LeeEvolved
Compass Box Great King St New York Blend
Blended Malt — Scotland
Reviewed
April 7, 2018 (edited June 8, 2019)
My first attempt at adding a bottle to Distiller. I figure I need to be ready to review it once I created it. I don’t usually like to review something that I have a full bottle of until after I’ve tried it several times, but I was kind of anxious to add a bottle. So, here we go...
Most scotch drinkers have certainly heard of Compass Box. They may have also heard of their entry level blends they created several years ago under their London street address: Great King St. The Artist’s Blend and the Glasgow Blend still remain cheap and popular today. This bottle was a limited run that John Glaser created in honor of the American city of New York. The idea sprung from a story in the late 1800’s when a local, New York bartender asked for branded bottles of malt whisky to use for cocktails instead of having to stick with bulk shipped casks that were the norm of the day. By doing so, he was able to acquire some smoked malts along with the typical sweeter malts of the day. This is Compass Box’s tribute to that forward thinking bartender.
The specs: 20% of this blend utilizes Lowland grain and the remaining 80% is Highland, Speyside and Islay single malts. About a quarter of the entire blend is made up of heavily peated, Islay malt. Most of the malts used are from first fill American oak, with some refill bourbon and sherry casks thrown in to add some complexity. This bottle was released in the summer of 2012, with a paltry 1,840 bottles available for sale. Rare alert! It’s bottled at 46% and like all CBW whiskies it is natural color and non-chill filtered.
The nose is nicely perfumed and sweet. There’s dried orchard fruits in abundance here. The Islay smoke mingles softly and doesn’t overpower anything. The seemingly ever present waxiness from most Compass Box releases is faintly in the background, as well. Very nice on the nose.
The palate is velvety smooth. There’s a nice complexity between sweet apples, pears and other hanging fruit. The smoke adds a subtle depth to this that really lifts this bottle closer to some of the more expensive bottle releases that CBW has done recently. There’s an excellent, oily mouth coat that keeps all the flavors hanging around well into the finish.
Speaking of finish, it’s not overly long. The heavier than usual mouthfeel keeps the sweetness in place while the smoke rises as you exhale. It’s fantastic.
Overall, my initial thought is that this is what CBW’s Lost Blend or This Is Not A Luxury Whisky would be like with a little bit of Peat Monster blended in. I want to give this 4.5 stars. I’m not sure if the $70 I paid for this bottle is simply because retailers have realized this one has disappeared from shelves, and it’s time to capitalize on that, or if this one has been that price all along. If this one was on par with Artist’s and Glasgow blends and offered at $40 initially, then its truly a masterpiece deserving of 5 stars because of price for value. Either way, this is a wonderful blended whisky that proves John Glaser and his team’s brilliance when it comes to blending. If you can find a bottle or a pour at a bar I highly recommend taking the plunge. It’s truly a remarkable dram. Cheers, folks.
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Thanks Lee - double the price of the Artist & Glasgow blends. Probably still worth it though
@SolanaRoots - okay, since you asked. There are 2 bottles left at Lukas Wine & Spirits in Ellisville, MO. If you search their online store you’ll see them available at $80/ea. Grab ‘em before they’re gone. Cheers.
Any hints on where you found a bottle of this @LeeEvolved ?
@PBMichiganWolverine - now that you mention it I do seem to recall seeing a few of those experimental blend bottles up for auction.
@LeeEvolved the Glasgow amd NY Blend came from his Experimental Series. There were barely a few hundred sold to the public ( $30), amd they later got input from the people that bought them to figure out which Experimental Series was preferred.
Looking back at mine (and a few others) CBW Lost Blend review I notice at lot of similarities from that bottle and this one. I want to say the story for the Lost Blend told of paying homage to one of CBW’s older blends. It makes me wonder if that bottle and this older, NY Blend share a similar recipe. There’s definitely no heavy citrus or oak spices in the NY vs the Lost Blend. I think Mr Glaser May have tweaked this bottle for his Lost Blend. If that’s true- cheers to the evolution of CBW.
@solanaroots - I have both the Artist’s and Glasgow blends, but haven’t opened either one. I will be sampling both at the Compass Box booth at Whiskyfest DC next week, though. I’m looking forward to trying the both for sure.
Excellent, cheers for adding this great review @LeeEvolved - did you happen to do the side by side by side with the Artist & Glasgow blends?
This is impossible to get now. Back when this was readily available, it was the same price as Glasgow and Artist, about $40. Now it’s just retailers realizing it’s hard to get, so supply and demand
Also, it looks like $70 was the original price. That’s how much I paid for it in November.
Thanks for adding Lee. I’ve been wanting to post a review as I have a bottle (or two) of this lovely liquid.