Wolfburn Langskip Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky (700ml)
Volume: 700ml ABV: 58% Age: No Age Statement Country: Scotland
The Wolfburn Distillery has reawakened the spirit of Scotland’s rugged north shore, crafting whisky like it was made over a hundred years ago. Spirit produced by craftsmen made by hand, using only the finest ingredients and without haste. Situated in Thurso in the Highland whisky region of Scotland this distillery was originally first producing spirit in 1821 where it was named Wolfburn after the watercourse it drew from. Now most would relate ‘burn’ to something hot but in Scotland the word ‘burn’ relates to a small stream or small river.
In 2011 the old distillery site was found and more research was carried out to help create a new distillery in Thurso. Purchase of land and plans were completed in May 2012 and before long on January 25th 2013 the distillery started to produce new spirit. This spirit was the first since there was a reward of $16,000 for Ned Kelly – Dead or alive. The Wolfburn motif is taken from a drawing by Konrad Gesner who was a 16th century linguist and zoologist. It was said that the wolf was a common sight in the far north of Scotland and on the coast it was said to have a supernatural relative – the sea-wolf. According to the lore of the time the sea-wolf ‘liveth both on land and sea’ and would give good luck to anyone fortunate to see it. We recommend trying the whisky from this distillery at such a young age and following its path as it forms a new life.
Bottled at 58% and matured in first fill ex-Bourbon casks. This is as natural as Wolfburn gets and if you want to experience the new make spirit components this is where it get some real flavours from. Hugely deep in flavour and mouthfeel.
Our Tasting Notes
Nose: Luscious and floral, sweet shortbread and sugared almonds with some white pepper.
Taste: Mixed dried fruits, walnuts and almonds, macadamia nuts and apricots. nutmeg, ginger and white pepper.
Finish: Freshly cracked black pepper and freshly made toffee apples.