Live Auction

April 2025 Auction

Monthly Auction
Past auction
Started
25 April 2025
Closed
05 May 2025
1 - 32 of 323 Lots
Image for Dalmore Aurora 1964 Oloroso Cask 45 Year Old
45%
70cl
UK
45%
70cl

Dalmore Aurora 1964 Oloroso Cask 45 Year Old

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

This is the Dalmore Aurora, which draws its name from the Aurora Borealis, the Northern Lights, which can occasionally be seen from the distillery. It was distilled in April 1964 and matured in a single Oloroso sherry cask for an incredible 45 years. Presented in a beutiful Glencairn crystal decanter and carbon fibre presentation box.

One of only 200 decanters.

64.3%
70cl
EU
64.3%
70cl

Dalmore 1967 Sirius 44 Year Old

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised. Independent releases like this are hard to come by.

A single cask, this was bottled by Sirius Whisky Purveyors. It was distilled in 1967 and then filled into cask number #2055 on February 24th. 

One of only 89 bottles produced. 

52%
70cl
EU
52%
70cl

Dalmore 1974 32 Year Old

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

An impressive limited edition, this was distilled in 1974 and matured for 32 years in a sherry butt. One of 780 bottles. 

 

Image for Dalmore 1981 Matusalem Sherry Finesse
44%
70cl
UK
44%
70cl

Dalmore 1981 Matusalem Sherry Finesse

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

Distilled on the 24th November 1981, this Dalmore was initially matured in American white oak bourbon barrels for 22 years, then finished for 6 years in Matusalem oloroso sherry casks from Gonzalez Byass.

A certificate of authenticity accompanies the bottle, signed by Richard Paterson.

One of 497 bottles.

Image for Dalmore 1974 Matusalem Sherry Finesse
42%
70cl
UK
42%
70cl

Dalmore 1974 Matusalem Sherry Finesse

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

This addition to Dalmore's Rare and Prestigious series was distilled on the 15th April 1974 and bottled in 2008. It was matured exclusively in a Matusalem sherry butts from Jerez De La Frontera.

One of 948 bottles.

Image for Dailuaine 1966 Cadenhead's 31 Year Old 75cl / US Import
56.8%
75cl
EU
56.8%
75cl

Dailuaine 1966 Cadenhead's 31 Year Old 75cl / US Import

The Authentic Collection was launched by Wm. Cadenhead in 1991, and included whiskies from several rare closed Scottish and Irish distilleries, bottled for the company's 150th anniversary. It would later go on to become a mainstay of their portfolio, as the cask strength alternative to the Original Collection, which replaced their famous \"dumpy\" bottlings in the early 1990s. The Authentic Collection is now the flagship Cadenhead brand, and one of the most recognisable independent labels on the market.

This 1966 vintage Dailuaine was bottled for the US in 1997.

Dailuaine was at a time in the 19th century, Speyside's largest distillery, and it was home to Scotland's first pagoda roofed kiln. That distillery perished in a fire however, in 1917. The newly rebuilt distillery was acquired by DCL (now Diageo) who used its \"meaty\" spirit as a filler for their many blends. As with most of the single malt operations in the Diageo portfolio, the Flora & Fauna release was Dailuaine's first ever distillery bottling. Its single malt had been available in the form of independent releases like this in the preceding years though.

 

Image for Dalmore 1990 Single Cask 31 Year Old #4 - Jacky & Leo
48.4%
70cl
UK
48.4%
70cl

Dalmore 1990 Single Pauillac Cask 31 Year Old #4 / Jacky & Leo

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised. 

This Dalmore was distilled in 1990 and initially matured in American white oak bourbon casks, then finished in single red wine barrique #4, sourced from a Premier Cru estate in Pauillac. It was bottled exclusively for Jacky & Leo. 

Image for Daftmill 2005 Inaugural Release
55.8%
70cl
EU
55.8%
70cl

Daftmill 2005 Inaugural Release

Daftmill was granted a license to begin producing spirit in 2005, and has not bottled a single drop of that first distillate until now. This 12 year old expression is an unprecedentedly well-aged first release, and is a vatting of 3 casks, #02, #03 and #07, all filled in that first year of production.

