GLENMORANGIE 18 YEAR
Glenmorangie
make some of the most elegant, feminine whiskies out there, from their
paradigmatic Extra Matured series to experimental throwbacks like
Finealta. The 18 Year, called Extremely
Rare, is a decadent, rich single malt that shows great finesse and balance,
managing to be both buxom and lithe.
Aged fifteen years in bourbon barrels, it spends its final three in
Sherry butts; it’s something like the apotheosis of the twelve-year-old Lasanta, showing a
hint of its struck-match note at the finish.
After only a few hours of air, this older iteration begins fairly to
glow with a Speyside-like sweetness and roasted-nut charm, possessed of breathtaking
breadth of complexity and flavor, and a finish that goes on for minutes.
nose: Has that wonderful old-book sweetness, glossy leaves with
ink you can feel under your fingertips like braille; spicy orange confit and
clove; cinnamon toast and vanilla orchid; spearmint and honey; a certain
limeflower roundness like old Riesling. Finely-wrought, accessible, and mightily sophisticated.
palate: An initial salvo of vanilla-almond meringue swirls and
expands and then seems to plunge over a cliff, or maybe burst like a dam. It's an eye-rollingly pleasurable sensation, something like the palate being pulled into a vast,
open organoleptic space where wave after wave of supple, spine-tingling flavors
bear it along and safely to rest. It manages somehow to be utterly
nostalgic and yet unexpected, reassuring and at the same time thrilling. There are hops
and honeycomb and lime and slate and grass and saltwater taffy and sweet minty
candy, with a midpalate that tastes eerily of Kentucky chess pie: flavors that
burst onto the palate like cream into a cup of tea, to swirl and integrate into
a wondrous, swooningly delicious whole, that shimmer and echo and fade away
with the tiny, tiniest wee hint of smoke (here the match-head echo of Lasanta). So, so long and pretty.
This is whisky
to write poetry on, and to, if you’ll forgive the grammar. Wistful and compelling and leaning mightily
in the direction of the shattering vinous elegance of a Macallan 18. Glenmorangie make a damn fine whisky in general,
so, as you might expect, this Extremely Rare 18 Year is absofuckinlutely worth
the benjamin, if you’ve got it to drop.
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