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Glengoyne Burnfoot

Average score from 2 reviews and 2 ratings 77

Glengoyne Burnfoot

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@markjedi1
Glengoyne Burnfoot

The distillery was named Glengoyne only in 1905. Before that, it was called Burnfoot. This release, which appeared in duty free in 2007 for the first time and is something of an homage to old name, is bottled at the entry level strength of 40% ABV. There is no age statement, but sources indicate that this vatting is composed of several vitages of which the oldest is no less than 34 years old (which I find quite hard to believe). A large portion used came from first fill sherry casks.

The nose is very soft and fruity. All kinds of citrus with oranges in the lead, peel included. Loads of caramel and heathery honey. Hints of vanilla, cinnamon and something that reminds me of apple sauce. Nuts? Far from bad, but rather docile.

The arrival is very soft with a light body and mild spices. Think cinnamon. Loads of sherry. Cream sherry! Almonds and walnuts, raisins, caramel. Silky soft. Hint of oak.

Medium long finish on apple sauce and caramel. Mildly drying.

Nice whisky, but undemanding. Not even 40 EUR, making this value for money.

@jasonbstanding

Burnfoot appears to be a release for the travel market, as I don't seem to be able to find it anywhere else. The bottle comes with no age statement, and the packaging contains a load of bumf about the significance of the name and the Glengoyne production process.

My bottle was a hip-flask sized 500mL bottle, made from a very sturdy plastic, which had a certain quality about it that just made me want to keep opening the bottle (and once the lid's off... well...), however I understand that there's also a more "normal" Glengoyne bottle release.

The name "Burnfoot" apparently comes from the original name for the distillery between its establishment in 1833, and 1908 when they changed the name to Glengoyne.

Quite an active whisky: the aroma of this one creeps out of the glass and tries to overtake the room. From about 2 feet away I'm picking up vanilla, paw paw (I think you guys call it Papaya?), and caramelising sugar. Up close I'm getting whiteboard marker and honey as well.

Taking a hefty swig, it sort of sits on the tongue as a big banana and caramel puck before the volatile vapours start to creep their way up into the nasal cavity. It's not a whisky that fills the cheeks, but it's quite tight and pleasantly flavoursome in a sweet way without being saccharine or sticky.

The only synonym I can think of for the finish is that it all leaves together rather than slowly rolling off the tongue like metaphorical smoke. This whisky just grabs its things and leaves - it doesn't rush; it's a nice finish. And once the bulk of it's left there are chewy elements of spent chocolate orange.

I sort of want to sum this up as liquid shortbread. It's incredibly drinkable, and the 500mL flask nearly didn't survive its first outing.

A solid whisky, perhaps not quite as elegant as its stablemates, but a joy to drink and perfectly good for relaxing with after work or sneakily doling out of a hipflask with friends.

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