Description
Whiskey: Glen Moray 21 Year Old Portwood Finish – Elgin Heritage | 700ML
Part of Glen Moray’s core range comes this tasty 21 Year Old Portwood expression. The single malt spent much of its maturation in bourbon casks, before it was transferred to Port casks for a finishing period. The fruity Speysider was bottled at 46.3% ABV without chill-filtration.
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Size: 700ML
Proof: 92.6 (46.3%ABV)
Origin: Scotland
Distillery: Glen Moray
Part of Glen Moray’s core range comes this tasty 21 Year Old Portwood expression. The single malt spent much of its maturation in bourbon casks, before it was transferred to Port casks for a finishing period. The fruity Speysider was bottled at 46.3% ABV without chill-filtration.
Glen Moray 21 Year Old Portwood Finish – Elgin Heritage | 700ML Tasting Notes
Nose: Blueberry muffins, candied ginger, caramel digestives and vanilla shortbread.
Palate: Liquorice and dark chocolate, with jammy forest fruit and a mixture of chilli and ginger heat.
Finish: Chocolate covered raisins and a drizzle of toffee.
Distillery Information
Glen Moray was built on the site of the West Brewery to the west of Elgin on the banks of the River Lossie. Following reconstruction, Glen Moray Distillery was founded in 1897. It was not long before the distillery closed in 1910, though it reopened a couple of years later, shortly before closing once more. In 1920, Macdonald and Muir acquired the distillery and once more spirit flowed from the stills. The distillery operated its own floor maltings, converting to a Saladin Box in 1957, which remained in use until 1978. During the 1970s, the two original stills were replaced and two further stills were added, giving the distillery a total yearly capacity of two million litres. In 1996 Macdonald and Muir Ltd renamed itself Glenmorangie Plc and in 2004 the group was acquired by Louis Vuitton Mot Hennessy, for the princely sum of 300 million. The Glenmorangie distillery pioneered exotic wood finishes and Glen Moray championed white wine finishes, releasing a Chardonnay finish and two Chenin Blanc finishes in 1999. Most of the whisky from Glen Moray has long since been used in blended Scotch. More recently, the Glenmorangie Co decided to cease producing whisky for blending and subsequently, in 2008, the distillery was put up for sale. There are several official house bottlings, but independent bottlings are rather rare.




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