This one was actually acquired from the LCBO and was a last minute addition to the evenings tasting menu and a polar opposite from the Ardbeg Y2K that will be sure to appeal to those with a love of Highland spirits. There is certainly some love amongst the club membership for previous releases of Glenmorangie’s Signet, so this one caught the eye and it fit into our budget for the anniversary tasting party.
LCBO: 46% ABV
$715.00
Inspired by a winsome cup of Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee, Signet Reserve is distilled from a chocolate malt(a heavily toasted barley malt) that imparts espresso, tiramisu and bitter dark chocolate notes ageing in Sherry, bourbon and new oak barrels adds butterscotch, vanilla and spice notes.
Tasting Notes by The Producer:
Nose
Deep and powerful aromas. Dark chocolate sponge cake and intense espresso coffee. As the nose develops, more coffee and chocolate flavours mix with hazelnut cream, orange zest and muscovado sugar.
Palate
A big mouthcoating whisky with a texture that coats the tastebuds from the first sip. Chocolate truffles, toffee, treacle and fudge. Then notes of Turkish coffee and roasted coffee beans. Some toasted cinnamon emerges mixing with orange oil, citrus, milk chocolate raisins, then raspberry.
Finish
Incredibly complex flavours of coffee and chocolate develop in the lengthy finish. More creamy toffee eventually finishes in the familiar flavour of tiramisu.
In the order of tasting we did this one last out of the 3 anniversary tasting bottles this month. I would categorize this as a “dessert whisky”, something akin to an aperitif. Still a fantastic overall tasting experience and happy to have explored this one. The consensus with the club members though was that we had a hard time differentiating why this one was pretty much double the cost of a regular bottling of Glenmorangie Signet. While delightful to the palate and a great finisher for this evenings tasting lineup we were left scratching our heads as to why we didn’t just go for a normal Signet as opposed to the reserve version. Certainly worth a try, however the bang for the buck proposition, just does not add up at the price point.