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Bruichladdich 16 Year Old First Growth 'Cuvee B' Paulliac Islay Whisky

Bruichladdich 16 Year Old First Growth 'Cuvee B' Paulliac Islay Whisky

8.4 /10
EDITOR
Type: Single Malt
Age: 16 Year Old
ABV: 46%
Price: £325.00

There are bottles that ask you to sit up and pay attention, and then there are bottles like this — a Bruichladdich 16 Year Old from the First Growth series, matured in Pauillac casks from one of Bordeaux's most storied appellations. At £325, it is not a casual purchase. But this is not a casual whisky. The 'Cuvée B' designation places it squarely within Bruichladdich's celebrated experiment in wine cask maturation, a project that married Islay's unpeated spirit with some of the finest French oak available.

I want to be precise about what we are dealing with here. This is an unpeated Islay single malt, bottled at 46% ABV with sixteen years of age behind it. The First Growth series has always been about pushing the conversation between Scottish barley and continental winemaking tradition, and Pauillac — home to Lafite, Latour, Mouton Rothschild — represents the pinnacle of that ambition. The casks that held those wines carry deep colour, tannic structure, and a particular dark-fruit richness that leaves a lasting impression on spirit given enough time. Sixteen years is more than enough.

What sets this apart from other wine-finished malts is restraint. Too many distillers treat wine casks as a shortcut to sweetness, dumping young spirit into active wood and calling it innovation. Bruichladdich's approach with this series has always been more considered — the base spirit is given room to breathe, and the Pauillac influence is a partner, not a disguise. At 46%, non-chill filtered as is Bruichladdich's standard practice, you get the full weight of the interaction without anything stripped away.

What to Expect

Without specific tasting notes to hand, I can tell you what sixteen years in Pauillac casks typically delivers from this distillery: expect a whisky that leans into dried dark fruits, subtle tannin grip, and a waxy, cerealy backbone that Bruichladdich's spirit is known for. The Islay coastal character should be present but gentle — salt air rather than smoke. This is a whisky built for contemplation, not quick pours at a party.

The Verdict

At £325, you are paying for provenance — both the distillery's and the cask's. I think it earns that price. The First Growth series occupies a genuinely rare space in Scotch whisky: serious age, serious wood, and a distillery philosophy that refuses to cut corners on filtration or strength. An 8.4 out of 10 reflects a whisky that delivers on its considerable promise. It is not flawless — at this price point I find myself wanting just a touch more complexity to justify the leap from Bruichladdich's more accessible ranges — but what is here is beautifully crafted and unmistakably premium. If you are a collector of wine-cask expressions or an admirer of what Islay can do without peat, this belongs on your shelf.

Best Served

Neat, in a Glencairn, at room temperature. If you must add water, a few drops only — enough to open it up, not enough to dilute the tannic structure the Pauillac casks have worked sixteen years to build. This is an after-dinner whisky, best appreciated slowly and without distraction.

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Duncan Cairns
Duncan Cairns
Senior Whisky Reviewer

Duncan has spent two decades judging Scotch whisky at competitions from the International Wine & Spirit Competition to the World Whiskies Awards, developing a palate that prizes balance and terroir ab...

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