
Ardbeg's newest limited-edition single malt, Ardbeg Drum, is finished in rum casks. (Photo by iStock/Dmitrii Sakharov)
Ardbeg Drum, Teeling 29 Year Old Single Malt & More New Whisky
February 22, 2019 –––––– Susannah Skiver Barton
Ardbeg Drum
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Islay)Age: Not statedProof: 46% ABV (Ardbeg Committee release is 52% ABV)Price: $110 (Committee release is $120)Release: March 2019Availability: Limited edition
Need to know:
Ardbeg has unveiled its annual limited-edition whisky, ceremonially released every year on Ardbeg Day, June 1, as part of the Islay Festival of Malt and Music. (It comes out a bit earlier at retail.) Ardbeg Drum includes both "classic Ardbeg" and liquid that is initially matured in ex-bourbon casks and then finished in rum casks from the Americas. (Ardbeg hasn't specified exactly where.) The whisky is intended to evoke the atmosphere of Carnival.
Whisky Advocate says:
Like this new whisky, Ardbeg's last couple of Committee releases have had special barrel treatments: the 2018 release, Ardbeg Grooves (91 points), was matured in heavily charred wine casks, while the 2017 whisky, Ardbeg Kelpie (88 points), included liquid matured in casks made of oak grown and seasoned on the Adyghe Republic's Taman Peninsula, which is surrounded on three sides by the sea.
Teeling 29 Year Old Single Malt
Style: Single maltOrigin: IrelandAge: 29 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $2,500Release: February 2019Availability: 100 bottles, only available in the U.S.
Need to know:
Distilled in 1989, this single malt whiskey spent 27 years in ex-rum casks and was finished for two years in a Pedro Ximénez sherry cask. It is for sale only in the U.S.
Whisky Advocate says:
Last week, Teeling master distiller Alex Chasko was visiting New York to launch this whiskey, and gave us a taste of this special whiskey. As you might expect, the sherry cask influence yields notes of raisins, almonds, and brown sugar. For this whiskey—and others that Teeling is maturing—the company purchased an entire solera of casks from a bodega in Jerez—a very rare resource. Most sherry casks used for aging whisky are "seasoned," meaning they were made and filled with sherry explicitly so that they could be repurposed for whisky maturation. Sherry bodegas prefer to use their solera casks for decades, and rarely let them go. The casks Teeling bought date from 1918.
Balcones Texas Pot Still Bourbon
Style: Straight bourbonOrigin: TexasAge: 2 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $30Release: February 2019Availability: Initially available in California, Florida, and Texas, with expansion planned
Need to know:
A new, permanent addition to Balcones' core lineup of whiskeys, this bourbon was made on the distillery's pot stills and aged at least 24 months in new charred oak. The mashbill includes roasted blue corn, Texas wheat, Texas rye, and malted barley.
Whisky Advocate says:
Two years isn't a long aging time in a place like Kentucky, where the cold winters slow down the interaction between whiskey and barrel that is crucial for developing mature flavors. But in Waco, Texas, where Balcones is located, the average low temperature never gets to freezing—and is much higher for most of the year. That means much quicker maturation, plus a lot more evaporative loss (known as angels' share), and thus a bourbon at 2 years old can hold its own against longer-aged counterparts from elsewhere in the country.
Murray McDavid 2001 Bowmore 15 year old
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Islay)Age: 15 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $225Release: February 2019Availability: 935 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
This whisky spent its first seven years in a 500-liter sherry cask, and was then transferred to a freshly emptied port pipe for the remaining eight years.
Murray McDavid 1999 Laphroaig 17 year old
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Islay)Age: 17 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $260Release: February 2019Availability: 264 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
This Islay single malt spent its entire maturation period in a sherry hogshead.
Murray McDavid 1997 Fettercairn 19 year old
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Highlands)Age: 19 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $180Release: February 2019Availability: 296 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
After a 17-year maturation period in refill bourbon casks, this whisky was finished for two years in a first-fill bourbon cask.
