Last night I headed to ** Michelin star restaurant De Pastorale for a special evening organised by Luc Timmermans. He presented his latest and sadly also last selection of Glenfarclas.
No need to tell you that Luc is a renowned Glenfarclas collector, that 1968 is Luc’s birth year and that he has been monitoring the entire stock of this vintage very closely. You might want to read about his last few casks of Glenfarclas 1968 bottled in 2009, 2010 and 2011:
- Glenfarclas 1968 (51,6%, OB 2009, Family cask #699, Lindores 5th Anniversary, 35 btl.)
- Glenfarclas 41 yo 1968 (49,7%, OB 2010, cask #702 & 5240, 318 btl.)
- Glenfarclas 43 yo 1968 (47,5%, OB Family Cask #697, Manzanilla, 133 btl.)


Side note: the dessert was marinated pineapple with vanilla ice cream that had some of the Glenfarclas 1968 inside. Apparently chef De Pooter experimented with different whiskies and the result with the 1968 was simply too good. If you buy a bottle and you don’t know what to do with it: try this recipe!

A proper review with my full tasting notes will come later (update: see here), but I can tell you the whisky was excellent. It is fresh, sherried but not too much, very elegant, with a perfect dose of fruits and oak spices. A perfect tribute to 175 years of classic Glenfarclas craftsmanship, with a hell of a lot of boxes ticked. It’s accessible yet complex, predictable yet magical. An example of how a sherried Glenfarclas should be, or better still, a supreme example of how a sherried whisky should be.
The bottle is only available when you participate in one of the My Tribute Dinners around the world (still to come: Paris, Taipei, Singapore, Atlanta). In Belgium it was € 1750. Expensive but just compare it to the 1953 launched earlier this year, or other premium official bottlings and remember it encompasses an entire event, superb wines and great company. An event to remember!
