Generously_Paul
Compass Box Flaming Heart 15th Anniversary Limited Edition
Blended Malt — Scotland
Reviewed
November 16, 2017 (edited September 16, 2019)
I was lucky enough to get a sample of this limited edition release by Compass Box Whisky from my good friend Lee a few months ago. I finally had the time to try it tonight and I’m glad I did.
This is a blended malt scotch, the components of which are a combination of two different vintages of Caol Ila, Clynelish and Dailuaine. I’ll spare you the age, percentages and cask types of each as they are well documented. Bottled at 48.9% ABV and as all CBW whiskies are, it is non chill filtered and natural color. This is a golden straw color.
Big peat smoke on the nose initially. Strong citrus, grilled lemons. I get salty baked whitefish with green olives on a plank of green oak. A bit of an unusual combo but it works. Burnt wood/campfire ashes, settling into what my in-laws basement smells like during Christmas when they have a nice fire going. Once the big smoky notes subsided, a beautiful wave of warm vanilla buttercream, toffee, caramel and toasted coconut took over. Lovely but somewhat restrained fruits like peach, apricots and pineapple. Some dark chocolate rounds things out.
The palate starts off with vegetal peat and sooty smoke. Smoked shellfish in a lemon/lime brine with some herbs. Baking spices like nutmeg, clove and pepper. Creamy vanilla comes in with oak and dark chocolate. Soft leathery notes and maybe the barest hint of tobacco. Every sip the smoke is the first thing you notice, but you get used to it and then can pick through everything else.
A medium bodied mouthfeel that is oily, becoming dry.
A medium long finish that is dry with lots of cold ashes, peat and vanilla.
A well put together blended malt scotch. I’ve never had any of the individual components as single malts (soon to change), but they work well together. The casks are mostly American oak and it shows in the vanilla and toffee notes as well as the nutmeg and overall softness. It’s quite mature with the peat still playing a major role in the overall profile. Even though I’m giving this the same rating as I did with the Lost Blend, I think Lost Blend still holds the top spot from CBW for me. Thanks again @LeeEvolved for the lovely sample. 4.5
Cheers
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Most beautiful bottle of whisky ever made! Only produced 1,985 of them. Better than looking at girlie magazines. :)
1.75L ??!!? Why...how...? Never mind. Less I know, the better.
What’s the point of living if you can’t drink whisky and break peoples balls lol
@PBMichiganWolverine, no Paul is referring to the 1.75L bottle of CBW Peat Monster cask strength I have. They released it in large bottle format for whatever reason and I’ve been hinting at opening mine soon. He says I can give everyone on Distiller a pour and still have plenty leftover for myself. He’s “breaking my balls” and I’m totally okay with it, lol.
Wait, @LeeEvolved , did you buy some mega size version of this? Like an entire barrel?
Way to go and ruin the surprise for everybody, Paul. For the rest of the holiday season I shall only refer to you as BuzzKilly_Paul. Lol
You could provide samples of that big PM bottle to everyone here and still have some left over lol
Great review, Paul. I’m glad you enjoyed this one. It’s a fine, smoky dram but I have yet to find one that tops “Not A Luxury Whisky” at this point. I’m gonna bust open that Peat Monster cask strength sometime over the holidays along with the Double Single for our next round of samples. I’m expecting big things from both of those. Cheers.