LeeEvolved
Bushmills 16 Year Single Malt
Single Malt — Ireland
Reviewed
February 6, 2020 (edited February 24, 2021)
Ah, Bushmills. Up until I recently devoured bottles of the Green and Yellow Spots, this was one of my favorite Irish whiskies- alongside a few West Cork releases. This 16yo Bushmills that advertises Port Wine finishing really had me thoroughly excited. I had a sample of the 21 year old Bushmills a couple of years ago and I believe I gave it a perfect score of 5 stars. It was a delicious, complex dram. I was hoping for similar results here...
Well, let’s just say, that didn’t happen. This 16 year old release contains 2 whiskies: one aged in ex-bourbon casks and the other in ex-Spanish Oloroso sherry casks. They were blended together and then finished for an additional 6-9 months in ex-Port wine casks. It was then where I believe this whiskey went awry: it was blended down to 40% ABV. It’s weakness is where I place all the blame for the negative aspects I detected in this dram.
It’s a beautiful, dark copper in the Glencairn (which I’m not sure if there was color added). There were large, watery drops that were chased down by undefined, heavy legs. There even seemed to be a thin layer of water overtop of the entire pour.
The nose was initially soft wood and sweet raisins but was ultimately taken over by a nutty dominance that never released its hold. Giving it time and a concentrated nosing I was able to pick up faint notes of grape must and bitter chocolate.
The palate stayed true to the nosing with raisins, grapes and cereal oatmeal with a slow-burning, wood characteristic that neither excited, nor hurt the overall flavor profile. It was just a constant, yet restrained smoke. The infusion of a drop of water only killed what was already a weak mouthfeel. An oily mouthcoat might have actually saved this dram for me, but alas, the watery feel washed everything quickly away.
This also left the finish a bit wanting. It ended up very short and sickly sweet. Smoky wood and chocolate gave it a funky aftertaste that left me disinterested in trying to pick up more from this dram. This bottle really begs for a higher punch from the ABV- I think 44-46% would’ve given this one some heat and necessary character.
Overall, the biggest plus I got from this bottle was the sale price- I picked it up out of the U.K. for a song: $59. I’ve seen prices here in the USA for $125+. There’s no way it’s worth that price, but $59 is an absolute steal and a price is actually pay again for a bottle of this caliber. Sadly, I doubt I’ll see it again at that level. It’s still a middle of the road dram, and if you’re a Bushmills fanboy then I’d say splurge for a bottle if you can find it under $100. Otherwise, pony up the extra and buy the 21 year old or divert that money to a bottle of wine finished Green Spot. That’s money better spent, IMHO. As is, this is a 3.25-3.5 star dram, tops. Cheers.
59.0
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per
Bottle
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@Rick_M Red Spot was on my list for quite a while, but price tags are just outrageous for a 15 yo single pot still...
@LeeEvolved Yeah I really really want to try those wine finished GSs but no luck getting them here. I'd buy a bottle without even tasting first
@AntonioSchmid - yes, but Red Spot tops them all and hits the sweet spot at 46%abv. :)
@AntonioSchmid - I completely understand. Like I said, if I could land this bottle for $65-70 I’d keep one on the bar year round, but I was blown away by the Green Spot recently and will keep buying those until they dry up or the price rises too much. I’m excited to try the wine finished Green Spots very soon.
I beg to disagree here... I tried this one at Raglan Road (yes, Disney!) and was so impressed that went after a full bottle (and you’re right, prices for this one are all over the place) I would place it above both Green Spots and Yellow Spot and at the same level of Redbreast 12 (that I liked more than 15 and 12CS) But just my opinion of course. Cheers! 🥃
I oppose this hare-brained idea of sending the higher ABV out of Ireland. I’m prepared to chain myself to export crates of Green Spot in protest...
@Slainte-Mhath - not sure I can put my finger on it, honestly. The 21 I had was a sample from a friend and it was just hit all the right notes at the time. This bottle seemed more one dimensional and watery. I have a bottle of the 21, that I bought based on the sample I had years ago, hopefully it won’t disappoint like this 16 did. I will update my 21yo review if it does, rest assured.
@LeeEvolved Bushmills 21yo is bottled at 40% ABV as well, and yet you scored it 5 stars. What's the difference?
@PBMichiganWolverine - well, I think I did score my bottle from whiskysite.nl during one of their sales. Plus, the exchange rate versus the euro is even better than the pound.
I’m surprised at the huge price difference between UK/EU and US on this one. I get it if it’s a bit more b/c of customs and dollar rate, but 2x is ridiculous
Good to see you back. Timely review, as I was about to buy this one for $110. I'll save my $$$ for something better...
@LeeEvolved the same could be said about oh so many scotches too. Just make them 43-46% minimum for exports and make people happy
@Rick_M - I believe you are correct, sir. Why can’t they just have dual releases- one for their countrymen and one for the rest of the whiskey drinking world? Is that too much to ask?
40%abv is an Irish thing. They think too much of their lips. :)