Review by: dustbunna

Here is an archived review, as this was a random pickup almost a year ago— a whisky that turned out to be the last bottle standing while I packed up and prepared for a move at the beginning of the summer of 2022. I shared it widely, and burned through it pretty quickly. This Blair Athol came from at least two casks, possibly more— matured in a combination of refill sherry hogshead(s) and refill sherry butt(s). Unusually for Gordon & Macphail, it carries an age statement instead of a vintage, and that’s about all the info I could find about it, besides that it had sat on a shelf for nearly a decade…
This was a distillery that had slipped under my radar thus far (it’s another Diageo workhorse, the bulk of which makes up the malt component of Bell’s) and I’m always up for a $65 independent bottling that helps me explore a bit more.
Distillery: Blair Athol.
Bottler: Gordon & Macphail.
Region: Highlands.
ABV: 46%.
Age: 9 years. Bottled in 2014.
Cask type: 50% sherry hogsheads, 50% sherry butts.
Price: $65 USD.
Natural Color. Non-chill-filtered.
Bottle open across approx. 2 months, notes taken leisurely across that period. Bold notes taken beneath the shoulder, regular-formatted notes taken further into the bottle past the halfway point, italicized notes taken towards the heel.
Nose: intensely leafy and green at first, orange peel, baking spices, gummy candies, forest floor, matchsticks, applesauce.
Palate: medium-thin body ~ more leafiness, old papers, minerals, apple skins, minerals intensify.
Finish: medium length ~ roasted nuts, more orange peel, marshmallow, sweetens more with green apple and watermelon candy, flint, flattens out a bit at the heel.
Conclusion: This started out pretty nice, easily drinkable but with interesting notes popping out here and there. For a 9-year-old whisky, it definitely holds its own as it develops, picking up some complexity through the sweeter notes, minerals, and a hint of matchstick sulfur on the nose. This is simply good whisky, not mind-blowing, quite enjoyable, a fun one-off exploration.
G&M has a reputation, especially amongst the CS lines, for really good maturation in refill sherry casks, and I can see some of the outline of that here— it’s a different, more subtle experience than first-fill maturation, which sometimes can overwhelm the spirit. I guess I ought to go seek out some more refill sherry (and some more Blair Athol, for that matter.)
Final Score: 80.
Scoring Legend:
- 95-100: As good as it gets. Jaw-dropping, eye-widening, unforgettable whisky.
- 90-94: Sublime, a personal favorite in its category.
- 85-89: Excellent, a standout dram.
- 80-84: Quite good. Quality stuff.
- 75-79: Decent whisky worth tasting.
- 70-74: Meh. It’s definitely drinkable, but it can do better.
- 60-69: Not so good. I might not turn down a glass if I needed a drink.
- 50-59: Save it for mixing.
- 0-49: Blech.
I just opened a bottle of Blair Athol 12 Year Old Flora & Fauna. It’s very good indeed. The best thing about it was the heavily discounted price – apparently Australians don’t like gambling on unfamiliar brands.
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Nice! – that’s supposedly one of the best Flora & Faunas (Florae & Faunae?).
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