Deanston

Deanston 8 Year Old 2017 SMWS Single 1st Fill Bourbon Barrel 79.15 Fifty Shades of Citrus Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2026) 70cl

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SKU: DEAN8SMWS79.15
Deanston 8 Year Old 2017 SMWS Single 1st Fill Bourbon Barrel 79.15 Fifty Shades of Citrus Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2026) 70cl 1 of 229 bottles produced from a...

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Deanston 8 Year Old 2017 SMWS Single 1st Fill Bourbon Barrel 79.15 Fifty Shades of Citrus Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2026) 70cl
£99.00 GBP

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Deanston 8 Year Old 2017 SMWS Single 1st Fill Bourbon Barrel 79.15 Fifty Shades of Citrus Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2026) 70cl

1 of 229 bottles produced from a 1st fill bourbon barrel

The Scotch Malt Whisky Society was founded in Edinburgh in 1983 by Phillip 'Pip' Hills who, while travelling around Scotland in the 1970s, fell in love with whiskies drawn straight from the cask. After he expanded his syndicate the Society was purchased by Glenmorangie PLC in 2004. In 2015, the Society was sold back to private investors. In June 2021, the private owners floated the holding company The Artisanal Spirits Company plc on the Alternative Investment Market of the London Stock Exchange.

It has a unique code system where the first number refers to the distillery and the second refers to the cask from which the bottle comes. SMWS also offers the largest range of distilleries of any independent bottler. These curiously named drams really do have something for every whisky lover!

TASTING NOTES

The neat nose on this one revealed a playful and pleasingly light, zingy and refreshing fruitiness. We also detected jelly beans, lemon and lime bonbons, citrus curds, finger limes, bay leaf and pink grapefruit. It appeared to be all about the citrus, the Panel agreed. With water things became richer and more emphatically cereally, toasty and waxy, with notes of fresh warm draff, freshly baked breads, sourdough starter and autolytic champagne. The palate was wonderfully natural and naked, full of lemon barley water, malt extract, barley sweetness, lime curd, pineapple and chopped hazelnuts. Reduction brought a lick of peppery warmth, watercress, pithy citrus rinds and a tang of horseradish.

About Deanston

Even though it was built in the late 1960s, Deanston has retained some old-style features in kit and distilling regime.

Its mash tun is open-topped for example, while the way it is run – low gravity worts, long fermentation, slow distillation – helps to produce a new make style which is in the waxy quadrant. This represents a switch back to the original style. In the Invergordon era, Deanston had conformed to a modern style of production, making a light dry ‘nutty-spicy’ make.

Today organic barley is also run through the stills and, in common with all of Burn Stewart’s single malts, it is bottled without chill-filtering or caramel tinting.

There are many distilleries in Scotland which started life as mills, but none of them had quite the scale of Deanston. This huge plant was constructed on the banks of the fast-flowing River Teith in 1785 by Richard Arkwright who used it as one of the sites for the development of the Spinning Jenny. It also had what was claimed to be the largest water wheel in Europe.

Weaving continued here until 1964 when the buildings were bought by Brodie Hepburn [see Tullibardine, Macduff]. Production started in 1969, but its original owners only had it for three years before the company was bought by private label specialist Invergordon. It ran for a decade before the ‘80s whisky slump forced its owner to shut it down. Eight years later, it was bought for £2.1m by Burn Stewart.

It can claim to be one of the greenest distilleries in Scotland. All of its power is generated by a turbine house which processes 20 million litres of water an hour. The excess electricity is then sold to the National Grid.

Although single malt bottlings started relatively early – in 1974 – it is only recently that Deanston has been elevated to a front-line single malt brand.

60.1% ABV

70cl

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

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