Tullibardine

Tullibardine 17 Year Old 2008 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice Single Bourbon Barrel #21603502 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl

Regular price £130.00 GBP
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SKU: G&MTUL17CC2007
Tamnavulin 16 Year Old 2007 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice Single Bourbon Barrel #700370 Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl 1 of 256 bottles produced from a single bourbon...

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Tullibardine 17 Year Old 2008 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice Single Bourbon Barrel #21603502 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl
£130.00 GBP

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Tamnavulin 16 Year Old 2007 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice Single Bourbon Barrel #700370 Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl

1 of 256 bottles produced from a single bourbon barrel

Arguably the most famous independent bottler of Scotch whisky there is. Gordon & MacPhail was founded in Elgin in 1895 by James Gordon and John Alexander MacPhail. It is now owned by the Urquhart Family who have bow bottled over 350 different expressions from around 69 different distilleries. Gordon & MacPhail is the Trading name of Speymalt Whiskies while also owning the Benromach distillery, which they purchased in 1993. Some of the brands include Connoisseurs Choice, Cask Strength, Rare Old and Speymalt.

The Connoisseurs Choice series is known for independently bottling carefully selected individual casks to showcase distillery character and cask influence. 

TASTING NOTES

Nose: Blood orange zest compliments poached pears and charred oak. White peach and vanilla pod lead to grapefruit zest.

Palate: sweet clover honey and banana accompany apricot. Malted biscuit develops alongside ripe apple and marshmallow.

Finish: Medium-Bodied with citrus and black pepper.

About Tullibardine

During its Invergordon era, Tullibardine was set up to produce a light, nutty malt which was mostly used when young and aged in refill casks for buyer-own blends.

The requirements of a single malt house – which Tullibardine became – necessitated some tweaking of the spirit run (introducing more high-toned floral notes now coming to the fore, with the nuttiness being dialled down) and a more 21st century wood policy with a massive influx of fresh casks.

Alcohol has been produced in Blackford for over six centuries. A brewery was operational in 1488 when James IV [the King who famously asked Friar John Cor to make aqua vitae from eight bolls of malt in 1495] stopped to buy a barrel of ale after his coronation at Scone. It could lay claim to be the oldest ‘public’ brewery in the kingdom.

Distilling was also tried. In 1798, William & Henry Bannerman opened the first Tullibardine distillery, though it only ran for a year. In 1814, Andrew Bannerman (presumably a relative) tried again. This time it operated until 1837. By the 19th century, the town had a maltings and three breweries: the original one, Gleneagles Brewery, now owned by the Sharp family, the other two by the Eadie family. Both of Eadie’s plants closed by the turn of the 20th century, leaving Gleneagles to soldier on until 1927. At this point it seemed as if this rich tradition had finally ceased, but in 1949 the famous distillery designer William Delme-Evans bought the Gleneagles Brewery site and built a new distillery there. It was the first to be built in Scotland since 1900.

In 1953 it was bought by blender Brodie Hepburn which increased capacity (see Glenturret) and from there via Invergordon (which bought Brodie Hepburn) into Whyte & Mackay (which in turn bought Invergordon) which promptly mothballed it, though retaining its extensive warehousing.

Tullibardine lay silent from 1994 until 2003, when a business consortium snapped it up. Their idea was to sell off some of the site as a retail park, using the money raised to get distilling up and running again.

In a similar fashion to Bruichladdich, the new owners found that most of the stock had been filled into old, tired casks which though suitable for some aspects of blending were not ideal for a stand-alone single malt brand. An extensive – and expensive – re-casking operation started along with the inevitable rash of ‘finished’ whiskies. The group sold their interest in 2011 to the French wine and spirit group, Picard which owns the Highland Queen and Muirhead’s brands and was looking for capacity.

The (failed) retail park venture has been bought back and a newly repackaged and reformulated range of single malts has been introduced.

58.2% ABV

70cl

Product specifications table
Specification name Specification Value
Country Scotland
Region Highlands
Whiskey style Single malt, Single cask, Cask strength
Whiskey variety Scotch

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