Daftmill is a farm distillery, owned and run by the Cuthbert family, who grow all of the barley used in their whisky on-site. The distillery is only operational during the farm's quiet periods in mid-summer and mid-winter, sometimes producing as few as 100 casks per year. This first release is no heralding of an opening of the floodgates then, and future Daftmill releases should prove every bit as difficult to come by, and as sought after as this, the first. A true boutique product.

The Chariot barley used for this bottling was harvested in 2014 from the farm's Dam Park and Curling Pond fields. It was malted locally in Fife by Robert Kilgour & co, some of the last in fact, as that company has long since closed down.

One of just 629 bottles.

101 US Proof
75cl
EU
101 US Proof
75cl

Eagle Rare 10 Year Old 101 Proof 1985

Eagle Rare is a historic bourbon brand, originally developed by Seagram's in an effort to capitalise on what it felt were the popular marketing motifs used by Wild Turkey. The produced these early bottlings at the Four Roses distillery in Lawrenceburg, before the label was acquired by the Sazerac company in the 1980s.

The Four Roses distillery was built in Lawrenceburg in 1910 by JTS Brown & Sons. Known back then as the Old Prentice, it is one of the Kentucky distilleries on the National Register of Historic Buildings for its distinctive Spanish mission style architecture. It was re-opened in 1933 after the repeal of Prohibition, passing into the hands of Seagram in 1946, who moved the production of their Four Roses brand there and eventually renamed the distillery after it. When Seagram was wound up in the early 2000s, the distillery and its brands were bought by Japanese firm, Kirin, who continue to produce Four Roses to great acclaim, as well as contract distilling for a number of other bourbon brands.

The Sazerac company moved production of th the Eagle Rare brand to what is now Buffalo Trace in 1992.

Image for Domaine de la Romanee-Conti 1994 Marc de Bourgogne
45.2%
75cl
UK
45.2%
75cl

Domaine de la Romanee-Conti 1994 Marc de Bourgogne

From the internationally-acclaimed Burgundian winery, Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, we present this Fine Bourgogne Brandy.

Marc de Bourgogne is a type of aged pomance Brandy from Burgundy, France. Using wine grapes as the base for distillation, the spirit (at this stage, a Marc or eaux-di-vie) is then matured in oak barrels for a minimum period of 3 years before bottling.

This brandy was distilled from grapes grown during the 1994 vintage, the spirit matured in oak barrels until being estate-bottled in December 2014.

 

Image for Domhayn 2010 Cask DLNABK Spirit Drink / Inaugural Release
55.5%
70cl
UK
55.5%
70cl

Domhayn 2010 Cask DLNABK Spirit Drink / Inaugural Release

This is the inaugural release from maturation innovators Domhayn, an unprecedented single cask spirit drink hydrostatically-diffused in a cask submerged at the depths of Loch Ness.

Cask DLNABK, a small European oak cask seasoned for 12 months with a blend of Oloroso and Pedro Ximénez sherries, was filled with a 15 year old natural strength, unpeated, single malt whisky from the North East of Scotland. ​​​​​The cask was then lowered to the depths of Scotland's iconic landmark on Valentines Day 2025, sitting an incredible 214 meters (702 feet) below the surface. Under more than 280 PSI of pressure, the extreme conditions alter the spirit as the cask compresses - a phenomenon unseen in traditional maturation.

Samples of the spirit before and after submersion have been analysed using mass spectometry by the University of Oxford, demonstrating a decrease in sulphur molecules and an increase of those attributed to the cask itself.

The bottle itself features the exact coordinates where the cask lay on the loch floor, and is presented in a handmade, leather-lined, wax-cotton bag, produced in collaboration with Canadian fashion designer Charlotte McKeough.

This is one of only six bottles, and the first bottle of spirit drink made available from the brand's first submerged cask.

