Chivas Regal

The Power Behind the Crown: The Distilleries Behind Chivas Regal.

Strathisla strathclyde braeval longmourn glen keith whisky single malt scotch chivas regal distilleries thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Words by Colin Hampden-White

Covid 19 has created some real problems for the world of wines and spirits. With hospitality having been shut down, and with fewer people shopping on the high street, businesses are under a lot of pressure. With the travel ban in the UK only allowing us to travel if we have to, many tourist sites are closed.

The distilleries keep on distilling; however, the distillery shops and visitor centres have been closed. There are some advantages for the whisky lover that this is the case. Distilleries often sell whisky in their distillery shops which cannot be bought anywhere else. This is a sort of reward for those venturing to visit the distillery. These bottles can be very special, ranging from bottles you can fill yourself (hand-fill bottles as they are known) as at Aberfeldy or Glenfiddich, to limited editions such as those created by Lagavulin and Oban. There are also occasionally single cask, cask strength bottles created, and it is a set of those I am particularly excited about.

Every now and again there are single cask, cask strength bottles created by Chivas to show off their single malt distilleries and these are sold in their shop at the Strathilsa distillery. Recently eight bottles have been created and, as we can’t visit the distillery shop to buy them, Chivas have opened their shop to everyone and are selling these unique expressions online.

There are four very different expressions from the Strathisla distillery itself, and four rare expressions from Strathclyde, Braeval, Glenkeith and Longmorn.

Strathisla 13 Year Old 1st Fill Barrel

Strathisla whisky 13 year old first fill barrel whisky Chivas Regal thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

This is a perfect place to start. Strathisla is at the heart of the Chivas blend, and this cask gives sweet aromas and flavours of honey and vanilla. There are also sweet meadow floral notes and a core of fresh orchard fruits like apple and pear. For a whisky at a high ABV, it is smooth and satisfying and opens up a little with a drop of water. Being non-chill filtered and un-coloured, at £65 this single cask bottle is great value and if you are venturing out into the world of single cask bottles, a great place to start.

Size: 500ml
ABV: 57.1%
Find here: £65


Strathisla 13 Year Old 1st Fill Butt

Strathisla whisky 13 year old whisky Chivas Regal thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

We then come to another 13 year old Strathisla. This has been matured in a first fill sherry butt which shows perfectly the different flavour a sherry cask gives to spirit in comparison to the ex-bourbon cask and it is only a little higher in ABV at 59%. One can see from the colour alone that this is a very different whisky from the first. This whisky gives up aromas and flavours that are rich and robust with lots of dried fruits like raisins and figs with spices of cinnamon, nutmeg and a touch of cardamom giving balance and interest. The spices continue well into the finish which is very long and dry. At £75 this is a great introduction to sherry cask maturation and when tried with the previous whisky, it is a great education into the differences between ex-bourbon and ex-sherry casks.

Size: 500ml
ABV: 59%
Find here: £75 

Strathisla 16 Year Old 1st Fill Barrel

Strathisla whisky 16 year old whisky Chivas Regal thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

With the third offering, we have a little more age added to maturation in a first fill ex-bourbon barrel at 53.5%. This whisky shows the advantages of age, and has even more vanilla smoothness that the 13 year old. There is extra fruitiness too, with not only orchard fruits but tropical fruits coming into the mix. The honey flavours are a little more complex and the vanilla flavours develop into a creamy vanilla toffee fudge which persists right through to the finish. With extra age there are a few more pounds, but still great value at £85.

Size: 500ml
ABV: 53.5%
Find here: £85

Strathisla 16 Year Old 2nd Fill Butt 

Strathisla whisky 16 year old second fill butt whisky Chivas Regal thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

The last of the Strathisla whiskies is another 16 year old expression at 62.6%. Using sherry butts which have been used once before, this high strength dram has lots of power but also has great complexity from the sherry cask. The balance created by using a second fill cask is clearly evident and the wood notes don’t overpower the spirit. There are lots of toasted oak flavours and nuts like hazelnut and oily walnuts. The spices are root spices like ginger and there is a touch of pepper in the background too. These strong flavours are all in harmony and although the ABV is very high, the whisky has a gentle laid-back character. With sherry butts costing nearly ten times the price of an ex-bourbon barrel, this is a steal at £90.

