Old Pulteney 33 Year Old 1983 Sherry Cask 700ml bottle - Scotch Whisky whisky
Scotch Whisky Highland Whisky

Pulteney

Old Pulteney 33 Year Old 1983 Sherry Cask

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Volume

700ml

ABV

46%

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Finished in ex-oloroso sherry barrels, this is a rich and chocolatey Old Pulteney with undertones of stewed fruit and toffee. More than 33 years old, this is a fine single malt and...

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Old Pulteney 33 Year Old 1983 Sherry Cask

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Product Information

Product Details

Name Old Pulteney 33 Year Old 1983 Sherry Cask
Brand Pulteney
Average Price £750.00

Product Properties

Volume 700ml
Alcohol Content (ABV) 46%
Country of Origin Scotland
Created On CasKompare 05-08-2022

Product Description

Finished in ex-oloroso sherry barrels, this is a rich and chocolatey Old Pulteney with undertones of stewed fruit and toffee. More than 33 years old, this is a fine single malt and a wonderful new addition to the Old Pulteney range.
~ Master of Malt

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About The Brand: Pulteney

In Wick, Caithness, a Highland region of Scotland, the Pulteney Distillery is a malt whisky manufacturing and maturation facility. The distillery includes a tourist center in Huddart Street and makes Old Pulteney single malt whiskey in a variety of ages. Sir William Pulteney, after whom Pulteneytown is called, founded the distillery in 1826. He passed away in 1805. When it was founded, the distillery was the furthest north on the Scottish mainland (Wolfburn Distillery in Thurso has since supplanted it), and it was almost unreachable unless by water. Sea transport was used to bring in the barley and to transport the whiskey. Many distillery employees also worked as fishers. Although Wick's herring fishing business is no longer an integral part of everyday life, the distillery is still in operation and continues to produce one of the best Highland single malts on the market. The whisky's aging in sea air is thought to have given it certain qualities. Following the local parish's enforcement of prohibition laws, the distillery closed in 1930 due to dwindling business. It reopened in 1951 after the vote was overturned and the legislation was repealed. Inver House Distillers presently owns it. Thomas Telford built an ancient mill, which is used at the Pulteney site. Three or four kilometers to the south, a grain mill is said to have been powered by this stream, which emerges from Loch Hempriggs.

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