Image for Eagle Rare 17 Year Old Fall 2024
2024
101 US proof
75cl
UK
2024
101 US proof
75cl

Eagle Rare 17 Year Old Fall 2024

Eagle Rare is a historic bourbon brand, originally developed by Seagram in 1975 in an effort to capitalise on what it felt were the popular marketing motifs used by Wild Turkey. Distilled at their Four Roses distillery, the recipe was devised by Charles L. Beam and was sold as a 10 year old with both a 90 and 101 proof version available. Seagram held ambitions beyond the drinks industry however, and in an effort to diversify their portfolio in the 1980s, they sold Eagle Rare along with the Benchmark brand to the Sazerac Company. They initially bottled it using barrels sourced from Heaven Hill, but later moved production to Buffalo Trace in 1992.

The 17 year old Eagle Rare was introduced in 2000, using bourbon distilled at George T. Stagg in the early 1980s. It has been released annually every year as part of the Buffalo Trace Antique Collection, a selection of whiskies collated and in some cases created to pay homage to the history of the company and its brands.

A historic distillery, Buffalo Trace was built in 1812 Harrison Blanton. It was then purchased by the legendary Edmund Haynes Taylor Jr in 1870, who named it OFC (Old Fashioned Copper) and invested heavily in its modernisation. So much so in fact that he declared himself bankrupt after just seven years, and George T. Stagg stepped in to rescue it, becoming its owner in 1878. He ran the distillery until his retirement in the 1890s, and it was renamed in his honour in 1904. Having survived Prohibition, it was bought up by the Schenley company in 1933, who ran it as part of their extensive portfolio for the next fifty years, eventually selling it to Age International. The latter's new Japanese ownership in 1992 had no interest in it (only in its brands), and immediately sold it to the Sazerac company, who renamed it Buffalo Trace in 1999.

This is the 2024 release, distilled in the Spring of 2007.

41%
75cl
EU
41%
75cl

Domaine De La Romanee-Conti Marc de Bourgogne 1960s-70s

From the internationally-acclaimed Burgundian winery, Domaine de la Romanée-Conti,​​​​​​ Marc de Bourgogne is a type of aged pomance Brandy from Burgundy, France. Using wine grapes as the base for distillation, the spirit (at this stage, a Marc or eaux-di-vie) is then matured in oak barrels for a minimum period of 3 years before bottling.

 

 

Image for Elmer T Lee Single Barrel Kentucky Bourbon / Gold Wax
45%
75cl
UK
45%
75cl

Elmer T Lee Single Barrel Kentucky Bourbon / Gold Wax

Elmer T. Lee is a bourbon brand from the portfolio of Age International, the company formed by former Fleischmann's Distilling director's, Bob Baranaskas and Ferdie Falke. They had approached Schenley in the early 1980s with a view to purchasing its Old Charter brand, but were instead offered Ancient Age and the George T. Stagg distillery where it was produced. The deal was completed in 1983, two years before the retirement of George T. Stagg master distiller, Elmer T. Lee, who had served there for 36 years, working his way from the bottom up. One of his final pioneering triumphs before doing so was the introduction of mass produced single barrel bourbon through the creation of the Blanton's brand in 1984. In a fitting tribute, the following year saw the distillery launch the Elmer T. Lee single barrel in his honour. At the time of his death in 2013, Elmer was one of only two living master distillers with a bourbon named after them.

The popularity of these products was particularly high in Japan, coinciding with a market boom for American whiskey there in the 1980s. In 1991, with Age International in some financial trouble, a Japanese company called Takaro Shuzo stepped in and acquired a 22.5% stake in the company. In an unusual series of events, they then scuppered a deal the following year that was to see the remaining shares sold to Heublein (a subsidiary of Grand Metropolitan). Their deal the year before had included a 30 day right of refusal to purchase the shares for themselves should they be put up for sale. With the deal all but done, the Japanese company stepped in on the final day of the window to acquire full control of the company. As it turned out, their only interest was in the brands, and they had used the 30 days to negotiate a deal with the Sazerac Company of  New Orleans. This saw the American company take ownership of the distillery (which they renamed Buffalo Trace in 1999), as well as the exclusive production and US distribution rights for the Age International labels. This is an arrangement that is still in place today.

Interestingly, the Buffalo Trace name is borrowed from the DBA (\"doing business as\") name that Age International used to bottle Elmer T. Lee in the 1980s and 1990s.