Size: 500ml
ABV: 62.6%
Find here: £90

 

Strathclyde 12 Year Old 1st Fill Barrel

Strathclyde 12 Year Old 1st Fill Barrel Chivas Regal thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Blends are of course made up from both malt whisky and grain whisky, and it is a grain whisky Chivas have released in their fifth bottle of the collection. It is from the Strathclyde distillery. It is a 12 year old matured in a first fill ex-bourbon barrel and bottled at 62.2%. This whisky has a delicate body and is very smooth for a youngish grain whisky. For such a high ABV this is quite soft and has a creamy mouthfeel. There are floral and citrus aromas and flavours and touches of clear runny honey which persist all the way to the finish. This whisky gives an idea of the character needed to be the backbone of a great blended whisky. It is delicate enough not to overpower the malts and bold enough to allow the malt whisky flavours to shine. This whisky is only £45 and is a great way to experience grain whisky by itself.

Size: 500ml
ABV: 62.2%
Find here: £45


Braeval 17 Year Old 1st Fill Barrel 

Braeval 17 Year Old 1st Fill Barrel Chivas Regal thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

We now move onto more unusual whiskies little seen as single malt. To make up a good blend many single malts are used to give great complexity and harmony. This single malt is Braeval (also known as Braes of Glenlivet). It is a seventeen year old whisky matured in a first fill ex-bourbon barrel and bottled at 56.4%. This whisky has the typical Speyside flavours of apples and pears which are joined by toffee and tropical fruits. These flavours are sweet and the dram has a very moreish quality. A great way to explore the single malts of Speyside further and taste a whisky with a slightly different character. With this whisky rarely seen as a single malt, like the whiskies before it represents good value for a rarity at £95.

Size: 500ml
ABV: 56.4%
Find here: £95

 

Longmourn 20 Year Old 2nd Fill Butt 

Longmourn 20 Year Old 2nd Fill Butt Chivas Regal thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

The penultimate whisky is one of my favourite distilleries in Speyside. It is a 20 year old Longmorn matured in a second fill sherry cask and bottled at 55.2%. With such a long time in cask, this whisky is complex and luxurious. The spices are subdued with sweeter flavours persisting. Almonds and toffee mix with sweet pear juice and dark chocolate, and there is a little manuka honey in the background. There is also a touch of ginger in the finish which becomes drier and spicier after a while. This is not a cheap whisky, but then it shouldn’t be, at 20 years old it is £175 and worth every penny.

Size: 500ml
ABV: 55.2%
Find here: £175

 

Glen Keith 22 Year Old First Fill Barrel

Glen Keith 22 Year Old 1st Fill Barrel Chivas Regal thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Lastly, we come to a distillery that had a change in its history. Glen Keith closed down in 1999 very soon after this whisky was distilled and was not re-opened until 2013 after a huge refurbishment programme. That makes this 22 year old whisky rather rare, and as the old distillery processes no longer exist we will not see the likes of it again. It was matured in a first fill ex-bourbon barrel and bottled at 49.5%. It is a sweet whisky with a zesty side to it. Honey and vanilla creams mix well with fresh orchard fruits and a little tinned peach and dried apricots. It is very smooth and satisfying and one of the best examples of Glen Keith at around this age I have tasted. It is £165 which I think is very good for a single cask, cask strength rare whisky at 22 years old and bottled by the proprietor.

Size: 500ml
ABV: 49.5%
Find here: £165

Although all these whiskies are great to try by themselves, as a collective they show the breadth of flavours that make up the Chivas blend, and the costs have been kept down by creating 50cl bottles rather than 70cl. And if you can’t buy all eight of them, I’d certainly get one ex-bourbon and one ex-sherry to try side by side, especially if you want to understand the role of a blender in Scotch whisky.

For more whisky goodness check out 5 Epic Chocolate and Whisky Pairings or Around the World in Six Whiskies.

Blended Scotch v Single Malt Scotch Whisky: What Should I Buy?

Words by Colin Hampden-White

Blended Scotch Malt Scotch thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Whisky is made of three ingredients; grain, water and yeast. Malt whisky uses malted barley which is barley that has been brought to the point of germination by soaking, then drying, before it is then used to make the malt whisky. Whisky can be made by using other grains like wheat or maize too and this creates grain whisky. Blended whisky is a mixture of grain whisky and malt whisky. In the case of blended Scotch whisky, the whisky must contain 15% of malt whisky, all the whisky must be aged in oak barrels (casks) for three years, and it must also be over 40% abv.

The difference is relatively simple, but a preconception that blended whisky is not as good as malt whisky needs to be unpicked. 90% of the whisky produced and sold globally is blended whisky, and 90% of that blended whisky is inexpensive supermarket whisky. This leads to the idea that blended whisky is not as good as malt whisky which, for the majority of whiskies, is true; it will be aged for less time and the barrels used will generally be not as high quality as those used for malt whisky. However, there are blended whiskies that are just as good as malt whiskies and sometimes quite a bit better.

