Glenfarclas 185th Anniversary Edition vs The Glenlivet 18 Year Old

Compare current tracked prices, stockists and core specifications. Glenfarclas 185th Anniversary Edition currently starts £1.25 lower.

AvailabilityIn stockIn stock
Best current price£120.00£121.25
Current stockists1 merchant1 merchant
ProducerGlenfarclasGlenlivet
TypeSingle Malt WhiskySingle Malt Whisky
Size700ml700ml
Where to buy

Glenfarclas 185th Anniversary Edition

In May 1836 Glenfarclas Distillery was officially licenced for the first time, adding the designation “Distillery” to Rechlerich Farm. Therefore, May 2021 marks 185 years of legal distilling and Glenfarclas is celebrating the anniversary with a limited-edition bottling. Due to their grandfather’s foresight, Glenfarclas are very fortunate to have casks in their dunnage warehouses from 7 different decades, from the 1950s to the 2020s. Some of the ware-houses even predate the 185th anniversary thhey are celebrating, as ‘uisge beatha’ was being made at Glenfarclas a good few years before a licence was held. To mark 185 legal years they have selected some of their finest casks from across the decades and put together a whisky with old, rich, sherried flavours that remain fresh and vibrant in your glass. Glenfarclas means ‘Valley of the Green Grassland’ and the spring water, which ensures the verdant green grass, is essential to the distinct flavour of Glenfarclas Highland Single Malt Whisky. It bubbles up, crystal clear, from the underlying granite on the slopes of the Speyside mountain, Ben Rinnes, to supply the distillery below. There, it is combined with the finest malted barley, twice distilled in traditional, direct fired, copper pot stills and only the lightest and best fractions of alcohol are collected, two thirds to be filled into the finest Spanish Sherry oak casks and one third into plain oak casks in which to lie maturing over many years. Explore all Glenfarclas Single Malt Whiskies here.

The Glenlivet 18 Year Old

The Glenlivet Distillery roots can be traced back to 1815 but it is well known that illicit distilling was going on long before then. In 1817 George Smith leased some land at Upper Drumin Farm, he continued illicit distilling to supplement his crofters wage. During 1823 an Excise Act was pushed through by the Duke of Gordon - Smiths's landlord - to stop illicit distilling. Gordon then persuaded Smith to take out the first licence and he also helped to set up the distillery at Drumin. Due to the success of Glenlivet, a number of distilleries in the region appended the name Glenlivet to their own. In 1880 J.G. Smith took legal action and the court ruled that there was only one "The Glenlivet". Distillery bottling.

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