Stop number 43 on the SDT is Highland Park. Arguably, along with its sister distillery, Macallan, one of the most highly regarded brands in single malt scotch. Located in the far north on the Orkney Islands, HP is part of the Islands region of Scotland.
Einar (pronounced I-n-ar), is a travel retail exclusive and the second of eight in their Warrior Series released to celebrate their Viking heritage. Bottled at 40% ABV and like all HPs it is natural color. This one is an amber gold. I believe it is non chill filtered but not 100% on that.
The nose is sticky sweet sherry. Brown sugar raisins and dates. A little citrus, like chocolate oranges and dried pineapple. Barley sugar and a it's a little malty. Vanilla buttercream and golden pancake syrup. Just a hint of smoke and a little mint in the background. A big French toast note with maple syrup. Some overripe bananas trailing off.
Sherry sweetness up front on the palate. Some wood smoke, but it's not peaty. A little citrus, but not a zippy citrus like lemons. More of a darker citrus if that makes sense. Figs and raisins and some weak oak. French toast with syrup. Banana muffins with crushed walnuts on top and warm vanilla.
Light bodied mouthfeel. Thin but a little creamy.
Medium length finish. Sherry, light smoke, syrup and banana.
The use of American oak here is apparent from the softer notes and lack of any significant spice level, but there is some European oak in play here too I feel. Sherry is the driving force here and the peat level is very low. I was surprised at the distinct notes of French toast and syrup. Most scotches this sweet would be called a dessert dram, but this feels more like a breakfast dram, if that was a thing. For HP, this is rather weak. It's good, just sadly has no oomph to it. Very easy to drink though. One of those all night type drams. I believe I picked this 1L bottle up from duty free for around $45, which makes it a great value for money. Would I buy it again? No, but I do not regret this purchase. 3.5
Cheers