This is an early version of the Elmer T. Lee when the bottles were still sealed with wax.

Image for Eagle Rare 10 Year Old 1985
45%
75cl
EU
45%
75cl

Eagle Rare 10 Year Old 1985

Eagle Rare is a historic bourbon brand, originally developed by Seagram's in an effort to capitalise on what it felt were the popular marketing motifs used by Wild Turkey. The produced these early bottlings at the Four Roses distillery in Lawrenceburg, before the label was acquired by the Sazerac company in the 1980s.

The Four Roses distillery was built in Lawrenceburg in 1910 by JTS Brown & Sons. Known back then as the Old Prentice, it is one of the Kentucky distilleries on the National Register of Historic Buildings for its distinctive Spanish mission style architecture. It was re-opened in 1933 after the repeal of Prohibition, passing into the hands of Seagram in 1946, who moved the production of their Four Roses brand there and eventually renamed the distillery after it. When Seagram was wound up in the early 2000s, the distillery and its brands were bought by Japanese firm, Kirin, who continue to produce Four Roses to great acclaim, as well as contract distilling for a number of other bourbon brands.

The Sazerac company moved production of th the Eagle Rare brand to what is now Buffalo Trace in 1992.

1983
45%
75cl
EU
1983
45%
75cl

Eagle Rare 10 Year Old 1983

Eagle Rare is a historic bourbon brand, originally developed by Seagram's in an effort to capitalise on what it felt were the popular marketing motifs used by Wild Turkey. The produced these early bottlings at the Four Roses distillery in Lawrenceburg, before the label was acquired by the Sazerac company in the 1980s.

The Four Roses distillery was built in Lawrenceburg in 1910 by JTS Brown & Sons. Known back then as the Old Prentice, it is one of the Kentucky distilleries on the National Register of Historic Buildings for its distinctive Spanish mission style architecture. It was re-opened in 1933 after the repeal of Prohibition, passing into the hands of Seagram in 1946, who moved the production of their Four Roses brand there and eventually renamed the distillery after it. When Seagram was wound up in the early 2000s, the distillery and its brands were bought by Japanese firm, Kirin, who continue to produce Four Roses to great acclaim, as well as contract distilling for a number of other bourbon brands.

The Sazerac company moved production of th the Eagle Rare brand to what is now Buffalo Trace in 1992.

Image for Dalmore 1966 The Bottlers 27 Year Old Cask #6867
49.8%
70cl
UK + % VAT
49.8%
70cl

Dalmore 1966 The Bottlers 27 Year Old Cask #6867

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

A rare independent bottling of Dalmore. This was distilled in 1966 and released at 27 years old by Raeburn Fine Wines as part of their The Bottlers series.

Drawn at cask strength from cask #6867 in 1994.

Image for Dalmore Rivers Collection Season 2011 4 x 70cl
40%
4 x 70cl
UK
40%
4 x 70cl

Dalmore Rivers Collection Season 2011 4 x 70cl

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised. Independent releases like this are hard to come by.

The Rivers Collection was originally released in 2011 following the success of the original Dee Dram released in 2010 - a 12 year old limited edition released to raise funds for the river Dee Salmon Trust. A second \"season\" was bottled in 2012.

In recognition of the various trusts a donation was made to the Tay Foundation, Tweed Foundation, Spey Foundation and Dee Trust when these bottles were originally on the market.

  • Dalmore Tay Dram Season 2011, 40% 70cl
  • Dalmore Tweed Dram Season 2011, 40% 70cl
  • Dalmore Spey Dram Season 2011, 40% 70cl
  • Dalmore Dee Dram Season 2011, 40% 70cl

Please note this lot has a 4 bottle shipping fee.

Image for Elijah Craig 1990 Single Barrel 23 Year Old #172
45% / 90 US Proof
75cl
EU
45% / 90 US Proof
75cl

Elijah Craig 1990 Single Barrel 23 Year Old #172

Elijah Craig is named after an 18th century pastor, often cited (although probably incorrectly) as the first man to distil bourbon in the US due to his tenuous accreditation for pioneering the use of charred barrels in maturation. The Elijah Craig brand was trademarked by Commonwealth Distillers in 1960, who sold it to current owners, Heaven Hill in 1976. It would be ten years before they would bottle it for the first time however, somewhat controversially launching the flagship 12 year old in 1986 when the US bourbon market, which historically preferred younger age-statements, was already in one of its lowest troughs in popularity. The gamble paid off however, reshaping the image of Heaven Hill as a premium producer, which prevails to this day with the Elijah Craig label remaining at the forefront of its output.

