Bruichladdich 17 year old Single Malt Scotch Whisky from the 1990s (30ml dram)
About This Dram
Cheaper By The Dram shares the cost of expensive whiskies between customers by splitting bottles into drams.
Dram NO.19 is a 17-year-old single malt scotch whisky, distilled at Bruichladdich and bottled by the distillery in the 1990s.
The current retail price of a 1L bottle is £300.
About This Single Malt Scotch Whisky
Distilled At: Bruichladdich Distillery
Region: Islay
Bottled By: Distillery
Type: Single Malt Scotch Whisky
Age: 17 Year Old
Bottled: 1990's
Dram Size: 30ml miniature
Alcohol by Volume: 43%
About Bruichladdich Distillery
Located on the shores of Loch Indaal, a sea loch on the western part of Islay, the Bruichladdich distillery was built in 1881 by the Harvey brothers a Glasgow-based family of distillers who owned the Dundashill and Yorker grain whisky distilleries. As with virtually every Scottish distillery established in the late Victorian period the Bruichladdich distillery initially existed to provide malt for blending, originally producing peated malts to satisfy the demand of Glasgow benders.
Over the years the Bruichladdich distillery’s style would shift to meet the blenders needs, and in contrast to the heavily peated Islay whiskies produced by Ardbeg, Lagavulin and Laphroaig the distillery would become renowned for its output of an unpeated Islay malt displaying a gentler fresh and mildly floral character. The Harveys operated the Bruichladdich distillery until 1929, when the distillery closed as a result of the interwar Depression. Although revived in 1936 and sold to Joseph Hobbs the owner of the Ben Nevis distillery in 1938, for the next thirty years the Bruichladdich distillery would see a succession of owners.
In 1968, the Bruichladdich distillery was bought by Invergordon Distillers, although impacted by a downturn in the whisky market the distillery would operate at reduced capacity throughout the 1980s. After Invergordon’s takeover by Whyte and Mackay Ltd in 1993 the Bruichladdich distillery was closed as surplus to requirements and allowed to fall into disrepair. Bruichladdich looked destined to become one of Scotland’s lost distilleries, but in 2001 it was acquired by a consortium of Islay landowners and London-based wine merchant for £6.5 million. Following renovation, the Bruichladdich distillery resumed production with the new owners evaluating stock of maturing spirit and casks used for maturation to release a series of limited editions, whilst the new maltings retain the distillery’s classic lighter fresh and fruity character.
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