Sunday, May 20, 2012

Eigashima Releases (14YO & Private Bottlings)


Post by Stefan of Tokyo Whisky Hub.

A few weeks ago, word got out that a 14-year old Eigashima was about to be released. Well, it's available now! I, for one, can't wait to try it. It's not only their oldest single malt to date (following on from their 5-, 8- and 12-year old expressions), but it is in fact the oldest whisky in stock at the Eigashima distillery. As some of you may know, their output is tiny. They used to distill for just one month a year, but the last couple of years they've been extending their distilling season to two months a year.

The new 14-year old expression is, in fact, their 12-year old Spanish oak ex-sherry cask-matured whisky, finished for a further year and a half in an ex-Japanese white wine cask (from Yamanashi prefecture). It's bottled at 58% abv (500ml) and retails for a little over 7,000 yen (about 95 USD). I happened to be at the distillery when they were preparing to transfer their 12-year old whisky and I only saw one such ex-wine cask the day I was there. I don't know how many casks they actually used - not many, I should think, as it was an experiment of sorts, and seeing as they only have a tiny aged stock, I don't they think they would have used their entire oldest maturing stock.

While we're on the topic of Eigashima, I thought I'd introduce these two rare private bottlings: one is a 5-year old (distilled in July 2005), matured first in an American White Oak hogshead before being transferred to a Spanish oak ex-sherry butt; the other is a peated, 12-year old Eigashima (distilled in September 1997), matured in a Spanish oak ex-sherry butt. The 12-year old private bottling is, actually, an "un-finished" version of the new 14-year old release (sister casks were used). Both were bottled at cask strength in September 2010. It's kind of a "yin yang" pair - reflected in the art work, too - one very light and elegant, the other dark and heavy. A really gorgeous set. Fans of Japanese art may be interested to know the small "window" on the label features details of two different prints from Yoshitoshi's "One Hundred Views of the Moon" series. Ninety-eight more to go, maybe...

Private bottlings, in general, are rare in Japan. As far as Eigashima is concerned and as far as I know, there has only been one other private bottling: the 4th anniversary bottling for Bar Zoetrope, which was also a 5-year old but one year younger than the one above. There were 100 bottles of the Zoetrope release; there are 102 each of the "Luna" pair (yes, Italian for "moon"). I happen to know the person this was bottled for. Apparently, there are a handful of sets left. Those who are interested: drop me a line and I'll put you in touch. 'Nuff said.

2 comments:

dramtastic said...

I've always been suspicious that these are from the same type of stock used for the standard 5 and 12 year olds but bottled at cask strength and being sold at twice the price. The colour is identical and as the regular 12 seems to have a level of peating it would take a lot for me to be convinced otherwise. Nice labels though.

As for the 14YO, if readers find it hard to come by there will be a second release in November.

Stefan said...

Well, they come from the same stock, of course... because the stock is incredibly small. In fact, the stock maturing at Eigashima is so small that they are very reluctant to actually let people see the warehouse. They just don't have loads of 12-year old casks to "choose" from. There are, however, batch variations that - together with the cask strength - make these bottlings very interesting, in my opinion. As far as the price is concerned: it's a private bottling and therefore not generally for sale, but you will find that the price charged for a set is, in fact, less than what you would pay if you were to buy a standard 5- and 12-yo.

 
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