Ardnamurchan Rum Cask Release

Release of 8334 Bottles | 55% ABV

Score: 6/10

Good Stuff.

TL;DR
A great new take but this one, for me, doesn’t sing like others do

 

Ahoy Landlubbers!

A perhaps fair criticism was directed at me recently - let someone else review Ardnamurchan on Dramface for once. How can the viewing public get a fair assessment of anything if it’s just one person bleating from the sheep dip about how amazing a distillery is. “All we ever see are 7’s and 8’s.”

I would like to think that a consistency of focus, by one person against one distillery, might offer a bit more insight - someone so close to the output of a place, who resonates with their whisky so deeply, might be the perfect person to pick out something that might not hit the mark. Something that might not be overtly fantastic.

One person’s opinion is just that - one position amidst hundreds, all formed through self-motivation to broadcast what it means to them, the individual. This is what I think, and I commit to the sea of noise what it means to me. I get it, there’s more than one way to skin a Sgiathanach, and having a mix of opinions about a distillery will give a more broad-spectrum overview of what’s going on - Doog thinks this, Drummond thinks that, Wally thinks the next thing. Together those voices form a consensus and soon we have ground swell.

For nearly two years I have ramped up my interest in Ardnamurchan Distillery because, paint me with the guilty brush, I bloody love their whisky. It started with being a bit startled by it, thinking their whisky was too smoky, like a proper bonfire on the wind. But that was pre-peat explosion, where I dunked myself into the actual overtly peated whiskies like Port Charlotte and Ardbeg. Soon after, and coming back to Ardnamurchan, I realised that the harmonious balance of 50/50 peated/unpeated ratio was actually pretty damned interesting - it’s all about perspective: a lightly smoked whisky, yet still eminently coastal was what I discovered post-peat.

Cut to now, where I’m fully enrobed in the world of Ardnamurchan, and I won’t apologise for how it makes me feel. I want to shout about it, because I want other folk to step into this world of integrity and fun, focus and friendship like me, and see how the guys at Ardnamurchan operate. I want them to visit the distillery and see it with their own eyes - once you do you’ll understand everything. It’s endearing in the full sense of the word. It’s helmed by enthusiasts who love the concept of making great whisky for making great whisky’s sake. Aye, they’re a business, obvs, and they’re out and about shouting too, but they go about it so openly and relaxed that it’s hard not to want to be in that loop.

But in all honesty I was feeling like I’d wedged myself in an Ardnamurchan spiral, not wanting to consider other whiskies because I was happy just to bask in the pool of gorgeous whisky blasting from Glenbeg. All my disposable income was shot at the Ardnamurchan target. All I thought about was what other Ardnamurchan I could find. Maybe we all go through this phase? Regardless, with the consistency of output from Glenbeg being as fantastic as it is, and with each subsequent release following in the quality, assurance and confidence as the last, it’s no wonder I wasn’t looking elsewhere.

I’ve wandered into other places - Bruichladdich, The Hearach and Raasay recently, and found really great things in all. Then I’d pour an Ardnamurchan and be reminded of how resonant it is with me, and off I’d go again, digging deeper into the rock face. The ArdnAmerica bottle was a classic example of just how damned excellent Ardnamurchan whisky is, and reason enough to chase every expression they release, if one can afford it. Let it be known that the fact that Ardnamurchan are releasing single strains of a whisky - the Sherry Cask Release, the Paul Launois range, the Cask Strength releases and now the Rum Cask Release - instead of combinations of multiple types of different-previous-contents casks, is a wonderfully simple way to engage with their spirit. Here’s how it presents in x-type of cask. It’s honest too - some will love it, others will not, but that’s ok.

 

The Rum Cask Release (RCR) was announced and unsurprisingly, I immediately bought it. There’s something about the idea of rum, whether it be the maritime sea captain swilling the rum in his goblet, or the tropical nature of rum as a drink, that makes me excited to find out how that will interface with the coastal magic distillate. I’ve never persisted with rum as a drink - it reminds me too much of my inwardly turbulent aggro-teenage years, where girls were fresh on the scene and we were allowed to consume alcohol legally. Our drink of choice was Captain Morgan’s Spice Rum. Gah, I boke at the thought of drinking it now - I did, in my pre-whisky phase of cocktails and concocting buy a bottle of Pusser’s Gunpowder Proof Rum to try some recipes, but immediately got flashbacks to silk shirts and Brylcreem’d posturing, and handed it quickly off to my brother in law.

