There is a recently
established distillery in the Scotland Lowlands situated in Ayrshire, which
used to be a location for pigs, cattle, and agricultural waste, more politely
called a middery. It became operational in 2018 and named it Lochlea
Distillery.
“The land at Lochlea is important, and not just to the distinctive taste of our whisky. This was the land Robert Burns tended when he lived at Lochlea, inspiring his thinking and development as a poet. Burns toiled the same soil that we are privileged to grow our malting barley in today. We like to think he’d approve.” – Lochlea Distillery
Lochlea started with
distillery manager Malcolm Rennie. He handed the reins to John
Campbell, the former distillery manager of Laphroaig.
This Lowland distillery
grows its own barley; this release is named Our Barley, slated to be the first
of its core expressions. Our Barley is a single malt Scotch that’s been aged in
first-fill Bourbon barrels, then to STR (shaved, toasted, re-charred)
barriques, and finally, Oloroso Sherry butts. Lochlea is reasonably transparent
with its cooperage. The former Bourbon barrels come from Maker’s Mark. The
Sherry butts were sourced directly from Jerez, and the barriques held Rioja
wine from Spain.
Our Barley is non-chill
filtered, naturally colored, and bottled at 46% ABV
(92°). It carries no age statement. You can expect to shell out about $63.00
for a 700ml package.
Lochlea’s
exclusive US distributor is ImpEx
Beverage, who was kind enough to provide me with
a sample of Our Barley in exchange for my no-strings-attached, honest review.
Let’s #DrinkCurious and delve into this Scotch.
Appearance: I
poured this whisky into a Glencairn glass and sipped it neat. Inside, it
presented as a light golden liquid. A thin rim was formed, and even more
delicate tears crawled down the wall and back to the pool.
Nose: The
aroma consisted of malt, grass, honey, butter, and Honeycrisp apples that all
seemed to complement one another. When I breathed the vapor into my mouth, I
found lemon zest.
Palate: The
texture was like velvet, then turned oily. It was indeed a different
experience! The front was a citrus bomb, with grapefruit meat and peel, followed
by lemon, then apples. My mid-palate tasted barley malt, golden raisin, and
fresh grass. There were oak tannins, almonds, and green peppercorns on the back.
Finish: Medium
in duration, the finish featured grapefruit, malt, almonds, vanilla, and green
peppercorns. There was also a slight astringent quality.
Bottle, Bar, or Bust: Our
Barley is an uncomplicated Scotch. It does take a few sips to get past the
grapefruit, especially. But once you do, this becomes quite tasty. The price is
a little steep, but it isn’t out of the realm of reality. I’ve reviewed First Release and Sowing Edition “First
Crop” and
between the three, I preferred those up and above Our Barley. This one hovers
somewhere between a Bottle and Bar, and when that happens, I default to
the lower rating. Cheers!
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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