Loch Lomond

Loch Lomond 8 Year Old 2016 Single 18m FF Loupiac Wine HHD Finish Cask #24/73-3 AIG Women's Open 2025 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl

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SKU: LOLO8AIGWO2025
Loch Lomond 8 Year Old 2016 Single 18m FF Loupiac Wine HHD Finish Cask #24/73-3 AIG Women's Open 2025 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl 1 of 287 bottles...

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Loch Lomond 8 Year Old 2016 Single 18m FF Loupiac Wine HHD Finish Cask #24/73-3 AIG Women's Open 2025 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl
£79.00 GBP

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Loch Lomond 8 Year Old 2016 Single 18m FF Loupiac Wine HHD Finish Cask #24/73-3 AIG Women's Open 2025 Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl

1 of 287 bottles drawn from a single bourbon cask finished in first-fill Loupiac Wine Hogsheads

To honour our partnership with the R&A and the AIG Women’s Open, we have released this Exclusive Cask of Loch Lomond Single Malt Whisky, crafted specially for the AIG Women's Open 2025 at Royal Porthcawl. This is our second annual bottling to celebrate the event, following the success of last year’s release.

Utilising whisky from our exceptional Straight Neck stills, this unpeated 8 year old single malt has been matured in ex-Bourbon barrels and finished for 18 months in first-fill Loupiac Wine Hogsheads. This finish enhances the liquid’s sweet richness and fruity character. Hailing from the prestigious Bordeaux region of France, Loupiac casks contribute to a uniquely sweet, fruity and floral whisky. Delicate floral notes of jasmine and blossom lead into ripe peaches, nectarines, and pears. Followed by sweet almond biscuits, zesty lemons, and a rounded vanilla finish.

TASTING NOTES

Nose: Floral notes of jasmine and blossom

Taste: Ripe peaches, nectarines and pears

Finish: Sweet almond biscuits, zesty lemons, vanilla

About Loch Lomond

Loch Lomond was set up by its former owner to be Scotland’s self-sufficient distillery. Rather than playing the normal game of exchanging the spirit you make for fillings of grain and malt for your own blends, it made all its requirements itself. That meant being innovative.

The original distillery held a set of pot stills with rectifying plates in their necks (also known as Lomond stills), allowing different flavour streams to be produced. Expansion in 1990 saw a second pair of the same design being installed, before the distillery installed two continuous stills three years later in which to make its own grain whisky. Two ‘traditional’ swan neck pot stills were added in 1998, before an additional continuous still, set up to produce grain whisky from a 100% malted barley mash, was installed in 2007. With the recent addition of two more Lomond stills, Loch Lomond has the capability to produce 11 different distillates for its whisky brands (not including the spirit coming from Glen Scotia). Wine yeasts have also been used to help create different flavours. In many ways it is more akin to a Japanese approach to distilling than a Scottish one.

As well as the High Commisisoner blend, Loch Lomond has produced a range of single malt brands, including Inchmurrin, Inchmoan, Inchfad, Old Rosdhu, Croftengea and Craiglodge. While all have been available as official and independent bottlings at one time or another, only a handful continue to be bottled as part of the distillery’s current range.

A product of the 1960s distillery building boom, Loch Lomond was built in ’66 by a joint partnership between Duncan Thomas, the American owner of [now demolished] Littlemill, and Chicago-based Barton Brands. The American firm took full control in 1971, but closed it in 1984 when that boom turned to bust. It passed into the hands of Inver House the year after, before they flipped it to Glen Catrine Bonded Warehouse Ltd in 1986. The firm added Glen Scotia to its portfolio in 1994.

Glen Catrine was the bottling and ageing arm of Bulloch & Co, a well-established blending and retail firm which owned the High Commissioner brand as well as, in time, Glen’s Vodka. Under Glen Catrine’s ownership, Loch Lomond grew to become the most flexible – and arguably the most innovative – distillery in Scotland. Its specialisation in the private label and export business however meant that its operations were never widely reported, or understood.

The firm was sold in 2014 for an undisclosed sum (believed to be in the tens of millions) to private equity firm Exponent whose new distilling division, Loch Lomond Group, is headed by former Diageo executives.

57.1% 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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