More
    HomeTasting NotesSpringbank 15: A Gentle Giant With Funk, Sulfur, and Serious Character

    Springbank 15: A Gentle Giant With Funk, Sulfur, and Serious Character

    Published on

    Springbank is one of those distilleries that commands genuine devotion, and for good reason. So when I finally got my hands on a near-full bottle of the 15-year-old, courtesy of a trade with a good friend who felt this particular batch wasn’t quite his thing, I knew it was time to sit down and give it a proper, honest review.

    This is the February 2023 batch, and despite my best efforts scouring Google, I couldn’t pin down the exact cask makeup. One would assume mostly sherry with a touch of bourbon, but if anyone knows the specifics, I’m all ears.

    Let me be upfront: I love Springbank. The 10-year-old remains my favorite expression from the distillery. It’s remarkably consistent and always delivers. But this review isn’t about comparisons. It’s a straightforward assessment of a bottle I’ve never owned before, taken entirely on its own terms.

    On the nose, this whisky announces itself with classic Springbank character. It’s loaded with orange and chocolate, to the point where it genuinely reminds me of a slightly sulfury Terry’s Chocolate Orange. There are plums, raisins, and a cognac-like sweetness that I’ve been noticing more and more in sherry-cask whisky lately. The smoke is there, but as with all Springbank, it doesn’t shout at you. It simply adds depth.

    On the palate, the sulfur becomes more pronounced, and while I know that’s a dealbreaker for some, I actually enjoy that almost industrial contrast. The oiliness is remarkable. It coats the tongue completely, delivering waves of dark chocolate, dates, and that unmistakable Springbank funk: those clingy, rich, almost fusel-oil notes that border on yeasty, buttery territory, like aged champagne or brioche.

    Surprisingly, the finish is light and crisp rather than heavy, which makes this dram feel approachable despite everything it has going on. Springbank themselves call the 15 a “gentle giant,” and that feels exactly right.

    What makes Springbank endlessly fascinating is that even their core range expressions are technically limited editions. Every batch is different because the cask makeup shifts based on what’s available. A tiny distillery simply can’t guarantee the same ratio of sherry to bourbon to port to rum each time. Compare that to something like Johnnie Walker Green Label, where massive volume allows for tighter consistency. Springbank’s variability is part of the thrill, but it also means you’ll encounter batches that divide opinion, and this one, with its sulfur notes, is clearly one of those.

    I’m scoring this a solid 8 out of 10. It’s not the most complex Springbank I’ve ever tasted. I’ve had richer, more layered experiences with both the 10 and the 12. But it’s a very, very nice whisky with real personality.

    At £75 retail, it represents fair value for what you get, though actually finding a bottle is another matter entirely, given the ballots, lotteries, and inevitable auction markups.

    So here’s what I’d love to know: what are your go-to Springbank 15 alternatives? BenRiach often gets mentioned in that conversation, and I understand why, but every distillery does things differently. If you know of something that gets you into that same ballpark of funky, sherried, lightly smoky brilliance, drop your recommendations in the comments. I’m actively hunting them down.

    To see my full tasting of Springbank 15, check out my YouTube video.

    Read the full article at Springbank 15: A Gentle Giant With Funk, Sulfur, and Serious Character

    spot_img