This is a 23 year old Elijah Craig and was matured in single new charred oak barrel #172.

Heaven Hill was established by a group of private investors in 1935, following the repeal of Prohibition a few years earlier. Among the founders was distiller, Joseph L. Beam, and a member of the Shapira family. As the company grew, the Shapira's eventually acquired sole ownership of it, and their descendants still run it today. In a similar dynastic vein, Joe Beam remained master distiller despite the Shapira takeover, and members of his family have occupied the role ever since. This was produced at the Old Heavenhill Springs distillery, later renamed simply as Heaven Hill, which was located in Bardstown, Kentucky. It was sadly lost in a devastating fire in 1996, and bourbon made there has become increasingly sought after as the years pass. The company had no distillery for the next three years, but were permitted to rent stills at Jim Beam and Brown-Forman in order to maintain production. They eventually acquired the newly refurbished Bernheim distillery from Diageo in 1999, which has been their home ever since.

Image for Diageo Hill Street Johnnie Walker 1820 Blend / 50th Anniversary Decanter
40%
70cl
EU
40%
70cl

Diageo Hill Street Johnnie Walker 1820 Blend / 50th Anniversary Decanter

Johnnie Walker is arguably the most popular and recognisable blended Scotch on the market. Its core range includes the standard Red Label and Black Label, introduced in 1909 and named, quite simply, after their packaging. The iconic “striding man” motif was first drawn by Tom Browne the year prior. The premium Blue Label brand was introduced in 1992, and is composed using malt whisky from some of the most sought after distilleries in Diageo’s extensive portfolio. Today, many of these distilleries are only still with us due to their importance to the Johnnie Walker blends during the difficult 1980s period for the industry. A true champion of the whisky world.

This is a decanter presented to employees of Diageo to commemorate the 50th Anniversary of Diageo at Hill Street, Kilmarnock in 2006. The decanter contains the rare Johnnie Walker 1820 blend produced originally only for the Taiwanese market which contains whiskies estimated to be 21 years old.

47%
70cl
EU
47%
70cl

Famille Vallein-Tercinier Lot 65 Tres Vieux Grande Champagne Cognac

Lot 65 is a 1965 vintage Grande Champagne Cognac, bottled after an incredible 50 years in 2015.

Vallein Tercinier was foundered in 1850 by Georges Vallein and today remains in the same family five generations down the line. For over a century and a half the family have developed a reputation in the world of cognac for the quality of its blending. They have also purposely steered clear of expanding to a size where they would no longer be considered to be a boutique producer. This puts them in the position of not being a household name, but for those who know the subject of cognac they can be described as a “kept secret\". Today the Maison is ran by Catherine and Louis Tercinier who have embraced a mixture of modern production techniques and traditions gathered from 170 years’ worth of experience.

 

 

40%
70cl
EU
40%
70cl

Faberge Art's Applied Craft Imperial Collection Super Premium Vodka

This premium Russian Vodka is produced in the Ladoga factory located in St. Petersburg. It is made from Saratovskaya wheat and with water from the Ladoga Lake, refined through birch charcoal, a silver filter and membrane filter. 

These decanters and glasses are made of Venetian glass with the decorative elements adorned with 24-carat gold. Inspired by Faberge eggs, the outer case is made of metal alloy decorated with colored crystals.