Murray McDavid 1997 Mortlach 19 year old
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Speyside)Age: 19 years oldProof: 50.4% ABVPrice: $300Release: February 2019Availability: 238 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
This whisky matured for 19 years in refill ex-bourbon casks, and then was finished for two months in a European oak barrique from Château Talbot in Bordeaux.
Murray McDavid 1997 Macallan 18 year old
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Highlands)Age: 18 years oldProof: 50.4% ABVPrice: $825Release: February 2019Availability: 115 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
Initially matured for 16 years in ex-bourbon casks, this single malt spent a two-year finishing period in 30-gallon rye casks from Chicago's Koval Distillery.
Murray McDavid 1996 Loch Lomond 19 year old
Style: Single grainOrigin: Scotland (Highlands)Age: 19 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $135Release: February 2019Availability: 635 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
Made from malted barley at Loch Lomond Distillery, this is nevertheless considered a grain whisky because it was distilled on a column still. (In Scotland, single malt must be distilled using pot stills.) It initially matured in refill bourbon casks before being finished for three months in 30-gallon rye casks from Koval Distillery in Chicago.
Murray McDavid 1995 Darach Ruadh III 20 year old
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Speyside)Age: 20 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $210Release: February 2019Availability: 310 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
Made at an undisclosed Speyside distillery "within sight of Ben Rinnes," according to the bottler, this whisky was matured in an American oak hogshead for over 18 years, then finished in a Pedro Ximénez sherry cask. "Darach ruadh" means red oak in Scots Gaelic.
Murray McDavid 1991 Glen Scotia 25 year old
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Campbeltown)Age: 25 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $275Release: February 2019Availability: 315 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
Initially matured in refill sherry casks, this whisky was then transferred to a red wine barrique from Burgundy's Domaine Leroy, where it spent the last ten years of its maturation period.
Murray McDavid 2003 Òrdha Meas 13 year old
Style: Blended whiskyOrigin: Scotland Age: 13 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $55Release: February 2019Availability: 742 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
A combination of various malt and grain whiskies made at the likes of Highland Park, Glenrothes, Glengoyne, Cameronbridge, and Port Dundas and aged at least ten years in ex-bourbon casks, this whisky was finished in European oak sherry casks after blending.
Murray McDavid 2010 Peatside 6 year old
Style: Blended maltOrigin: ScotlandAge: 6 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $80Release: February 2019Availability: 2,266 bottles for the U.S.
Need to know:
Technically a blended malt, Murray McDavid admits this is a "teaspooned" malt—i.e. 99.9% single malt from one distillery, combined with a tiny amount of single malt from somewhere else. It initially matured in bourbon barrels, then was split into two different finishing cask types: port and Pedro Ximénez sherry.
Whisky Advocate says:
Murray McDavid is an independent bottler; that means it buys whisky from various distilleries and either blends it or bottles it as-is under its own name. Most of the distilleries in this batch have allowed Murray McDavid to use their name on the label, but that's not always the case. We have clues about the source of the Darach Ruadh III 20 year old "mystery malt," for example, but thanks to non-disclosure agreements, Murray McDavid can't actually reveal it.It's similar, though not exactly the same, for Peatside 6 year old; the practice of "teaspooning" legally forces an independent bottler to mask the source of the whisky because it's no longer a single malt. An NDA could do the same thing, but I suppose some distillers want to be extra sure that their name doesn't leak as the source of the whisky. Savvy Islay fans, however, could probably taste this whisky and take an educated guess about where it was made.
Big Peat 10 year old
Style: Blended maltOrigin: Scotland (Islay)Age: 10 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: £65Release: February 2019Availability: 10,200 bottles; not available in the U.S.
Need to know:
Ten years ago, Douglas Laing & Co. created the Big Peat blended malt, and this 10 year old limited-edition version celebrates that milestone. As usual, the whisky is made up of various Islay single malts and is bottled with no coloring or chill-filtration.
Whisky Advocate says:
Unhappily for Americans, this whisky is for sale in the UK, Europe, and Asia only.