This review originally appeared on June 17, 2019, at Bourbon & Banter.
BOTTLE DETAILS
- DISTILLER: The Balvenie
- MASH BILL: 100% Malted Barley
- AGE: 14 Years
- YEAR: 2018
- PROOF: 86
Proof (43% ABV)
- MSRP: $52.99
NOSE:
Vanilla | Toffee
| Sweet, Dried Fruit |
Slight Oak
TASTE:
Oak |
Vanilla | Brown Sugar
| Pomme Fruit |
Honey
FINISH:
Sustained sweetness with a build-up of black pepper and a gentle vanilla kiss.
SHARE WITH: Fans of
Speyside Scotches.
WORTH THE PRICE: Most
definitely.
BOTTLE, BAR, OR BUST: Scotch
is comparatively pricier than American whiskeys. For $70, an American whiskey
should be a great performer. For Scotch, this is the beginning of mid-tier.
Folks who don’t enjoy unpeated Scotches probably won’t enjoy The Balvenie just
the same as most any other Speyside. However, The Balvenie Caribbean Cask
has much going for it and is a fantastic value. I enjoy Scotches from all
regions, and this is a very easy Bottle.
OVERALL: It
seemed that much of my 2018 involved barrel-finished whiskeys. Scotch, Bourbon,
Rye, or Irish - all of it jumped out at me. Barrel finishing is an interesting
process where the distiller or producer takes an (allegedly) good whiskey and,
once correctly matured, dumps it into another barrel that previously held
something else. That something else may have been another spirit, wine, maple
syrup, coffee, or, as we saw with George Dickel, Tobasco sauce.
One of the more memorable
finished whiskeys I tasted last year was The Balvenie Caribbean Cask Single
Malt Scotch. The Balvenie is from Scotland’s Speyside region, which features
the country's most significant number of distilleries. Speyside Scotches
typically are unpeated, meaning they don’t burn peat to dry the barley in the
malting process. The Balvenie distillery is unusual because they grow their own
barley and use a traditional malting floor to germinate and dry the barley.
They’ve been doing this since 1892, when the distillery was founded by William
Grant.
Distilled from 100% malted
barley, The Balvenie then ages this Scotch for 14 years in ex-Bourbon barrels.
From there, it is dumped into Caribbean rum casks, where it rests for an
unpublished amount of time. The Balvenie calls it “extra matured.”
Some distillers legally use
caramel coloring to make their Scotch more appealing. The Balvenie neither
colors nor chill filters theirs. This gives the whiskey a more natural
appearance. In the case of the Caribbean Cask, it presented as a clear, golden
liquid in my Glencairn glass. Very interesting, despite my attempts to do so
without swirling, I failed to create a rim or legs. When I gently rolled the
glass, all that happened was it fell immediately back into the pool.
Vanilla was the most
assertive aroma, even before it reached my face. When I cycled through my
nosing zone, toffee, sweet dried fruit, and the slightest of oak hid beneath.
Sweet honey was picked up when I inhaled the vapors through my lips.
The initial mouthfeel was
thin and oily, and oak hit the tip of my tongue. Subsequent sips became more
creamy, with vanilla and brown sugar flavors up front, morphed to pomme fruit
mid-palate, and a few drops of honey on the back.
A sweet and peppery finish
stuck around for several minutes until it dissipated. Right before it ended,
there was a gentle caress of vanilla before everything disappeared. It
absolutely enticed me to take another sip.
I first tasted The Balvenie
Caribbean Cask with five other finished whiskeys at a Scotch tasting. The
Balvenie was one of my two favorites of the night, and I bought both shortly after
that. In Scotchland (see what I did there?), The Balvenie Caribbean Cask
is a standout and absolutely earns a Bottle rating.
My Simple, Easy-to-Understand
Rating System
- Bottle = Buy It
- Bar = Try It
- Bust = Leave It
Whiskeyfellow encourages
you to enjoy your whiskey as you see fit but begs you to do so responsibly.
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