Note- this lot will incur a two-bottle shipping fee

43%
1 Litre
EU
43%
1 Litre

Delva \"Afrika Corps Lost Liquor\" Special Brand 1940s

This is a fascinating bottle. The contents of which are some of the near 250,000 gallons of whisky, discovered along with stores of Cognac, Rum and Gin by Erwin Rommel's Afrika Corps in a wine cellar in North Africa during the early stages of World War 2. After sharing the spoils among his men, the remaining casks were shipped to the Italian village of Nettuno, Italy in the holds of Axis ships.The town was then captured by Allied forces in 1944, the alcohol along with it, and US forces ordered it to be bottled at the local Delva Distillery, to be distributed among the troops. The bottles were tested by a long-forgotten Allied Military Government unit called the R.A.A.C. who labelled them, \"chemical tests carried out on Delva Liquors showed all to be within standards of purity prescribed for use by Allied Military personnel.\"

After the war the bottles were transferred into the care of the Linz National Customs Forces in Austria where they remained untouched until the 1970's. Then, in early 1976 the Afrika Corps \"Lost Liquor\" bottles were released, for sale predominantly within US Army Class VI stores. Many of the bottles had significant damage to the labels, so they were removed and replaced with replicas that looked identical but read, \"this is a true and faithful reproduction of the original label-combination on this bottle\" (and now bore volume and ABV indicators). The bottles however are still those filled at Delva, and the liquid is still that discovered by the Nazi Afrika Corps forces in the 1940's.

A bottle of blended Scotch from the early 20th century; this is a fantastic piece of both whisky and World War II history.

Please note: no volume is stated on this lot

53.6%
70cl
EU
53.6%
70cl

Eye Of The Dragon Islay Single Malt / slowdrink.de & Regensburger Whisky Club

This is an Islay single malt from an undisclosed distillery, speculated to be Caol Ila.

Though scant on the details, the label provides a tongue-in-cheek rundown of the tasting notes, as well as disclosing that the whisky is from a cuvée of vintages with almost 40% dating back to the 1970s. It was matured in ex-Bourbon and Oloroso casks and bottled by Regensbuger Whiskey & Wine Club, and is the 15th in their series of private club bottlings.

53.6%
70cl
EU
53.6%
70cl

Eye Of The Dragon Islay Single Malt / slowdrink.de & Regensburger Whisky Club

This is an Islay single malt from an undisclosed distillery, speculated to be Caol Ila.

Though scant on the details, the label provides a tongue-in-cheek rundown of the tasting notes, as well as disclosing that the whisky is from a cuvée of vintages with almost 40% dating back to the 1970s. It was matured in ex-Bourbon and Oloroso casks and bottled by Regensbuger Whiskey & Wine Club, and is the 15th in their series of private club bottlings.

Image for Four Roses Barrel Strength Small Batch 2013 70cl / 125th Anniversary
51.6%
70cl
UK
51.6%
70cl

Four Roses Barrel Strength Small Batch 2013 70cl / 125th Anniversary

The 2013 barrel strength, small batch release from Four Roses.

The origins of the Four Roses brand are historically hazy, with some speculating that it has been sold since the 1860s. The brand name itself was trademarked in 1888 by the Paul Jones company. At the onset of Prohibition, Paul Jones purchased the Frankfort Distillery, reorganising their company as part of it in order to use its medicinal license to continue to bottle Four Roses bourbon. The Four Roses distillery we know today was built in Lawrenceburg in 1910 by JTS Brown & Sons. Known back then as the Old Prentice, it is one of the Kentucky distilleries on the National Register of Historic Buildings for its distinctive Spanish mission style architecture. It was re-opened in 1933 after the repeal of Prohibition, Seagram purchased the Frankfort Distillery in 1943, and the Old Prentice distillery three years later, moving the production on the Four Roses brand there, renaming the plant after it in the process. When Seagram was wound up in the early 2000s, the distillery and its brands were bought by Japanese firm, Kirin, who continue to produce Four Roses to great acclaim.

One of 12,468 bottles released in the 70cl size. 

 

Image for Dalmore 1992 Mackenzie​ / includes Print
46%
70cl
UK
46%
70cl

Dalmore 1992 Mackenzie​ / includes Print

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

The Dalmore Mackenzie was released to commemorate the long lasting relationship between Dalmore and Clan Mackenzie. The whisky was distilled in 1992 and intially matured in bourbon hogsheads for 11 years, then finished for a further 6 years in port pipes.