Long since donated, my rum interfacing has been zilch. Having heard rumours of a rum casked release and missing out on trying their Distillery Exclusive Rum Cask at the Arisaig Highland Games (they had bottles there but I never got to try them), I couldn’t help but wonder what a rum cask would bring to the Ardnamurchan table - maybe some overt sweetness and sugary loveliness? Maybe some tropical banana magic to offset the salty coastal magic? One more point on the Ardnamurchan research graph regardless.

I got chatting with fellow Dramface writer Drummond at the Bon Accord post Glasgow Whisky Festival, and we got on to the RCR. He mentioned that he’d bought the Distillery Exclusive AD/08.17 CK.592 Rum Cask Finish, that same one I didn’t get to try at Arisaig, and that he’d send me some so that we could both compare the single cask version of rum finished Ardnamurchan and the RCR. As such, he’s weighed in below, not just with the Rum Cask Release, but also that single cask Distillery exclusive.

 

 

Review 1/3 - Dougie

Limited Release - #76 / 8334, 55% ABV
£75 - still available

 

Score: 6/10

Good Stuff.

TL;DR
I love that they’re game to offer different takes, but this rum finished Ardna, for me, doesn’t sing like others do.

 

Nose

A flatter profile than I’m used to with Ardna - more savoury. Leafy. Really nice creamy smoke in there too. Sour cream and chives. Mineralic and beachy background. Chalky rocks. Sweet sugar water. Gym socks. Peppery aftershave. Saline solution rather than sea salt flakes.

A week later and the peat is powerful - big wafts of rich smoke pour from the glass. It comes and goes, revealing the salty seaside underneath now and again, alongside the sweetness of toffee and maybe even a burnt caramel - a bit sour maybe.

 

Palate

Ardnamurchan for sure, but has a souring edge to it. Hot too, maybe not Madeira release hot, but I’m still reaching for the dropper quickly. Water in and it’s more manageable - soft sugar surrounding that coastal sandy profile I love in Ardnamurchan whisky. It’s not as sweet as I’d thought it’d be, more green than gold. At the death, a bonfire marshmallow feast wafts down the throat pipe.

It’s 55% but somehow feels thin, but at the same time being hot, too?

A week later and it’s big on the peaty notes - earthy, vegetal, maybe even a blackening banana skin. It’s a flavour that isn’t as richly, sweetly inviting followed by salty rocky madness, as is typical of Ardnamurchan, but instead is a bit more on edge, sharper, some might argue (and have) souring - it’s a flatness. A dulling of the gnarled rocky edge into an ocean smoothed pebble. There’s no nooks to explore or surprising little pips of flavour.

 

The Dregs

Counter to what might be public opinion I do not drink Ardnamurchan and think it’s all uniformly sensational. The Aberdeen single cask, peated bourbs, was good - half a bottle remaining to be considered. The Tyndrum single cask, unpeated bourbs, was okay. The Good Spirits Co single cask, unpeated bourbs, despite its reputation as being one of the Ardna greats, was good in my opinion. I’ve tried a lot of good Ardnamurchan but I’ve not written about it, yet. Instead I’ve parked those bottles and continued on my voyage of discovery with other places. One day I’ll come back to them and see how they’re doing, compared to my worldview at that point. They might be great. They might not be great, but I try to write whisky reviews when I have something to actually say, when I feel like I am doing the whisky justice and that it has left its mark on me, positively or negatively - a whisky anchor, you might say. It sometimes comes quickly, but often takes a bit more time to really consider what it means to me.

Like today. This is not landing like other Ardnamurchan whiskies have, and at first I thought it was the introduction of the rum casks and their flatly sugary earthiness taking the edge off the whole thing. I’ve been coming back to it for weeks and weeks to see what it actually means to me, in the landscape of where I’m at right now. It’s 55% ABV but feels thin or washy, which is at odds with the viscous maritime dreamboat of Ardna spirit. It has smoke and it has salt and it has sweet and it has rocks and seashells, but it’s enrobed within a thin membrane of alkaline, chalky sugarwash that seems to mask, or maybe more fairly, throttle the whisky and stop it from really singing.

I reckon I have a bit of uneducated disappointment because I thought this would be a tropical zing-fest with robust rum-infused demerara sugar and spice, which would mingle with the inherently coastal character of Ardnamurchan whisky and come together in a blaze of rum-soaked wonderment. However, being a rum expert in as much as I have tried one or two, maybe three types of rum in my lifetime, it’s sometimes not the case that rum presents as this sugary overload. Graeme from Ardnamurchan mentioned in a comment below one of my InstaHoot posts, that some rums actually have a very leafy, green-cast profile and that makes absolute sense when considering the RCR; the casks used for this release must have been doing this particular dance. Ardnamurchan for me sings the loudest when it’s paired with the rich red sweetness of sherry or madeira, or the fizzy sherbet of champagne, or the ex-Adelphi scotch whisky casks of goodness knows what provenance. But rum casks?

