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Clynelish 37 Year Old / TWE 10th Anniversary
Product Description

A truly old-fashioned Clynelish in the classic Highland style, this 37yo is oaky and spicy with ample Clynelish beeswax and a warming, dry finish. Bottled for TWE's 10th Anniversary.

Clynelish 37 Year Old TWE 10th Anniversary

  • Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky
  • The Whisky Exchange

70cl / 46%

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Tasting Notes

Tasting Notes

  • Tasting notes by Whiskyfun (Serge Valentin)

    • Colour

      Pale gold.

    • Nose

      Oh yes. Not only the label hints at Old Clynelish, also the nose does. Supreme orangey waxiness with an admirable self-restraint (it’s no straight-in-your-face fruity Clynelish). Honeycomb, dried papayas, touches of fruity olive oil, very ripe oranges, wax polish, hints of ginger tonic, hints of bananas and even a little rum, white cherries…In the background: rocks and linseed oil. It’s all superb. Mouth: a sin, with just the right amount of sweet spices. A giant fruit salad with a little paprika and ginger. Or some orange salad with a honey and olive oil sauce. Please call the anti-maltoporn brigade.Finish: medium long, clean, a tad grassier and more tannic in the aftertaste but that’s more than normal. Comments: another winning 1972 Clynelish at drinking strength, maybe a little less spectacular than others but maybe also more elegant. But let me issue a warning: pour small drams to your friends or this bottle will become as empty as Paris Hilton in a flash. SGP:641 - 92 points.

    • Comment

      Old Clynelish enthusiast will love this very Ainslie-alike label but let's remember that the old 5 and 12 weren't (quite) from the same distillery.

  • Tasting Notes by WhiskyNotes' Ruben

    • Nose

      Beautiful start on beeswax and honey. Very fruity, with a basket of fresh tropical fruits (mango, pineapple) and more indigenous fruit (pear, peach, tangerine). Haribo bears. Lovely paraffin. Vanilla. Whiffs of oak spices to top it off (cinnamon and light pepper). A little olive oil and camphor. I don’t like to use the word ‘perfect’ but this is close!.

    • Mouth

      A bit more resinous now. Still fruity (orange, peach) but less exhuberant. Some Turkish delight. Hints of smoke and dust. In the end it shows ginger and a slightly salty hint of liquorice.

    • Finish

      Very long and waxy with hints of orange skin and resinous dry oak.

    • Score

      92/100.

    • Comment

      Compared to the recent wave of 1982 Clynelish, this is oakier (of course), with more citrus and a more delicate profile. There have been some questions about the fact that it was diluted to 46% instead of earlier cask strength releases, but I can confirm that the end result is a good mix of complexity and drinkability. One to cherish!

  • Tasting Notes by Tim F

    • Nose

      Classic old Clynelish, with wax (beeswax and candlewax) and honey. A slight whiff of brine and the faintest trace of smoke (really took time for me to find it); also citrus (orange marmalade, lemon curd) and other fruits (maybe some dried banana), marshmallow; spice (clove), dried ginger, faint pepperiness. These latter combine with hazelnuts and musty old books (and I mean that in a good way), underlining the oak influence.

    • Palate

      The citrus flits through on a bed of creamy malt, then a big surge of honey and burgeoning spice as the oak moves in: powerful, ‘old-fashioned’ (as I think of it) dry oak, lifting the spices. Strong hints of ginger ale, becomes quite peppery, the old books are still there, but not much in the way of smoke. Delicate fruit, polished malt and powerful oak and spices – classic (for me) aged Highland whisky.

    • Finish

      Medium-full length, warm, salty. Faint smoke, residual waxiness, lingering oakspice and brine. Becomes drying, as is natural for drams of this immense age.

    • Comment

      A thrilling treat for fans of a nearly-extinct Highland style. Evokes one of those longhaired ginger cows chewing on a thistle, nodding along to the wail of a distressed bagpipe played by a man with mutton-chop sideburns. This is so old-fashioned that you can almost taste its kilt.

Customer Reviews

  • TWE Admin

    Gents, thank you for your interest. The reason we have bottled this at 46% instead of cask strength is that it tasted better that way. I'm afraid I can't give you exact information on the cask type or total bottles, but it's around 200 bottles.

  • ?l?D?x

    Please teach about?@cask strength or Addition of water??A what barrel or sherry cask or hogshead??BHow many total bottlings?

  • Anonymous

    I love old Clynelish (and Brora)I guess this one is watered down - why??