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Description
The Long Marriage: Fifty-Six Years of Quiet Strength
There are blends. And then there are relationships, the kind that weather decades in quiet parallel, building depth not through contrast but through continuity. The Long Marriage is exactly that: a union of malt and grain spirits laid down together, aged side by side in a single cask for 56 years, and bottled not for novelty, but because the whisky had reached a point of absolute cohesion.
This is one of the most enduring cask marriages ever bottled. While Blended at Birth offered a glimpse into youth grown old in tandem, The Long Marriage reveals what happens when that same bond is left undisturbed for over half a century. It is a whisky not just shaped by time, but defined by constancy.
An Expression of Continuity
Drawn from the House of Hazelwood’s Charles Gordon Collection, the private stocks of the Gordon family, spanning the rarest whiskies under their custodianship, this expression is more than a curiosity. It is a study in patience, restraint, and slow integration. A whisky where every note has had time to soften, settle, and settle again.
There is no rush in this dram. No urgency to impress. It unfolds with the serenity of something long understood, of a spirit that has had all the time it needs to become itself.
The Patience of Oak
On the nose, it opens with extraordinary grace. Old polished oak, honeycomb, a trace of sandalwood and sweet pipe tobacco. There’s a richness here that doesn’t rush, dried apricot, clove, leather-bound books, each element arriving in its own time, like conversations between old friends.
The palate is profoundly elegant. Silken texture gives way to antique complexity: baked orchard fruit, dark sugar, soft mint, and the kind of tannin that feels woven, not extracted. No bite. No gaps. Just balance, the kind that can only be earned, never engineered.
The finish is long and contemplative. Warming spices, fig, candied peel, and an echo of seasoned wood that lingers like a story retold at the end of the night.
Conclusion: A Promise Fulfilled
The Long Marriage is not a whisky built to dazzle, or to stir up auction fever. It was never made to prove a point. It was made to honour a long-held promise: to see a blend through, not halfway, not until convenient, but to its fullest, most natural point of expression.
It is a whisky that speaks not with volume, but with presence. Every detail has softened into the whole. Every flavour feels anchored, inevitable. And in its quietude lies its power.
For the collector, it is a rarity of remarkable integrity. For the drinker, a lesson in patience rewarded. For those who understand the value of unbroken companionship, of spirit that was never parted, this is more than a whisky. It is a marriage, kept.
Tasting Profile
- Light
- Full
- Low Tannin
- Tannic
- Sweet
- Dry
- Low Acidity
- High Acidity
Description
The Long Marriage: Fifty-Six Years of Quiet Strength
There are blends. And then there are relationships, the kind that weather decades in quiet parallel, building depth not through contrast but through continuity. The Long Marriage is exactly that: a union of malt and grain spirits laid down together, aged side by side in a single cask for 56 years, and bottled not for novelty, but because the whisky had reached a point of absolute cohesion.
This is one of the most enduring cask marriages ever bottled. While Blended at Birth offered a glimpse into youth grown old in tandem, The Long Marriage reveals what happens when that same bond is left undisturbed for over half a century. It is a whisky not just shaped by time, but defined by constancy.
An Expression of Continuity
Drawn from the House of Hazelwood’s Charles Gordon Collection, the private stocks of the Gordon family, spanning the rarest whiskies under their custodianship, this expression is more than a curiosity. It is a study in patience, restraint, and slow integration. A whisky where every note has had time to soften, settle, and settle again.
There is no rush in this dram. No urgency to impress. It unfolds with the serenity of something long understood, of a spirit that has had all the time it needs to become itself.
The Patience of Oak
On the nose, it opens with extraordinary grace. Old polished oak, honeycomb, a trace of sandalwood and sweet pipe tobacco. There’s a richness here that doesn’t rush, dried apricot, clove, leather-bound books, each element arriving in its own time, like conversations between old friends.
The palate is profoundly elegant. Silken texture gives way to antique complexity: baked orchard fruit, dark sugar, soft mint, and the kind of tannin that feels woven, not extracted. No bite. No gaps. Just balance, the kind that can only be earned, never engineered.
The finish is long and contemplative. Warming spices, fig, candied peel, and an echo of seasoned wood that lingers like a story retold at the end of the night.
Conclusion: A Promise Fulfilled
The Long Marriage is not a whisky built to dazzle, or to stir up auction fever. It was never made to prove a point. It was made to honour a long-held promise: to see a blend through, not halfway, not until convenient, but to its fullest, most natural point of expression.
It is a whisky that speaks not with volume, but with presence. Every detail has softened into the whole. Every flavour feels anchored, inevitable. And in its quietude lies its power.
For the collector, it is a rarity of remarkable integrity. For the drinker, a lesson in patience rewarded. For those who understand the value of unbroken companionship, of spirit that was never parted, this is more than a whisky. It is a marriage, kept.
Tasting Profile
- Light
- Full
- Low Tannin
- Tannic
- Sweet
- Dry
- Low Acidity
- High Acidity