Description
Whiskey: Benriach 11 Year Old 2011 (cask 2372) – Infrequent Flyers (Alistair Walker) | 700ML
A single cask, single malt whisky distilled at Benriach in 2011. It matured for 11 years in a tawny Port pipe before indie bottler Alistair Walker released it for its Infrequent Flyers collection in 2022.
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Size: 700ML
Proof: 114.4 (57.2%ABV)
Origin: Scotland
Distillery: BenRiach
A single cask, single malt whisky distilled at Benriach in 2011. It matured for 11 years in a tawny Port pipe before indie bottler Alistair Walker released it for its Infrequent Flyers collection in 2022. Plenty of ripe red fruit notes lend themselves to this Speysider, with an outturn of 703 bottles at 57.2% ABV, non-chill filtered and with natural colour.
Benriach 11 Year Old 2011 (cask 2372) – Infrequent Flyers (Alistair Walker) | 700ML Tasting Notes
Nose: Ripe summer berries, crunchy cherries, waffle cone, and toasted oats.
Palate: More red fruits, raspberry cordial, redcurrants, with oaky vanilla, and a touch of orange oil.
Finish: Peppery spice, with dried cranberries lingering.
Distillery Information
Founded in 1898 by John Duff, the original Benriach was short-lived; following monetary difficulties the distillery was sold to the Longmorn Distilleries Company who closed it at the turn of the twentieth century. Benriach, named for the Gaelic for ‘speckled mountain’, was one of the few distilleries with its own floor maltings, following closure they remained in use, supplying neighbouring Longmorn. The upturn in whisky’s fortunes in the 1960s saw Benriach run from 1965 onwards under new owners The Glenlivet Distillers, before Seagrams purchased the distillery in 1978. In 1985 two extra stills were added bringing the total to four. The floor maltings were in use again and remained so continuously until 1999. When Pernod Ricard took over Seagram’s whisky division in 2001 Benriach was mothballed, but in April of 2004, Benriach was sold, along with several thousand casks, for £5.4million to the South African company, Infra Trading, combining their efforts with Burn Stewart director Billy Walker. They reopened the distillery the following year and soon established the Benriach Distilling Co.






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