Whiskyfart
Balvenie 14 Year American Bourbon Barrel
Single Malt — Speyside, Scotland
Reviewed
September 9, 2024 (edited September 13, 2024)
I don't think I've ever been the first on this site to review a whisky. Well, except maybe some odd barrel pick or some off selection ( like that odd Korean blended whisky I reviewed some years back ).
I've got a love/hate thing with Balvenie. And I've discovered that their selections that aren't heavily influenced by fruit or wine casks: I absolutely adore. But once the focus becomes wine casks, red fruits fill every orifice of my face. It's quite.... unpleasant.
That's not to down trod on anyone who loves wine cask finish whisky. If that's your jam, spread it on your toast and enjoy the hell out of it. But its not really my thing, inherent of my deep love affair of Bourbon.
Enter: 14 year bourbon barrel. I can't wait to try this....
Whoa. The nose has a shockingly peaty quality about it. Upon first smell it's savory and umptious and has a bit of a smoked brisket quality about it. Served up with that savory peat smoke is some honey draped orange peel, citrusy but slightly bitter enveloped in thick sweetness.
The taste starts very mellow and soft. Thick honey drips over orange slices. The inherent bitterness of the orange pith is lost in the peat smoke undertone. Vanilla lands mid taste with tannic charred oak. There is such a thick, tongue coating mouth feel about this one, it's really incredibly satisfying.
The finish is dry, long lasting and viscous. Charred oak carries the finish to the end but right at the start of the finish you get a flash of aromatic vanilla bean on the back of your tongue. The viscous mouth feel on the taste leads to a pleasant tingle on the finish that lasts several minutes as you savor the memory of the peat smoke, oak, citrus, vanilla and honey.
Wow! This reminds me a little of Week of Peat releases ( come to find out, this particular bottling was produced immediately after peat week so by happy accident the bottling took on some of the peat flavors from the batch that proceeded ). But along with that, some of the sweet / oak combo from their Sweet Toast of the American Oak, with any rough edges rounded off for good measure. It's sweet, citrusy, smokey and all around delicious. It sings to all the flavors I love in whisky and it's damn near perfect for me. Why can't this become a regular bottling in their core line up?!
100.0
USD
per
Bottle
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