DrRHCMadden
Highland Park Dragon Legend
Single Malt — Islands, Scotland
Reviewed
December 30, 2022 (edited December 31, 2022)
According to the team at HP the Dragon Legend bottling was inspired by Sigurd the dragon slayer who licked dragon’s blood from his thumb and was granted powers of wisdom and prophesy. I think perhaps the marketing push is trying to hard. For this release HP have focussed on their classic sherry seasoned European oak casks but put with a higher proportion of Orkney peated malt than normal. Hopefully this is a build on from last nights more intensely smoky Valkyrie…
N: Initially full but soft with a developing complexity. A toasty wood mixes with nutty and feinty slightly sweaty notes. There is a mulchy to teabag like quality here too. The peat smoke builds but remains in the realm of woody and slightly herbal. Working really hard I can dig up the fruit sweetness and winey notes contributed by the sherry cask, but they are not stars of this show. Not my favourite HP nose, and a little too one dimensional compared to recent HP delights.
P: Immediate presence of smoke, an earthy and slightly floral smoke that fills the mouth leaving room for strong black pepper and an oily texture. Malty-cereals come next and bring salted pork, sherry fruits of dates and cherry(?), and dehydrated lemon. Oiliness develops to slightly leathery or tobacco like. Pepper remains constant, smoke builds its presence, and over time a HP floral-heathery honey develops. A lot more enticing than the nose suggested would follow.
F: Medium-long. Drying smoke fades to a peppery close that slightly pushes out the malt and lemon notes.
I was expecting more from the sherry casks, but the Dragon name of this bottle should have foretold me of the smoke that was to come forward. I like the restrained use of peat smoke by HP, its always delicate and intriguing. This is a much more forceful representation of their peat profile. The delicate dehydrated lemon, or maybe preserved lemon for some palates, is a nice brightness and the malty flavours along with some of the feinty leathery or sweaty notes are quite nice counterparts to the smokiness. I don’t mind this in the slightest. But, where I have been finding HP to be a ‘bright’ exploration of peat, the dragon legend feels comparatively ‘dark’. If I want darkness I can’t help but feel that Ardbeg 10 or Talisker 10 would be better places to go as this is, to me at least; a little one dimensional and in need of some more character befitting such an ambitious name.
[Pictured here with this drams Viking themed rock, a 450-400 million year old garnet bearing olivine-websterite from Holsnøy, Norway. This rock is an incredible representative of our upper mantle at depths of up to 185 km. Rather than being a typical olivine rich peridotite this rock is enriched in vibrant green chromium-pyroxene]
Distiller whisky taste #136
HP Running ranking (mostly for my benefit):
10: 3.75
12: 4
15: 4.25
18: 4.75
25: 4.75
Valknut: 4.25
Valkyrie: 4.25
Dragon Legend: 3.25
99.99
AUD
per
Bottle
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Sadly not @PBMichiganWolverine. I got the 25 a few years back at AUD 600, it’s now a cool 1000. Bought it for my wedding that only just happened in March. Mostly shared it with friends and family. Have two pours micro bottled and saved for another day, but that’s all gone now. The 30 is not something I will likely ever try unless I were to want to spend several hundred on a sample bottle should one be available ever. I’m very keen to try the 21, sadly not in my current run either. Between the 18 and the 25 I think something is lost for what is gained. I’m not sure how I’d feel about the super old HPs… anyway, seven more to come now…
@DrRHCMadden is the 30 on your list as well? Curious if that cracks the 5.0 , or if it stays with the 18 and 25.