the age statement might make up for any shortcomings.

Image Credit: Whisky Exchange

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