
The casks of Glen Moray
TL; DR: After the Cabrach, we drove straight to Elgin, for a last-minute tasting: Cask Origin Stories at Glen Moray! The distillery is an old acquaintance (fourth visit!), and as the previous three times, we had a great time with a range of delicious whiskies paired with a glass of what was in the cask before newmake or whisky. One for real whisky nerds!
(missed Part 1?)
The tour at the Cabrach lasted less than we thought, so after a short stroll around the distillery under an overcast sky, we were on the road again. Since the afternoon unexpectedly opened up, as soon as we had some phone signal, we phoned a well known distillery to ask if they still had places for a tasting weโd spotted, but until that moment we thought we could not make it on time. The tasting was the Cask Origin Stories, at Glen Moray, in Elgin.
Glen Moray is an old acquaintance. At the start of our whisky journey, we mostly saw their entry level expressions at supermarkets, a brand among many, possibly anonymous. However, thanks to Scotch Malt Whisky Society (SMWS), it didnโt take long to mark the distillery as one of our first great โdiscoveriesโ. We found some of their single casks remarkable, and our second bottle ever from the SMWS was indeed a Glen Moray – St Bernardโs barrel, 35.232, finished in an ex-wine barrique, hidden in the elusive Spicy & Dry category. We were definitely sold after we visited the distillery during our first trip to Speyside in December 2019. There, we had two whisky flights: the travel retail version of the core range (Elgin Classic, NAS, the 12y and the 15y: all not chill-filtered and bottled at 48%) and the bottle-your-own drams. It was a wee while ago, so we donโt remember all the details, but Gianluigi still regrets not buying a delicious ex-Rye whiskey finished expression. We went back there in 2022, during the Speycation with the Edinburgh Whisky Group, for a full distillery tour and tasting, and again last year for a Star Wars themed tasting on May the fourth.

We managed to get here on time, yay!
One of the great things about Glen Moray, other than the variety of casks they like to experiment with, is that they always have three bottle-your-own expressions available at the distillery. But mostly, that two of the three are kept at a very reasonable price, conversely to most distilleries that like to charge extra for distillery exclusive bottlings. Last time we were there, two were nicely priced at ยฃ60, while the third, a more aged one, was ยฃ99 (still very affordable for a 20y malt!). This makes all the new visits interesting, and hence, once we realised we had enough time, buying the tickets for this event was a no-brainer!

The power of the wind on Teresa’s hair.
As we arrived at the distillery, we greeted our pal Iain, the brand ambassador and visitor centre manager. We met him during an online tasting organised by Justine (Kask Whisky), and since then we had many tastings with him (and we are also acquainted by a similar taste in music). After a nice chat, it was the time for the tasting to start, not with him, but with Fiona, who led us to the Glen Moray House. This is a lovely cottage to the right of the entrance, a multi-functional space that has been used as a tasting room as well. First, she showed us some old registers, reporting dates and type of casks filled: among the many โrefillโ and โsherryโ, we spotted a few different wines, fortified or not.

A cosy tasting room.
We started the tasting with an unusual one, a Busnel Calvados (40%), followed by a vintage 2017 Glen Moray single malt finished in Calvados casks (56.9%). We moved on to the second pairing, a 10y Tawny Port from Cruz, with a 2008 (17y) single malt fully matured in a Tawny port cask (at the impressive abv of 60.2%!). These two drams were available as โbottle your ownโ, so it might be that at the time of writing (June โ25) they are still available at the distillery visitor centre. The third drink was a 15y Boal Madeira wine from Henriques & Henriques, followed by the Glen Moray House Exclusive whisky, a 13y Madeira matured whisky (57.8%). As the name suggests, this one is only available if you attend an event at the house. Finally, the last pairing was a single-vineyard Valdespino Inocente Fino sherry, and a peated, fully matured Fino cask whisky from 2015 (58.5%), this one available at the distillery.

From bottle…

…to glass.
It was a great line-up, and Fiona did a great job to walk us through the drinks and the drams, in spite of an unusually โseriousโ audience of northern European men (other than Fiona, Teresa was the only woman in the room). Drink-wise, we were not too keen on the Calvados, too sweet for our taste, but otherwise we liked them all, especially the Madeira! The drams were all very tasty, showcasing a range of flavours from fruitiness, savoury and smoke. The Port-finished dram and Glen Moray House Exclusive were the two we liked the most, while in the last one the peat was โturned to 11โ, which masked a bit the savoury notes of the Fino caskโฆOne for true peat lovers!

The new kid on the block.
Back at the visitor centre we tried some of the new releases: โspirit drinkโ finished in Maple syrup casks, one peated (11y) and one unpeated (8y, both ยฃ90). Obviously, it cannot be โsingle maltโ because the SWA doesnโt allow such experimental casks (but who knows? maybe Diageo or Pernod Ricard will buy a maple syrup producer at some pointโฆ). They were both less sweet than expected, in particular the peated one: was more like a BBQ-y meaty thing.

Not a bad spot for the night.
We soon left the distillery to find a spot for the night, which we did next to Portgordon, on the sea. There we made ourself dinner and relaxed (and Gianluigi powered through his drams, since he had bottled them all in sample bottles). It was nice to fall asleep to the sound of the waves, after such a nice day and cracking drams.
Stay tuned for more Spirit of Speyside action! Until the next week, slainte!
Glen Moray Cask Origin Stories tasting (Spirit of Speyside 2025)
Price: ยฃ50.00 pp + SoS transaction fee
Duration: 1h30m-2h
Tasting: 4 drams paired with the previous content of the cask (see above).
Distillery exclusives: bottle-your-own 2017 Port cask finish (59.4%), ยฃ60; 2005 Chianti cask finish (53%), ยฃ99; 2015 peated Fino Cask (58.5%), ยฃ60 (at some point the first two drams of the tasting)
Target: whisky geeks
Value for money: very good
Highlights: a few of the drams were excellentโฆand Fiona was a great host!
Recommended: absolutely
Links: https://www.glenmoray.com/ https://www.spiritofspeyside.com/

















