Hi Malt
Mates. I hope you are all fine. It’s been quite a while since I last posted a
whisky review so I thought now would be the right time to publish my second
Rev-U. The malt that I’m going to present is the Bruichladdich Rocks.
Bruichladdich
is a malt distillery on the Isle of Islay. It was founded in 1881 and was shut
down twice: From 1929-1937 and from 1994-2000. In the year 2000 the distillery
was bought for 7’500’000 £ by a Group of Investors led by Mark Reynier who successfully
brought in Jim McEwan as head distiller. McEwan is a legend in the whisky industry and
has previously worked as master distiller at the Bowmore distillery. In 2012 Bruichladdich was sold to Rémy Cointreau for 58’000’000 £. Generally speaking I
really like what Bruichladdich is doing. It is a progressive distillery that
focuses on using local resources, and giving the consumer a little bit extra.
All their whiskies are natural colour and unchillfiltered.
The name “Rocks”
is inspired by the fact that the water which is used by the distillery has
filtered up through “the oldest rocks in the whisky world – the curious 1.8
billion-year-old geology of the Rhinns of Islay”
The whisky
has no age statement and is bottled at 46% ABV. It has been matured in bourbon
casks and finished in Grenache wine casks.
This has
been one of the first bottles of whisky that I possessed. I got it as a gift
for my 19th birthday by my high school buddies. As I am writing this
article I am enjoying the very last sips of this malt so thanks a lot to Rafi,
Largey, Päsce, Vali and Simone if you are reading this J