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The Balvenie The Week of Peat 14YO Single Malt Scotch Whisky (70cl)

The Balvenie The Week of Peat 14YO Single Malt Scotch Whisky (70cl)

Regular price ₱9,420.00
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The Balvenie

THE BALVENIE

NOSE

Gentle sweet peat smoke, lighter floral notes and delicate butterscotch honey.

TASTE

Velvety and round to taste with the peat smoke balancing citrus flavours, oaky vanilla and blossom honey.

FINISH

Gentle smoke with a lingering and creamy vanilla sweetness.

THE STORY OF
THE WEEK OF PEAT

This story begins with distillery manager Ian Millar’s eagle eye spotting a week’s gap in the distillery schedule. Eager to experiment with The Balvenie profile using what he had learnt from a recent trip to Islay, he ordered a batch of Speyside peat for the kiln and built a peat burner on the side ‘for, well, extra peatiness’.

Ian continues: “In a way, The Week of Peat was nothing new. In fact, arguably, it’s the only week of the year we make whisky the way it used to be made – using smoke from a heavily peated furnace, like in the very old days when every farm burned peat from the land (and made whisky in a pot over the fire, it’s worth remembering).

14YO 3
Former Distillery Manager Ian Millar discusses the origins of The Week of Peat.

“We took our inspiration from some of the Islay distilleries. No-one on Speyside was doing it like this when we started. Essentially, given the maltings is a big tool for experimentation you can really work with it. So on our return we started to trial a few different approaches, one change at a time, to fully understand the impact each change made – patience was required.

“We got our peat from the north-east Speyside village of New Pitsligo, close to Fraserburgh. I helped muck in with the guys in the maltings, shuffling the extra-heavy peat into the kiln with big shovels. “We added a peat-burner to the side of the kiln. Trialling the burner in the early days allowed us to get levels similar to Laphroaig and Ardbeg, 30 parts per million phenols. Clearly the more we trialled, the greater our confidence in peating our own malted barley.

“The first time we did it there was a real buzz on site – engineers, coppersmiths and other team members came and had a look as they had never experienced the production of peated, malted barley before.

In the mash house there was a beautiful smell of porridge, sweet honey and gentle smoke; it was good enough to bottle!

14YO 2
Warehouse Coordinator George Paterson is responsible for managing the tens of thousands of casks maturing at The Balvenie.

“Due to the strong influence of peat, we had to separate the remaining low wines and feints, basically low-alcohol spirit, and store them in a tank until the following year’s peat week, so there is a year-to-year link between one peat week and the next.

Brian Webster, The Balvenie Mashman vividly remembers the smell: “That stinking stuff! As some guys say.” Brian laughs out loud, launching into the details: “During mashing it affected you – it went for your eyes, nose, throat, and this all lingered on me, through the whole shift. Jim, one of the other Mashmen, complained about the reek of peat on his clothes, as did his wife when he came home!”

David C Stewart, The Balvenie’s Malt Master, remembers how The Balvenie was made in the past:

With The Week of Peat we’re going back to the way we used to make The Balvenie. I’ve been here a long time.

he says, modestly – David is the longest serving Malt Master in Scotch whisky, “so I sampled the original peated Balvenie we made in the late 1940s, 1950s and early 1960s.

14YO 1
The malt kin fire dries our home malted barley in The Balvenie Maltings.

“It was in 2002 when we first decided to bring peat back. We asked ourselves, why don’t we take a week out of the year to make peated whisky? Let’s just do it. It made sense to do it in a week – generally at the end of summer or winter, when we’re shutting down for maintenance at the distillery. “I’m quite proud of the way it’s turned out. It’s clear that it’s The Balvenie – as opposed to an Islay peat – with that honey, vanilla, citrus flavour but with an extra layer of delicate smokiness.”

A STORY TOLD BY:

Ian Millar

Former Distillery Manager (7 years at The Balvenie, ‘Mannie’ to some, ‘God’ to others)

Brian Webster

Mashman (48 years at The Balvenie and keen hill walker)

David C Stewart

Malt Master (57 years at The Balvenie and caravan keeper)

MADE THE
TRADITIONAL WAY

From double-toasted casks to a liquid inspired by a rare rose, the Stories range tells the tales behind the whiskies. Through these tales, this range gives a view into life at our distillery, and introduces you to the Makers who work there. Delve deeper into the stories with our podcasts where our Global Ambassador, Gemma, talks to the characters from the range and discovers even more about the whiskies.

The Stories range celebrates our Makers and the creativity, determination and passion that they put into The Balvenie.

DAVID C STEART (MBE)MALT MASTER


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