This particular bottle includes a print of Benjamin West's 1786 masterpiece 'Death of the Stag', which depicts Alexander III of Scotland rescued from the fury of a stag by the intrepidity of Colin Fitzgerald of the Mackenzie clan. The original painting hangs in the National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh, and inspires the label and box of the bottle featured here.

One of 3,000 bottles.

Print measures 42cm x 29.5cm

Image for Dalmore 1992 Mackenzie​ / includes Print
46%
70cl
UK
46%
70cl

Dalmore 1992 Mackenzie​ / includes Print

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

The Dalmore Mackenzie was released to commemorate the long lasting relationship between Dalmore and Clan Mackenzie. The whisky was distilled in 1992 and intially matured in bourbon hogsheads for 11 years, then finished for a further 6 years in port pipes.

This particular bottle includes a print of Benjamin West's 1786 masterpiece 'Death of the Stag', which depicts Alexander III of Scotland rescued from the fury of a stag by the intrepidity of Colin Fitzgerald of the Mackenzie clan. The original painting hangs in the National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh, and inspires the label and box of the bottle featured here.

One of 3,000 bottles.

Print measures 42cm x 29.5cm

Image for Dalmore 1992 Mackenzie​
46%
70cl
UK
46%
70cl

Dalmore 1992 Mackenzie​

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

The Dalmore Mackenzie was released to commemorate the long lasting relationship between Dalmore and Clan Mackenzie. The whisky was matured in a bourbon hogsheads for 11 years before a finishing period of 6 years in port pipes.

A limited and highly sought after bottling of which only 3,000 were made.

64.6%
70cl
EU
64.6%
70cl

Dallas Dhu 1982 SMWS 16 Year Old 45.8

The Scotch Malt Whisky Society (SMWS) was founded in 1983 by a group of friends lead by tax accountant Phillip ‘Pip’ Hills as a private members club. The concept behind the society was to source casks from all over Scotland which would then be bottled and made available exclusively to its members. Perhaps the most famous feature of these bottles are the unique codes. Each distillery is represented by a different number and the following digits indicate that particular release. That same year, the SMWS set up its first location in Leith’s Vault buildings in Edinburgh where it still stands today.

This whisky was distilled in January 1982 and aged for 16 years.

In its time a key component of the Roderick Dhu blended Scotch, Dallas Dhu is a rarely seen single malt. As with much of the DCL (now Diageo) portfolio, the distillery was deemed surplus to requirements during the market downturn of the 1980s, and closed in 1983. It is now run as a distillery museum by Historic Environment Scotland. Very few official bottlings exist, and it is incredibly sought after when rare independent bottlings appear.

Image for Dalmore 15 Year Old Luminary No.1 / Kengo Kuma
46.8%
70cl
EU
46.8%
70cl

Dalmore 15 Year Old Luminary No.1 / Kengo Kuma

Dalmore is undoubtedly the prize single malt in the Whyte & Mackay portfolio. This was not always the case though. The blenders purchased it from the Mackenzie family in 1960, having been long-standing customers. Due to the long-running importance of it to their blends, their distillery bottlings of its single malt were limited to a 12 year old expression. Nowadays however, it is positioned as a luxury brand, rubbing shoulder with the likes of Macallan, and is globally recognised.

Released in 2024, this 2022 edition Luminary release celebrates the great Japanese architect Kengo Kuma, who is responsible for the Dundee V&A museum. The whisky itself was matured in American white oak casks, and finished in Amarone wine casks and bespoke virgin 'kintsugi' casks, crafted from Scottish Tay, Japanese oak and American white oak.

Image for Faberge Art's Applied Craft Imperial Collection Super Premium Vodka
40%
70cl
UK
40%
70cl

Faberge Art's Applied Craft Imperial Collection Super Premium Vodka

This premium Russian Vodka is produced in the Ladoga factory located in St. Petersburg. It is made from Saratovskaya wheat and with water from the Ladoga Lake, refined through birch charcoal, a silver filter and membrane filter. 

These decanters and glasses are made of Venetian glass with the decorative elements adorned with 24-carat gold. Inspired by Faberge eggs, the outer case is made of metal alloy decorated with coloured crystals.

Please note due to the size and weight of this lot, it will carry a two-bottle shipping fee.

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