LeeEvolved
Compass Box Great King St Artist's Blend Single Marrying Cask (Bounty Hunter)
Blended — Scotland
Reviewed
May 16, 2018 (edited March 24, 2021)
So, this is a single cask variation of Compass Box’s Great King St Artist’s Blend. This is a single cask bottling done and offered to several independent retailers worldwide. This particular batch was allotted to Bounty Hunter Wine & Spirits out of Napa Valley, CA. It’s limited to 228 total bottles.
The regular Artist’s Blend is composed of 46% grain whisky from Cameron Bridge, 29% Clynelish, 17% CBW Highland Malt blend and 8% Linkwood. This Marrying Cask bottle takes that original Artist Blend, replaces it back into a single cask and ages it for an additional year. This was cask #69, which previously held the original Cameron Bridge grain whisky used. It’s then re-bottled at or near cask strength of 49%. Re-casked in Feb 2016, bottled in Feb 2017. Other batches of the Marrying Cask were refilled into different types of previously used casks, so they should also offer different takes on the original Artist’s Blend.
The nose on this one is strong oak, vanilla and soft fruits. The near-50% grain whisky used really dominates the nose here, but it’s still sweet and rich. The palate showcases apples and similar fruits, light sherry, vanilla and some spices. It’s obviously a little harder on the tongue, thanks to the higher ABV, but it’s still relatively smooth. The finish remains heavy on the oak, long and warming, while revealing some astringent grain notes.
Overall, I can’t say this is much better or different than the original Artist Blend. The fact this is $20 more per bottle doesn’t bode well in the VFM category. It’s still a solid, smooth-ish blend, but I think this one is more suited for those that like their whisky more “in your face”. It would be cool to try to put together a complete collection of all the Marrying Cask offerings, but that is probably going to be hard to do given the various stores offered the exclusive, single casks. As it is, it’s still 3.5-3.75 stars. Cheers and thanks for reading this. Buy more Compass Box folks, they deserve our money.
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@Richard-ModernDrinking - that bespoke project was a marketing fail that I’m sure they learned from. These bottles are collecting dust. The shouldn’t have used the same King St. labels they use on their $40 product. And the story behind it is not great. Take a $40 product and age it for an additional year and you get a $50 product....so what.
@Ric_M Four Seasons. They had lots when I was there.
@Richard-ModernDrinking - good price! I paid $56 for mine. Maybe they’ve come down in price since they’re not moving that well. Which store did you use?
@Rick_M I will try to get to them this weekend. They were only $35 a bottle when I stumbled across them, so I thought worth a punt.
@Richard-ModernDrinking - interested to get your impressions on these. Did small sample 3 of the 4. Thought they were good but not good enough to spend cash.
@LeeEvolved yeh, that one lasted all of five minutes before its seal was broken
@Richard-ModernDrinking - thanks, sir. I will return samples in kind and I’ll save you a pour of the Bounty Hunter bottle if you haven’t had that one yet.
@LeeEvolved - I passed on the CB bespoke offering to 3 liquor stores in MA. Wasn’t a fan of the chintzy neck labels. I did buy one bottle signed by Glaser.
@LeeEvolved I’m looking forward to trying the four versions I got recently. Maybe one of those will make more of a mark. I’ll get your address from Pranay so I can send you a taste of them.