Lochside

Lochside 31 Year Old 1991 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice Recollection Series 2 Single Refill Bourbon Barrel #15194 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2023) 70cl

Regular price £1,499.00 GBP
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SKU: G&MLOCHS31CC1991
Lochside 31 Year Old 1991 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice Recollection Series 2 Single Refill Bourbon Barrel #15194 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2023) 70cl 1 of 57 bottles from...

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Lochside 31 Year Old 1991 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice Recollection Series 2 Single Refill Bourbon Barrel #15194 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2023) 70cl
£1,499.00 GBP

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Lochside 31 Year Old 1991 Gordon & Macphail Connoisseurs Choice Recollection Series 2 Single Refill Bourbon Barrel #15194 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2023) 70cl

1 of 57 bottles 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: Mellow vanilla notes give way to waxy lemon peel and dried exotic fruits with a touch of ginger.

Palate: Sweet and fruity with peach and passionfruit followed by hints of blackcurrant liquorice and pepper.

Finish: Medium with subtle lingering herbal notes. 

About Lochside

Lochside's imposing white tower was once unmissable, but is now sadly missed from the Montrose landscape.

Not commonly seen these days, but the few bottlings which have appeared showed it to be a medium-bodied malt with plenty of orchard fruitiness in the mid-palate. A significant number of bottlings have come from Sherry casks.

If you had journeyed to Montrose up until 2005 you would have seen Lochside distillery. In fact, you might even have stopped your car just to gawp at the white tower which sat above the town. It was unlike any distillery built before, or since. The tower had nothing to do with whisky, but students of brewery architecture will recognise it as a classic German brauhaus, in this case reinterpreted by none other than Charles Doig in 1899. His design wasn’t an accident – Lochside indeed was a brewery from 1786 until its closure in 1957.

The site was then bought by Joseph Hobbs who by then was the owner of Ben Nevis. Hobbs had spent much of the 1940s working as an agent for National Distillers of America’s Scottish arm, Train & Macintyre, and had already brought two east coast distilleries – Glenury Royal and Glenesk – under their control.

When he bought Lochside he installed a Coffey still – four pots were add in 1961 – and began selling and trading both, as well as blending the two as new makes for the distillery’s Sandy McNab blend. The practise was stopped on Hobbs’ death in 1964.

His son, Joe Junior, retained ownership until 1973 when Spanish distiller Destilerias y Crianzas [DyC] bought it as a source for the some of the malt it used in its top-selling DYC blend. The Coffey still was decommissioned and the distillery ran until the early 1990s when DYC [by then part of Sherry and wine firm Pedro Domecq] was itself taken over by Allied Distillers.

Lochside was considered surplus to requirements by its new parent and with most whisky firms being leery about adding capacity so soon after the slump, it was closed and sold to developers who, sadly, didn’t have the wit to retain the landmark tower in their designs and in 2005 it was demolished.

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

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