Bladnoch

Bladnoch 31 Year Old 1991 Mackillop's Choice Single Pedro Ximenez Sherry Cask #354924 Lowland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2022) 70cl

Regular price £429.00 GBP
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SKU: BLAD31MACK1991PX
Bladnoch 31 Year Old 1991 Mackillop's Choice Single Pedro Ximenez Sherry Cask #354924 Lowland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2022) 70cl 1 of 150 bottles produced from a single PX Sherry...

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Bladnoch 31 Year Old 1991 Mackillop's Choice Single Pedro Ximenez Sherry Cask #354924 Lowland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2022) 70cl
£429.00 GBP

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Bladnoch 31 Year Old 1991 Mackillop's Choice Single Pedro Ximenez Sherry Cask #354924 Lowland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2022) 70cl

1 of 150 bottles produced from a single PX Sherry cask.

Imagine what colour this would be if it was in the cask for longer. Incredible darkness and rich sherry.

“Mackillop’s Choice” is a range of specially selected Single Malt Scotch Whiskies drawn from individual casks. Founded in 1996 by Angus Dundee Distillers (owner of the Glencadam and Tomintoul distilleries). It is named after Lorne Mackillop. Lorne Mackillop is the heir to the chief of the Mackillop Clan, which was all but wiped out by the English in the aftermath of the battle of Culloden in 1745 during the Jabobite Rebellion. Lorne selects the casks that are bottled in the Mackillop’s Choice range. It is a range of specially selected single malt Scotch whiskies drawn from individual casks, and are bottled at either 43% or 46% alcohol, but more predominantly at their natural cask strength, without chill-filtering or the addition of any caramel colouring, which helps preserve the malts natural characteristics of aroma and taste.

TASTING NOTES

Not really needed. Just look at the bottle!

About Bladnoch

It was 1817 when John and Thomas McClelland took out a licence to make whisky on their farm in the hamlet of Bladnoch near Wigtown in the far south-west of Scotland. It stayed in family ownership until 1905, when it was one of many stills to close during a period of over-supply and low sales.

Bladnoch is not far from the sea crossing between Stranraer and Larne and twice in its history its saviours have come from Northern Ireland. The first of these was Belfast distiller Dunville & Co. which owned the Royal Irish distillery. It bought Bladnoch in 1911 and continued production – albeit intermittently – until 1937. At that point, Dunville’s directors were spooked by (Scottish-based) DCL’s declaration that Irish whiskey had no future. After DCL turned down the chance to buy the firm, it went into liquidation, despite being profitable and having stock. Bladnoch was closed once more.

Worse was to follow. Its new owner, Ross & Coulter, sold off Bladnoch’s mature stock and sent the distilling equipment to Sweden – and so the story continues, with owners coming and going at rapid rate. Bladnoch reopened in 1956, was expanded to four stills in 1966, became part of Inver House for a decade, and then in 1983 was bought by Arthur Bell & Son. After Bell’s was taken over it was folded into Guinness/UD [now Diageo] and production once again slowed. In 1993, it was officially decommissioned.

The year after, however, two brothers from Northern Ireland bought it with the initial idea of turning the extensive site into a holiday village. A change of heart soon after saw them wishing to start making whisky again – contrary to the terms of sale. It took six years to persuade Diageo to allow them to make 100,000 litres a year – below capacity and as it turned out right on the limits of profitability.

Most of the distillery’s income came from tourism, events and the extensive warehousing rented out to other producers. Production remained intermittent with mothballing taking place in 2009/10. In 2014, the brothers placed it into administration.

In July 2015 Australian businessman David Prior, along with ex-Scotch Whisky Association CEO, Gavin Hewitt, announced the purchase of Bladnoch and plans to restore the distillery to its former glory.

Ahead of its reopening in 2017, three single malts created using existing stocks of Bladnoch (Samsara, Adela and Talia), were released in limited quantities in Australia, the UK and other global markets.

Production at Bladnoch officially restarted in June 2017, with the flow of a grassy, malty Lowland-style spirit.

44.4% ABV

70cl

Product specifications table
Specification name Specification Value
Country Scotland
Region Lowlands
Whiskey style Single malt
Whiskey variety Scotch

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