Glenturret
Volume
700ml
ABV
N/A
Retailers
1
This single cask Glenturret is from the Platinum Old & Rare series of very limited single malts from Hunter Laing & Co. bottled exclusively for The Whisky Shop. Distilled in 1990 a...
Glenturret 30 Year Old Platinum Old & Rare (Hunter Laing)
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This single cask Glenturret is from the Platinum Old & Rare series of very limited single malts from Hunter Laing & Co. bottled exclusively for The Whisky Shop. Distilled in 1990 and bottled in 2021, this 30-year-old is left free from chill filtration and at a natural cask strength of 42.5% abv. Limited to 124 bottles. There are aromas of tropical fruits - pineapple, mango and melon - alongside some soft oak, crème caramel and some gentle floral notes. With time it releases a bit more lemon zest, fresh meadow grasses and flowers, and some creamy hot chocolate. On the palate the flavours are gentle with light honey sweetness. It shows it's maturity with rich oak then stone fruits such as yellow plums and peaches developing into green grapes, sugar coated lemon and white chocolate finishing up with ruch toffee and vanilla.
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On the banks of the Turret River, the Glenturret Distillery is located two miles (three kilometers) northwest of Crieff in Perthshire, Scotland. The distillery is tucked away in a glen, and its seclusion may have played a role in its early history as the home of a number of illegal bothy stills. It was believed that the tall hills on each side of the distillery served as lookout spots for the smugglers. The valley is 'a wonderful paradise to painters, who come in huge numbers to translate some of its sublime charms to canvas,' according to Alfred Barnard, who visited the distillery at the time. The Monzievaird and Strowan parish is where the distillery is situated. The distillery had been controlled by illegal distillers from 1717 in an effort to evade taxes until it was formally created in 1763. Because of its early history, Glenturret has been dubbed the oldest distillery in Scotland, a claim that other businesses like Littlemill or Strathisla dispute. The Drummond family had previously owned the distillery under the name 'Hosh.' 'Hosh' derives from the Irish word 'cois,' which means foot. John McCallum took control of it from 1845 to 1875, the year of its centennial, when Thomas Stewart assumed it and changed its name to Glenturret.
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