The GlenDronach is nestled in the valley of Forgue, deep in the East Highland hills of Scotland. It is of true Highland style: a heavy and robust spirit, perfect for a long maturation period in sherry casks. At The GlenDronach Distillery, the whisky is distilled in Pedro Ximenez and Oloroso sherry casks, marrying the best of Highland and Spanish skills. This creates whiskies of elegant, complex character, with tremendous depth of taste.
Barrie was in Singapore recently for tasting sessions with whisky lovers and the media at the Grande Whisky Collection in ION Orchard. She was launching the highly anticipated GlenDronach Aged Revival 15 Year Old. I was lucky enough to be one of the first tasters in Singapore of this new single malt. According to the tasting notes, the nose has “an intoxicating burst of maraschino cherry, ripe bramble and dark chocolate mint with hints of orange bitters and walnut liqueur”. That’s quite a tall order. And the palate is described as “honey-glazed apricot and ripe fig with a crescendo of black cherry and muscovado”.
But here is a woman who has nosed and tasted a lot of whisky — around 150,000 cask samples in 26 years — so I trust her judgement and descriptions. And it was an intense sensation for my taste buds. The secret, I was told, was to leave the whisky in my mouth for as long as possible. Perhaps 15 seconds — one second for every year it has aged. Only then do these flavours start to come through. I definitely tasted remnants of dark chocolate, brambles and cherry. Add a few drops of water and it’s almost like tasting a different whisky, with the single malt opening up even more.
Justin Harper is a freelance journalist with a passion for the finer things in life


