Bunnahabhain 2007 Mòine Oloroso Finish (Fèis Ìle 2018)
Single Malt
Bunnahabhain // Islay, Scotland
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Jan-Case
Reviewed April 2, 2021 (edited December 17, 2022)Bunnahabhain is one of the distilleries who do top tier peated and unpeated expressions. Both ends don’t have any shortcomings or compromises. This one surely is no exception. Sweet Italian cappuccino infused with thick and characteristic Islay peat. But this is only the pre-show - the main act is the Oloroso nuttiness with dried mushy fruits, brown sugar and heavy oak - then followed by a supporting act of fresh pressed apple juice, saw dust, olive oil and whole grain granola. The peat hangs above every stage like a heavy evening autumn fog. The palate introduces itself with rock candy, black tea leaves, intense peat notes with a dryness that makes way for a warm creamy sweetness after a while. The peat is so deliciously embedded that it creates a unison I rarely gotten from a whisky. The fruity nutty Oloroso character is so vibrant and saturated with that peat playing off-beat along that you can just smile with every sip while making a barely audible “hmmmm”. This whisky really is like a great song. Even the finish plays its medium short but important part with cappuccino notes remaining as the last note. This is as close as you can come to a perfect whisky. Bunnahabhain: chapeau. -
Richard-ModernDrinking
Reviewed August 4, 2018 (edited June 24, 2022)I was fortunate to get a couple of ounces of this from a contact that keeps me well stocked with samples of special edition Bunnahabhain, many of which I’ve yet to get to. But I’ve enjoyed all the ones I’ve tried and it’s quickly risen in my rankings from a distillery that I’ve overlooked to one I follow with interest, even if the number of limited releases seems to approach Highland Park levels at times. This was one of two Feis Ile releases this year and, contrary to the Distiller information, spent its entire maturation in oloroso sherry casks. I don’t comment often on the color of my drams but this one is ridiculously dark, and naturally so as far as I can ascertain. The nose is rich with stewed fruits and Christmas fruit cake. I was expecting some harsh alcohol notes given its strength but it’s very approachable and doesn’t numb the nostrils. Not so in the mouth, where the aftershock of the undiluted spirit overwhelms the taste buds. It takes a couple of teaspoons of water to tame it and find the fruity flavors of the nose. They’re yummy, but it’s very cask driven and I didn’t taste much of the peated spirit coming through. It’s on the finish that things get more interesting. It’s dry, like black tea, with a long aftertaste of plums and dark chocolate. And that aftertaste keeps going, morphing into a mouthful of juicy raisins soaked in wine and hanging around for at least an hour after I’d emptied the glass. It’s a five-star finish to a whisky that I’d otherwise rate three stars because the sherry influence has overwhelmed the heart of the Bunna spirit, so I’m splitting the difference and calling it a bottle worth buying if you can find at a sensible price.
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