The concept of the blend is to be harmonious. They can still have their own character, but, using the analogy of an orchestra, single malt is like a solo instrument, i.e. a violin, whilst a blend is like the whole orchestra playing together. One of my favourite whiskies is a blend:  Johnnie Walker Black Label, which requires around forty different whiskies. 

There are whiskies for everyone at all levels. Here are three of my favourite blends and three of my favourite malts at three different price points. What they all have in common is that they are excellent whiskies, and at the different price points the blends can equal the quality of the malts, and vice versa.

Blended Scotch Whisky

Johnnie Walker Black Label

Johnnie Walker Black 200

Johnnie Walker Black Label is my go-to whisky. It is brilliantly complex with an underlying fruity base, lots of caramel and vanilla flavours, but also a hint of smoke running through the whisky too. In 2020, Johnnie Walker celebrated its 200th birthday! It is incredible to think it has been two centuries since John Walker founded this whisky brand, which has gone on to become world-famous. As part of the festivity surrounding this milestone, a limited edition bottling of Johnnie Walker Black Label 12 Year Old was released, designed in collaboration with fashion house Alpha Industries. It contains the same whisky as the regular 12 and is the same price, but I think the bottle gives it a little extra panache. 

ABV: 40%
Size: 700ml
Find here: UK £29.95// US $29.99

Chivas Regal 18 year old

Chivas Regal 18

A richly indulgent blended Scotch whisky from long-time favourite, Chivas. The Chivas Regal 18 Year Old was personally created by Master Blender Colin Scott, including over 20 single malts from around Scotland, Colin is about to retire this year, but his legacy will live on in this excellent blended whisky, you can even see his name on the presentation box. Definitely no stranger to awards, this one. It even took home the International Wine & Spirit Competition 2014 Trophy for Blended Scotch Whisky! A great whisky to sip and savour, but also rather good for cocktails if you fancy giving them an upgrade.

ABV: 40%
Size: 700ml
Find here: UK £59.83 // US $99.99

The Tweeddale 28 Year Old – The Evolution

Tweeddale 28 evolution

This is the oldest of the Tweeddale range to date. This delicious blended Scotch whisky boasts an impressive 28 year old age statement and a flavour profile packed full of cooked fruit, festive spice notes and lifted oak. If you’d like to experience a blend that has youthful sweet fruits, but also impressive oak balance and has older whisky flavours running throughout, then this is a sure-fire bet.

ABV: 52%
Size: 700ml
Find here: £139.95

Single Malt Scotch Whisky

Highland Park 12 year old – Viking Honour

Highland Park 12 year old thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Highland Park's spectacular 12 Year Old expression had a full-on Viking make-over in 2017, (the 18 Year Old is also getting a redesign, too). Stylish new livery and matching sub-name (Viking Honour) aside, the malt remains the same, it is complex with a certain sea air quality and salinity balanced by honey. This is a single malt with lots of character and I’d have it as my solo instrument any day.

ABV: 40%
Size: 700ml
Find here: UK £29.95 // US $54.99

Talisker 18 Year old

Talisker 18

Talisker comes from the Isle of Skye on the west coast of Scotland, this expression has spent 18 years in casks, some of which used to hold Bourbon and some Sherry. The whisky is sweet and smoky with spicy flavours intermingling with the smoke and it has serious credentials. Back in 2007 it won the Best Whisky in the World category at the World Whisky Awards. For me, this is one of the best value versus price single malt whiskies in the world.

ABV: 45.8%
Size: 700ml
Find here: UK £75.95 // US $169.99

Tomatin 30 Year old

Tomatin 30

Tomatin 30 year old is one of my favourite 30 year old whiskies, and that is before I consider the price. Finding a 30 year old whisky at under £300 today is pretty difficult, and this is one of the best whiskies of this nature. It is full of honey and spice but has a lot of tropical fruit to balance all the spice and pepper. There is plenty of complexity. Unlike the Talisker, there is no smoke, so if you’re not a fan of smoky whisky, then you should love this. It is indulgent and has finesse at the same time.

ABV: 46%
Size: 700ml
Buy it now for £299

I would be a happy chap if those six whiskies were the only whiskies I could drink from now on. None of them have outrageous levels of smoke or are too sweet and all have complexity. They are my perfect six pack. If you’re intrigued by Scotch and would like to discover some great bang for buck bottles, how about trying a few of these bottles?