Glenfarclas: quality vintage whisky. No strings attached. | thearticle

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If you could build the perfect single malt Scotch distillery from scratch it would probably be fiercely independent and still in family ownership. It would make only malt whisky. It would


cleave to time-honoured methods of production and age its spirit in traditional, low-lying warehouses using former sherry casks that the owners had selected in person. It wouldn’t spend much


money on marketing and ritzy packaging (no celebrity brand ambassadors, thankfully) and, naturally, would lie in the very heart of Speyside the finest whisky making country in the world.


Good news! It already exists. If you haven’t guessed already, this is Glenfarclas, and the even better news is that, as it’s been operating since 1836 there is plenty of whisky to go round.


That’s because of the near-obsessive stewardship of the Grant family, who have owned Glenfarclas since 1865 and plan to hang onto it, well, forever. Chairman John L S Grant, the 5th


generation to take charge, even lives on site keeping a very sharp eye on every aspect of distillery life, with son George indefatigable in pursuit of global sales. But, for a long time,


perhaps because of their somewhat sceptical attitude to the rest of the industry, though held in high esteem by hard-core whisky fans Glenfarclas was relatively obscure. It’s a little-known


fact, for example, that the foundation of the Scotch Malt Whisky Society only came about after the founder tasted cask strength Glenfarclas, something that changed his life! More recently,


however, the distillery’s fame has spread. Discreet marketing of its great depth of stocks (only possible in a family owned business, impervious to the short-term demands of the City) has


brought the world its remarkable Family Casks range. Other distilleries boast, proudly, of their 40- or 50-Year Old whisky. Well might they do so, because such rarities are to be treasured.


None though, be they ever so distinguished, can match the Glenfarclas Family Casks; this collection of dated vintage whiskies dates back to 1954 and offers a continuous record of production


to the youngest in the range, the 2003, a mere stripling of 15 years. The packaging is unassuming and the pricing, perhaps not coincidentally, unusually modest when age and quality are taken


into account. Glenfarclas have chosen a simple bottle and label and a carton; presentation unadorned by fancy labelling, silver stoppers and elaborate brochures. Everything here says that


it’s the whisky that counts and the whisky only. It is, as they say, made to age and age it does, with unusual grace, balance and power. The direct-fired stills (largely abandoned elsewhere


as too demanding to operate); the crystal clear spring water from the granite of Ben Rinnes but, most of all, the Oloroso sherry casks in which the whisky ages all contribute to the magic. I


need say no more. _By Ian Buxton_