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MOST EXPENSIVE
SINGLE MALT SCOTCH
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Single Malt Scotch Club
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Costing more than
a luxury Mercedes Benz for just one bottle, Scotch is a true
collectors item. To track down that purest-form product of
single malt Scotch Whisky in its most expensive bottles, we
researched the findings of numerous Scotch experts,
including distillery owners, auction-house specialists and
spirits sommeliers.
Following are the world's most expensive
Scotches.
10. Kinclaith 36-year-old
$415 per 2-ounce pour
This rare single malt was produced at a distillery that was
shut down in 1975. At StripSteak in Las Vegas, a dram of
Kinclaith goes for $415. StripSteak’s Patric Yumul says the
Kinclaith is “oily and perfumey, with a dry, long, hot
finish.”
9. Ladybank Distillery
$ 4950/membership
Ladybank, located near the Scottish village of Fife, offers
part ownership in its distillery to a limited number of
members for 50 years (along with 6 bottles of Ladybank’s own
Single Malt Scotch during each of those years). But members
will have to exercise some patience—after construction is
completed later this year or early next, the first batch
will be distilled, and ready for pouring about seven years
after that. While Ladybank’s price per bottle may not touch
some of the others on our list, the singularity does. “We’re
pledging exclusivity to our members, and the members are
pledging loyalty to our project,” said Ladybank CEO James
Thomson, who explains that members will gain a “backstage
trip through the entire distillery set-up.” They’ll also be
able to offer input on production and drop in to Ladybank’s
visitor rooms, dining facility and five-star brew pub.
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8. Bruichladdich 40-year-old
$1,970
Bruichladdich master distiller Jim McEwan writes of the
oldest Bruichladdich, “The mouthfeel is succulent soft fudge
and exotic yellow fruits with a twist of lime and
grapefruit, and is sublimely smooth.” Five hundred bottles
exist worldwide, and list at Bruchladdich for £999, or about
$1,970. top
7. Bowmore 1957
$2,300
This special batch of Bowmore was poured into oak casks in
1957. Thirty-eight years later, the company explains, "The
spirit was found sitting just above the critical 40%
alcoholic volume strength for Scotch Whisky and so [the
distillery manager] moved with haste to have the whisky
bottled. If he had waited a moment longer, the whisky would
have become extinct, and a piece of history wiped out
forever." Mark Cassidy, a Scotch specialist at the Whisky
Shop in San Francisco, says he believes their bottle of
Bowmore 1957, priced at $2,300, is the only one for sale in
the western United States. top
6. Black Bowmore 1964
$6,000
Only 5,812 bottles of this Islay treasure were produced.
Today they retail for the price of a good used car. Bowmore
describes what that dear price tag delivers: "On the palate,
the concentration of flavours is mind boggling. They gently
roll over the tongue like waves to the shore." Drop by the
Park Avenue Liquor shop and pick up a bottle for a soothing
$6,000. top
5. Macallan 1928, 50-year-old
$11,900
Martin Green of McTear’s auction house says two bottles of
the 50-year-old Macallan have sold recently for £4,400 and
£6,000 (or $8,700 and $11,900 top
4. Balvenie Cask 191
$13,000
David Stewart, The Balvenie Malt Master, writes of this
50-year-aged Scotch: "The Balvenie Cask 191 Single Malt
Scotch Whisky has a complex nose, intense with toffee,
marzipan, sweet oak, raisins and nuts. The depth of flavor
is astonishing, developing from butterscotch to clover,
honey, liquorice and chocolate—elegantly balanced with
drying oak and spice.” Where available, this heady
smorgasbord retails for around $13,000 a bottle.
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3. 1937 Glenfiddich
$20,000
In April 2006, a bottle of Glenfiddich Rare Collection 1937
sold at auction in New York for $20,000. The prized liquid
hails from a single oak cask that slumbered in a dunnage
warehouse at the Glenfiddich Distillery in Dufftown,
Scotland for 64 years before it was bottled in 2001.
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2. The Dalmore 62 Years
$51,000
If you happen to cross paths with the anonymous buyer of
this £25,877.50 ($51,000) bottle, here are Dalmore Master
Blender Richard Paterson's suggestions for tasting: Prepare
the palate with a cup of warm Colombian coffee and milk; let
the noble spirit drift over the tongue; finish with a
bitter-chocolate such as Cote d'Or or Godiva. "The
combination of coffee, The Dalmore and the bitter
chocolate," says Paterson, "will ensure the experience is
unforgettable." top
1. The Macallan 1926
$75,000
In 2005 a South Korean businessman paid 70 million Korean
won (about $75,000) for a 1926 bottle from The Macallan’s
"Fine and Rare" range. “The actual purchase took place at
the liquor retail store, Interbang, in the upmarket Gangnam
area of Seoul," according to a statement from Macallan.
"However, the precious bottle was safely stored elsewhere in
a safe and only released when full payment was received.”
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