Review / Tamnavulin White Wine Cask Edition

This new whisky is the latest addition to the core range of Tamnavulin, the up-and-coming Speyside single malt brand. The Tamnavulin White Wine Cask Edition follows a series of successful ex-red wine cask expressions that have been launched over the la…


This new whisky is the latest addition to the core range of Tamnavulin, the up-and-coming Speyside single malt brand. The Tamnavulin White Wine Cask Edition follows a series of successful ex-red wine cask expressions that have been launched over the last two years. The new whisky was initially matured in American white oak ex-bourbon barrels before being transferred for a finishing period in ex-Sauvignon Blanc wine casks. White wine casks are used much less than red or fortified wine casks for maturing whisky. The Tamnavulin White Wine Cask Edition is bottled at 40% ABV and is available now in the UK and USA, and will be shortly available in selected European markets. A bottle will cost £32/ $42 US/ €38.

The Tamnavulin distillery is located in the hamlet of Tomnavoulin and sits on the banks of the River Livet near Ballindalloch. It was opened in 1966 by the Tamnavulin-Glenlivet Distillery Company, a subsidiary of Invergordon Distillers Ltd. The name of the distillery translates as 'the mill on the hill' from local Gaelic. 

Tamnavulin was closed for 12 years between May 1995 and July 2007. It was reopened by Whyte & Mackay who remain as the owners. The distillery has a large capacity of 4 million litres a year, although most is allocated for blending contracts. The Distillery Manager is Leon Webb, who was appointed at the beginning of May this year. 

Our tasting notes

The colour is golden yellow and the nose is fresh, vibrant and green. Lively aromas of crisp apple, cantelope melon and something very vegetal - this is reminiscent of fresh asparagus and a bouquet garni. Hints of green tomato, elderflower and lemon sherbet also add interest and depth. 

On the palate this whisky maintains that vibrancy and freshness from the nose. Initial sweet notes of vanilla, honey and white chocolate are quickly joined by some youthful heat. This reminds us of white pepper in particular. The expressive green characteristics also come through early on. These include crisp green apple, peardrop sweets, melon and tangy white grapes. With time it feels like the apple and grape have been dipped in golden syrup. The peppery nature gives the whisky punch and it becomes warmer with hints of cinnamon, gingerbread and woody tannins developing towards the end.

These late tannins make the whisky a touch bittersweet on the finish. The green tomato and vegetal notes evolve strongly and linger, with the sweeter and fruity characteristics dissolving quite quickly. However, the peppery heat elongates the finish, but gives just heat and little else.

What's the verdict?

It is interesting so see someone using a white wine cask in such a mainstream release. That can only be a good thing and spawn more such releases from other companies. Tamnavulin, and their owners Whyte & Mackay, have never been afraid to do this as their previous red wine releases show. 

But that said, this whisky still feels a bit 'safe' in terms of flavour. It is nice, fresh and vibrant but they could have pushed the boundaries of flavour a little further. We guess that is the fine balance that companies face - do you make something very expressive and 'out there' or do you cater for the palate of the general £30 a bottle whisky consumer?


Inbox / The Week’s Whisky News (April 22, 2022)

Welcome to Inbox, our weekly round up of whisky news and PR material that has found its way in to our WFE email. It was created as we cannot write full articles or do justice to every piece received. It features items from around the world of whisky an…



Welcome to Inbox, our weekly round up of whisky news and PR material that has found its way in to our WFE email. It was created as we cannot write full articles or do justice to every piece received. It features items from around the world of whisky and is published by us each Friday. Within Inbox we aim to write a few lines detailing each press release/piece of news/PR event that we have received and provide links, where possible, for you to find out further information. 
 
Here is the round-up of the news from this last week. 

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Douglas Laing
The independent bottler and blender of Douglas Laing & Co. have revealed a new limited edition of The Gauldrons, their Campbeltown blended malt brand. The Gauldrons Sherry Cask Finish features only single malts from Campbeltown and has seen the blended malt created, before a final finishing period in ex-sherry casks from Spain. The Gauldrons was an area of small coves and inlets on Campbeltown's western shoreline. There are just 2,125 bottles. The whisky is released at 46.2% ABV and is both non chill-filtered and of natural colour. It will be available from selected specialist whisky retailers in the UK from late-April. A bottle will cost £60.
 

Loch Lomond
 

The independent and award-winning Lowland distillery of Loch Lomond has unveiled a new look for its branding and packaging. The redesign features a new bottle shape and labels with deeper, richer colouration and bolder lettering. It will feature across the entire Loch Lomond range and includes the Inchmoan and Inchmurrin bottlings, plus the limited editions released as part of the brand's sponsorship of The Open golf tournament. The transition to the new packaging will begin from late-April and will incorporate both domestic and global travel retail markets.



Tamnavulin
The Speyside distillery of Tamnavulin has announced a new expression to its core range - the Tamnavulin White Wine Cask Edition. It follows a series of successful ex-red wine cask expressions that have been launched over the last two years. The new whisky was initially matured in American white oak ex-bourbon barrels before being transferred for a finishing period in ex-Sauvignon Blanc wine casks. The Tamnavulin White Wine Cask Edition is bottled at 40% ABV and is available now in the UK and USA, and will be shortly available in selected European markets. A bottle will cost £32/ $42 US/ €38.



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