Description
Whiskey: Teaninich 43 Year Old Platinum Old & Rare Single Malt Scotch
43 year old single malt from the Teaninich Distillery, independently bottled by Hunter Laing as part of its Old & Rare Platinum. It was distilled back in 1975 and left also for many, many moons, until 2019, when it was bottled at 40.2% ABV with an outturn of just 246 bottles.
Order from the Largest & Most Trusted Premium Spirits Marketplace!
Featured in
•ROLLING STONE
•MEN’S JOURNAL
•US WEEKLY
NOTICE: Many other small liquor store sites will end up cancelling your order due to the high demand, unavailability or inaccurate inventory counts. We have the ability to source from a large network of licensed retailers to insure in most cases your order is fulfilled.
Size: 700ML
Proof: 80.4 (40.2% ABV)
Age: 43 Year
Origin: United Kingdom
Distillery: Teaninich distillery
This single cask comes to us from family-run indie bottler Hunter Laing & Co. Specially selected and bottled for the Heritage series in the Platinum Old & Rare Selection, this expression was distilled at Teaninich in the Highlands in 1975. Matured for more than four decades, it has been bottled at a natural cask strength of 40.2% abv free from all chill filtration and artificial colouring. Just 246 bottles have been produced of this limited edition.
Teaninich 43 Year Old Platinum Old & Rare Single Malt Scotch Whisky Tasting Notes
Nose: This dark gold whisky has a note of oranges, caramel, barley sugar and herbs.
Palate: The palate is delicate, with notes of papaya, orange squash, milk chocolate and strawberry.
Finish: The finish is long and soft, with a faint touch of menthol.
Distillery Information
The Teaninich Distillery is one shrouded in mystery. Founded in 1817, the Highland single malt whisky producer today has an annual capacity of 10.2 million litres and distills for brands including Haig Dimple, VAT 69 and Johnnie Walker. Despite its size and stature (it’s Diageo’s third-largest whisky distillery, covering more than 20 acres), there’s not much out there about Teaninich as a whisky in its own right – which is rather a shame as the liquid exudes as much character and body as its two illustrious near-neighbours: Dalmore and Glenmorangie.






Reviews
There are no reviews yet.