A week on and I’ve paired it with another rum cask finished release, but this other one is sweet and rich and sugary. Turning back to the Ardnamurchan, the first thing that hits me is the peat - it’s overt and striking. I wonder if it’s the peat that’s causing the issue for me in this whisky - peat coupled with rum and the underpinning of maritime magic - that’s making it difficult to connect to. There’s been shouts of a souring note at the Glasgow Whisky Festival, and I can see why - the earthy, rich smoke does present as teetering on a thin edge from burning bonfire over to cold morning ashy remnants. It might be the peat. It’s probably a combination of it all. It’s a very rare, very understandable swing and scuff for the bods at Glenbeg, in my humble opinion. However.

As much as this RCR doesn’t live up to my expectations of what a rum casked Ardnamurchan might have been (in my mind’s eye), it’s still objectively a tasty whisky in its own right and I’m really pleased they’ve released it. It reminded me immediately of the Cask Strength black label releases with the balance initially tipping more towards the peated side of the scale, but unlike that balanced beauty, over time the peat has taken control of the RCR. It might not have been the Captain Haddock rich blunderbuss I was expecting, but it’s still more engaging and enjoyable than a lot of the stuff kicking about in Whiskyville at this price point. The blending team have considered this RCR and put it out as another take on Ardnamurchan whisky knowing that it will likely be divisive, and I love that they’re doing these releases. For an Ardnamurchan exciter like myself, it’s always going to be exciting to try new angles on something that resonates so closely, and I’ll always buy it.

As such in the grand scope, against drams like the Loch Lomond XL Fermentation, the Bruichladdich Classic Laddie and Islay Barley 2014, the Raasay R-01.2, The Hearach, Ardnamurchan’s AD Core range from summer 2023 and numerous samples (including that Distillery Exclusive single cask rum finish, which had a lot more punch than the RCR) that I’ve tried alongside this RCR, it still stands as a worthy whisky.

Priced at ~£75 however, it’s around £10 more than their Cask Strength and £5 less than the Distillery Exclusive - both whiskies that land more squarely. I’m glad I’ve tried it, but for now rum finished Ardnamurchan will be a tentative toe dip, rather than a lunge and grab like their sherry based wares. Dramface scoring puts this as a 6 - above average, a solid purchase, but missing that connection that would elevate it to a 7 or 8.

 

Score: 6/10 DC

 

Review 2/3 - Drummond

Ardnamurchan AD/08:17 CK.592 Peated Ex-Bourbon Cask Rum Finish
£80 - Distillery Exclusive, sold out - 60.4%

When my friend messaged me a photo of the bottle on the distillery shelf with the simple message “want one?”, I knew that his trip was going well.

I’d told him I was jealous that he was going with his family to the Ardnamurchan peninsula on holiday and that of course he’d be stopping at the distillery for a visit. I’d been to the distillery last summer and had also picked up a bottle, a young PX-matured handfill.

This particular bottle my friend sent me a photo of, however, was one of the single-cask blue-ish grey bottles, and I could see in the photo the shelf label indicating “rum finish, cask strength.” I don’t have much experience with rum-finished whiskies – the Glen Scotia Double Cask Rum finish and an indie Deanston being the only ones I’ve tried – and so the prospect of a slightly exotic-sounding Ardnamurchan sounded too tempting to turn down. My other Ardnamurchan bottles could always use some more company on the shelf, of course.

It wasn’t only idle curiosity, though. This west coast distillery is one of a handful that I feel like I’m on a journey with. I haven’t tried every Ardnamurchan out there (although if you want to see a Herculean effort on that front, check out Dougie’s Ardna-geddon mega-review), but I have quite a few bottles open that I’ve been getting to know over the past year, with more stashed away to be explored later. My trip to the distillery last summer helped to solidify my affection for Ardnamurchan: not only the unique and interesting and, of course, tasty house style, but also their efforts on the sustainability front, the friendliness of the staff we met, and the gorgeous wild setting. This single cask rum finish is a variation on Ardna’s lightly-peated, cotton-candy-popcorn, stewed fruits, coastal minerality house style that sounded quite different from anything I had, and so when I popped it open and happily listened to the first glugs cascading into my glass, I could tell right away that this was indeed a permutation that I hadn’t discovered yet.

As luck would have it, only a few months later, the official bottling of the AD/Rum Cask Release dropped, and the fortuitous opportunity for some more systematic comparison presented itself like a whack of peat to the face. Comparing and contrasting this single cask with the official large-batch bottling allowed for the rare opportunity to sample a single cask of the kind that made up the vatting for the special release.

