Royal Brackla
This elegant Highlands Single Malt has aged for 18 years in oak barrels before being finished in Sherry Palo Cortado barrels.
139,00 €In StockThis 21-year-old Royal Brackla is an elegant whisky whose complexity comes from a combination of Oloroso, Palo Cortado and Pedro Ximenez Sherry casks.
259,00 €In StockThis 18-year-old Royal Brackla, distilled in 2000 by the famous Scottish distillery, matured in Sherry Pedro Ximénez barrels.
259,00 €In StockGenerous and powerful Single Malt with spicy notes of 16 years old aged in Olorosso sherry casks.
119,00 €A 21-year-old Single Malt from the Highlands with a superbly rich tasting.
225,00 €Royal Brackla 12 years old is a Single Malt with a royal character, aged in Sherry Oloroso casks.
69,90 €
The whisky was also reported to be a favourite of Queen Victoria when she ascended to the throne shortly afterwards, and was one of the malts from which Andrew Usher created the first blended whisky in the 1860s.
These days, not much is heard of Royal Brackla, although this is an old and, as evidenced above, historic brand. The distillery was founded as far back as 1812, and changed hands a few times before being aquired by Scottish Malt Distillers (later to become part of Diageo) in 1943. During WWII, the distillery was taken over by the RAF and used as a school for new pilots.
After major renovations in 1966 and 1997 (the latter costing £2M), Royal Brackla was sold by the newly-created Diageo group to Bacardi-Martini, who incorporated it into their Dewar's portfolio (also recently acquired from Diageo). The vast majority of Brackla's spirit now goes into Dewar's White label and Bacardi's other blends.
Bacardi does little to promote Royal Brackla, preferring to spend its malt marketing money on Aberfeldy. For this reason the malt is rarely seen on shop shelves. A 10 year-old is the standard bottling, although an official 25 year-old was briefly available several years ago. This followed on the heels of some impressive Rare Malts bottlings done by Diageo in the 1990s, and a 10yo bottling under the Flora & Fauna rubric that is now extremely rare and valuable.
Independent bottlings of Royal Brackla are relatively regular, with Gordon & Macphail and Douglas Laing occasionally releasing interesting expressions. The house style was described by Michael Jackson as 'Fruity, cleansing, sometimes with a dry, hot finish. A refresher or a pousse-cafe.'