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Kilchoman Loch Gorm 2021

Kilchoman Loch Gorm 2021

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Bottled at 46% the Loch Gorm is Kilchoman's sherried Islay expression, matured exclusively in Oloroso Sherry and bottled without colouring or chill-filtering. The more recent bottlings have contained increasingly older whisky. This 2020 edition is a vatting of 21 oloroso sherry butts from 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2011.

Killchoman is Islay's smallest and only farm distillery. Their whiskies are among our favourite and best selling Islay malts.

Producer Description

"Named after a famously dark and peaty loch overlooked by the distillery, Loch Gorm is a sherry cask single malt matured exclusively in oloroso casks, extracting the rich spicy character of the European oak as it ages in our Islay warehouses. This, the 2020 edition of Loch Gorm is a vatting of 21 oloroso sherry butts from 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2011."

 

700ml ml
Region:Scotland > Islay

Producer Tasting Note (2020 Edition)

Nose: sweet maltiness, sooty peat smoke and citrus sweetness with light cinnamon and juicy raisins and sultanas.

Palate: Toffee, smoked meats and sherry sweetness with layers of ripe fruit, honey and hints of orange peel and sea salt.

Finish: BBQ smoke, dark chocolate with apples, pears, plums, raisins and lasting oak spice.

Andrew's Tasting Note 2018 Edition

Nose: nutty and earthy with loads of dark fruits: raisins, dates and figs; bright Manukah honey, dark milk chocolate and chewy malt; a hint of earthy smoke and briny medicinal tones but the sherry is firmly in charge; late emerging leather and tobacco.

Palate: more dark fruits, chewy juicy malt and firm earthy-smoke; leathery and tarry with licorice and tobacco leaf; cooked raisins, grilled dates and baked prosciutto wrapped figs; dark, bitter, bakers chocolate; savoury salty tones, sea salt caramel infused chocolate with chilli flakes.

Finish: rich, long, coating and dark: spices, chocolate and smoke slowly fade out; if this is your final malt of the night it will last until morning!

Comment: more balanced and elegant than earthy versions of the whisky; Kilchoman is coming of age and I like what I see!

The following was written by Andrew Ferguson for Celtic Life Magazine in 2017. Since then the distillery has doubled the number of stills, increasing its production considerably--albeit modestly by the standards of the industry. It is still the smallest distillery on Islay, and one of the smallest in Scotland.

Photo Courtesy Kilchoman Distillery

On a cold, windy, and rainy evening in late May of this year, I made my way to a new maturation warehouse built on a low hill overlooking Loch Indaal. I was on the island of Islay for Feis Isle, the Islay Whisky Festival, the holiest of events in the whisky pilgrim’s calendar. This year’s festival was extra special, as two of Scotland’s most iconic distilleries, Lagavulin and Laphroaig, were marking their 200th anniversaries. While these two industry giants were the unofficial special focus of this year’s festivities, they weren’t the only distillery marking a significant milestone. 2015 is also the 10th anniversary of the founding of Kilchoman, Islay’s first new distillery in 124 years. So with the wind howling outside and sheets of rain violently rolling across the building’s roof, I made my way into a dunnage warehouse with 60 other pilgrims for a very special tasting.

The tasting was a look back at Kilchoman’s first decade and what a decade it has been. We sampled a cask from 2006, its first full year of production, and other barrel samples from 2007, 2009, and a number from 2010. It was a rare opportunity to see the whisky’s evolution. The tasting was hosted by the distillery’s founder and managing director, Anthony Wills. Anthony’s vision was to build a small farm distillery, effectively taking Scotch whisky back to its roots. Most of Scotland’s distilleries, even giants like Glenfiddich, Glenlivet, and Macallan all started out as farm distilleries.

In just 10 short years the distillery has nurtured a cult following for its whisky and built a well-earned reputation for quality. Founding a distillery, even a small-scale farm distillery like Kilchoman is no easy feat. Kilchoman’s advisors knew the distillery couldn’t wait 10 years to bottle their spirit, so it had to be flawless right off the bat. They also knew that they would need top-quality casks for maturation. To survive Kilchoman would have to start selling its whisky at a young age, and it would have to be good. There was a lot of anticipation surrounding the release of the “Kilchoman Inaugural Release” in 2009. Interest in Scotch whisky was at a fever pitch, and Islay whiskies were hotter still. The first release didn’t disappoint, and neither have the subsequent ones.

Kilchoman is entering its second decade with confidence, momentum, and a loyal following. The distillery is still bottling young, very peaty Islay whiskies, and it is still turning heads. The distillery’s success has encouraged other small-scale and farm distilleries to pop up all over Scotland. So many that I’ve frankly lost track of.

For a period after its launch, Kilchoman primarily released periodic vintage expressions, but in 2012 the brand coalesced around a core of three whiskies. Kilchoman’s production is small, and so is its footprint. You won’t find these whiskies in every liquor store, but no self-respecting whisky specialist would be caught dead without them.

Photos are all courtesy Kilchoman Distillery!

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