A quick QR code scan with the old, cheap, cracked Drummond phone (saving my money for whisky, you see) reveals the following about the single cask: peated distillate from 2017, cask no. 592, bourbon barrel maturation before being finished in a rum cask for an undisclosed length of time.

 

Score: 7/10

Very Good Indeed.

TL;DR
Two big flavour hooks - sweet & peat

 

Nose

Peat right off the bat, balanced with that trademark Ardnamurchan minerality. Sweetness balanced with the charcoal peat. A slightly green woody note in the background. A bit of chalkiness and a hint of dunnage-style dustiness and a distant creaminess.

 

Palate

Sweet and powerful. Burnt charcoal-type peat. The sweetness is sharper than the more stewed-fruit-type sweetness I usually get from Ardnamurchan. Young and powerful spirit, but not spirity. Without honestly knowing much about rum, the rum casks are definitely present in the light tropical quality this has alongside the other elements. Nice texture and mouthfeel.

 

The Dregs

This is a big, powerful flavour punch that brings two big flavours hooks – peat and sweet – together in a really interesting, slightly funky, and tasty way. The rum sweetness is nicely balanced with the charred peat character, so much so that even though it’s a single cask the balance makes it somewhat taste like it was the intentional product of a blender. I’m really enjoying this both as a dram on its own, but also as a different permutation of the spirit that I can put it alongside the other open Ardnas that I’m slowly making my way through. I’m somewhere between a 6 and 7 on our scoring system, so I’ll bump it to 7.

“Very good indeed” about sums it up.

 

Score: 7/10 DD


 

Review 3/3 - Drummond

Ardnamurchan AD/Rum Cask Release - 55%

Paid £65

I’d had a few drams out of the single-cask bottle when I’d heard about the impending AD/Rum Cask Release, and so I was of course eager to see how similar or different it was. I was even more curious when I scanned the QR code and it revealed that the vatting for this bottling included some peated 2017 distillate – the same as the single cask bottle above. The handy cask make-up details that the distillery so fantastically offers us even lists some neighbour casks to my CK.592 that went into this vatting, such as cask 593.

Overall this vatting is composed of both peated and unpeated spirit from 2016 and 2017 vintages, all matured in American bourbon barrels before finishing in Jamaican rum casks.

Score: 5/10

Average.

TL;DR
Glad to have, but I’ll reach past it for other Ardnas

 

Nose

A pleasant but somewhat muted nose to start: light pineapple, some dustiness/dunnage similar to the single cask but more in the background here. Some softer fruits also in the background, and a very light citrus quality. Also hints of the light green woody note similarly found in the single cask.

 

Palate

Sweet and lightly salty. Pineapple carries through from the nose, alongside hints of vanilla pods and caramel. The official tasting notes list “candied grapefruit” and “guava,” which does well describe the softer fruits quality that sits alongside the sharper fruits. Hints of peat throughout which is nicely balanced with these other flavours, yet overall things feel a bit thin, including a thinner mouthfeel for 55% than I expected.

 

The Dregs

This AD/Rum Cask Release happened to fall second in my Ardna rum cask experience, behind the single cask. Maybe for that reason I’m not quite as impressed with the result of the larger vatted product here. And, it’s probably unfair to judge this against a higher ABV single cask version, with more oomph behind it in every way.

But nevertheless, this is a nice bottle, and the expertise that went into its blending is obvious, as it is with every other Ardna bottle I’ve had the pleasure of trying.

Yet, this AD/Rum Cask Release doesn’t quite have the full-on depths of flavour that I get from other releases. It doesn’t have the red berry-honey-mineralic power of the Madeira Cask Release; it doesn’t have the oaky, metallic, salty zing of the Paul Launois release; it doesn’t have the coastal-rock-salt-dark-sweet-dried fruits earthy complexity of the stunning Sherry Cask Release. And, it doesn’t really have the illustrative and salty mineralic lightly peaty popcorn sweetness of the excellent standard core AD/ release.

I’m glad I have this in my collection and on my Ardna shelf, although I probably won’t be reaching for this one quite as often as I do others.

 

Score: 5/10 DD

 

Tried this? Share your thoughts in the comments below. DC

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Other opinions on this:

Whiskybase (RCR)

Whiskybase (CK.252)

Got a link to a reliable review? Tell us.

Dougie Crystal

In Dramface’s efforts to be as inclusive as possible we recognise the need to capture the thoughts and challenges that come in the early days of those stepping inside the whisky world. Enter Dougie. An eternal creative tinkerer, whisky was hidden from him until fairly recently, but it lit an inspirational fire. As we hope you’ll discover. Preach Dougie, preach.

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