So we should celebrate Glenfarclas for all those rea-sons. It not the most fashion-able of distilleries; it’s not the sexiest and, thankfully you may feel, it’s not wrapped up in ‘positioning statements’, ‘brand architecture’ and ‘consumer touch points’. It does-n’t come in a fancy bottle; the packaging isn’t from an inter-nationally famous designer and it’s not a ‘lifestyle choice’.
So the Grant family, who have owned Glenfarclas since 1865, chose to celebrate the distillery’s 175 years in an under-stated, well-mannered and archetypally Scottish way: with dinner and a ceilidh for employees, a few old friends and valued sup-pliers. Not in a Mayfair restaurant, but in a ware-house emptied and dressed for the purpose. The ware-house, in fact, where 25 years ago many of the same guests, enjoyed the 150th birthday party. That’s tradition. That’s what discerning drinkers celebrate in this well-mannered, vintage Bentley of a whisky.
The good news is that we can join in with the release of two celebratory limited edition bottlings.
Glenfarclas 175 (43% ABV; around £75) is a vatting of casks from six decades dating back to the 1950s. It’s a great introduction to the style, which opens up delightfully with a little drop of water.
Rather harder to find will be one of the 1,296 bottles of the Chairman’s Reserve (46% ABV; £350).
This is a vatting of just four casks, the youngest being 42 years old, and with a combined age of 175 years.