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Springbank

Vendor: AM

Longrow 10 Year Old Early 2000s

£175.00
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Vendor: PM

Springbank 1967-2001 | 33 Year Old Douglas Laing Old Malt Cask Single Cask

£3,250.00
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Vendor: PM

Springbank 30 Year Old 1990s John Mitchell Label

£3,000.00
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Vendor: A

Springbank 21 Year Old Limited Edition 2022 Release

£810.00
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Vendor: A

Springbank 21 Year Old Limited Edition 2021 Release

£810.00
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Vendor: A

Springbank 1968-2006 | 38 Year Old Dun Bheagan Single Cask 616

£3,250.00
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Vendor: A

Springbank 1966-1997 Local Barley Single Cask 480

£8,000.00
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Vendor: A

Springbank 25 Year Old Bottled Mid 2000s

£2,950.00
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Vendor: A

Springbank 1967-2002 | 35 Year Old | Duncan Taylor Peerless

£3,250.00
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Vendor: Whisky-Online Shop

Campbeltown 25 Year Old | Tri-Centenary 1700-2000

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Vendor: Springbank

Springbank 21 Year old

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Vendor: P

Springbank 25 Year Old Early 1990s

£3,500.00
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Vendor: Springbank

Springbank 1965 | Local Barley

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Vendor: P

Springbank 12 Year Old 1980s

£1,500.00
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Vendor: Springbank

Springbank 15 Year Old 1990s

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Vendor: Springbank

Springbank 15 Year Old

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Vendor: Springbank

Springbank 18 Year Old

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Vendor: AM

Springbank 21 Year Old 1990s

£1,300.00
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Vendor: AM

Springbank 21 Year Old Circa 2000

£1,200.00
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Vendor: Springbank

Springbank 12 Year Old 1990s

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Vendor: Springbank

Springbank 175th Anniversry

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Vendor: Springbank

Springbank 1997-2008 | Batch 2

Springbank

Springbank is unique amongst Scotland's distilleries, it is one of the last truly independent distilling operations in Scotland and it is the only distillery to carry out every part of the process entirely on-site. From the use of locally grown, floor-malted barley through to in-house maturation and bottling, it is a very self-contained distillery. No wonder then that it is one of the most adored whiskies amongst enthusiasts the world over. One of only three operational Campbeltown distilleries it produces a truly distinctive and original spirit along with a peated variant (Longrow) and in recent years a triple distilled version as well (Hazelburn).

Founded: 1828

Stills: 1 Wash. 2 Spirit.

Capacity: 2 million litres per year

Water Source: Cross Hill Loch

Owners: Springbank Distillers Ltd

Spirits Produced: Springbank. Hazelburn. Longrow.

1900-1978: Old Old Style

Springbank is one of the few distilleries that still has a truly old school character to its whisky, one that is apparent even in today's bottlings. However, despite this there has still been a certain evolution of character at the distillery through the years. The basic and unmistakable style of Springbank is a coastal one, lots of brine, gentle fruits, coal smoke, tiny hints of peat, oil, wax and some chewy maltiness.

It is such a distinctive style that it has helped keep the idea of Campbeltown as a region in its own right alive in people's minds. Springbank is the main malt produced at the distillery (for information on Longrow and Hazelburn see the separate entries on their product pages), it is lightly peated to about 10ppm and 2.5 times distilled. This, slightly convoluted, distillation process in one of its main character definitions, it involves the partial re-distillation of low wines and feints in two spirit stills, good diagrams are available on the distillery's website. However, as we will see the many other variable parts of production that surround this central process have inevitably changed through the years.

There are literally hundreds of different Springbanks available to serious whisky enthusiasts these days. Most of these are bottlings from the last twenty years but there are also many old bottlings too, Springbank has been bottled as a single malt for over 100 years. There are some fantastic official dumpy, pear shaped bottings from the late sixties and early seventies that offer a real glimpse into the distillery's history being bottled at 15, 33 and even 50 years of age.

More common are the tall brown and green glass bottlings of 5 and 10yo expressions that are also fascinating historical examples. These are all understandably expensive but the whisky is often exceptional, displaying classical coastal notes with hints of engine oil, various metallic notes, herbs, elegant fruit and earthy peat. In the early nineties Springbank started releasing some phenomenal aged expressions from the sixties, often under the now famous 'Local Barley' label.

These were casks of spirit distilled from barley grown by local farmers and they are almost all stunning. There are numerous great aged Springbanks from the sixties both in sherry and bourbon. Bourbon-aged Springbank tends to display lashings of green fruit, coastal zing and luscious complexity while the sherry casks often have lots of minerality, chocolate, flints and earthy notes under classic sherry fruit edges. These casks are now very expensive but if you can ever try some of them then it is a great drinking experience. The official 21yo that was available throughout the nineties is also an exceptionally great dram, a wonderful fruit and smoke heavy example of the distillate.

Springbank achieved such quality through a combination of top quality casks, very slow, natural fermentations, old-style production such as 100 percent, in-house, floor-malted barley and the use of direct firing and worm tubs during distillation. These methods were eventually diluted to some degree as steam was used for the two spirit stills and two of the worm tubs were replaced with condensers. The result was that the eighties were, as in much of the industry, not the best time for Springbank.

1979-1995: A bad patch.

The 1980's at Springbank were characterized by corner-cutting in production and a resulting overall dip in character. Spirit distilled in this decade and the early nineties is notes for lacking the intensity and oily, fruity identity of earlier years. The whisky is notably thinner, not as fruity or as vibrant with its flavours. This is due to the changing of production styles, the speeding up in many parts of the process and poor wood management. Luckily this was all about to change.

1996-Present: Modern Old Style

In the late nineties there was something of an overhaul at Springbank. Production was tightened up and better casks were brought in as well as, crucially, a renewed effort to use high proportions of Local Barley. Since 1999 Springbank has taken 60% of its barley from local farmers, the majority of it being the original, ancient variety Bere Barley, a variety that is lower yielding than modern strains but far more resilient and provides a much more powerful flavour base.

Fermentations are the longest in the industry and the wash in only fermented to 4% abv, this allows the immense concentration of natural esters and other flavour compounds. The wash still is still direct fired and the first spirit still retains its worm tub. All these factors contribute to make Sprinkbank a rapidly improving and still very old school style of malt.

One of the best expressions to see this in is the current 10yo, which changes very regularly due to its small-batch nature but the quality is exceptionally high for a standard bottling. Modern bottlings display classic Springbank coastal notes with wax, minerals, soft peat and white fruits. The 100% Local Barley expressions, which will become more and more frequent as stocks increase and mature, are richer, more old-style and full of intense oiliness, farmy notes and powerful coastal characters. Let's hope that Springbank continues to stand as a beacon of old school quality and style for those of us who love to taste whisky as it should be made.

Springbank