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House of Hazelwood 'The Lost Estate' Scotch Whisky 41.6% 700ml
House of Hazelwood 'The Lost Estate' Scotch Whisky 41.6% 700ml
House of Hazelwood 'The Lost Estate' Scotch Whisky 41.6% 700ml

House of Hazelwood 'The Lost Estate' Scotch Whisky 41.6% 700ml

SKU: HHLENV10 UCAU
Regular price $2,390.00
Unit price
per 

House of Hazelwood is an independent, family-owned Scotch house, famed for releasing rare, ultra-aged blends drawn from the private cellars of the Gordon family.

A 43-year-old blend matured in refill American oak, highlighting components sourced from closed or historic distilleries.

Elegant and nuanced, showing aged honeyed malt, dried fruits, and soft oak with a lingering, contemplative finish.

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Estimated dispatch from Warehouse: Tuesday, July 29, 2025
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    • Description

      The Lost Estate: A Return to What Was Left Behind

      Some whiskies arrive with fanfare. Others arrive like rediscovered letters, quiet, personal, and profoundly transporting. The Lost Estate belongs to the latter. A 43-year-old blended grain Scotch whisky, drawn from the vaults of two now-silent distilleries, it carries not just flavour, but memory. It is an expression shaped by time, scarcity, and the House of Hazelwood’s enduring belief that legacy is not just something preserved, it’s something shared.

      Composed entirely of grain whiskies long forgotten by the industry’s front-facing stage, The Lost Estate is both a rarity and a reminder: that what is overlooked is often what reveals the most. This is not a whisky about reinvention. It is about recovery. And it speaks with the calm clarity of something that was never supposed to be found again.

      A Voice from the Silent

      Drawn from the Charles Gordon Collection, The Lost Estate brings together parcels from two closed grain distilleries, ghosts of a former landscape, unified here with subtlety and intent. These are spirits that were never made for public acclaim. They were made for blending houses, for internal reserves, for some future moment that no one could quite define. That moment, it seems, is now.

      This is not nostalgia in a bottle. It’s resonance. A whisky built from the past, but offered fully in the present.

      Where Silence Finds Form

      The nose is soft, but vivid. Creamed vanilla, mandarin orange, and pear drops rise from the glass, underscored by a confectionery brightness, barley sugar, white chocolate, and a hint of old oak polish. It is inviting, but composed. This is sweetness shaped, not spilled.

      On the palate, the years show their work. Stewed apple, pineapple, and almond cream glide across a silky texture, lifted by citrus oils and framed by well-worn oak. There’s no rush here, just unfolding. A gradual release of depth and detail that speaks of slow maturation in American white oak, and the gentle alchemy of time.

      The finish is long and lifted. Strawberry jam, soft wood spice, and a faint, creamy residue, like the aftertaste of old-fashioned sweets or sun-warmed grain. It fades with poise, not absence.

      Conclusion: The Estate Remembered

      The Lost Estate is not loud. It does not strive to assert itself. Instead, it reveals, a dram that invites the drinker to step back, listen, and rediscover what was once nearly lost. It proves that grain whisky, when matured with patience and blended with reverence, can offer not just elegance, but emotional depth.

      For the collector, it is a time capsule. For the drinker, a contemplative window into Scotch’s quieter corners. And for the House of Hazelwood, it is another chapter in a legacy defined not by what shouts loudest, but by what endures longest.

      This is the estate not forgotten, but found, and finally shared.



      Tasting Profile

      • Light
      • Full
      • Low Tannin
      • Tannic
      • Sweet
      • Dry
      • Low Acidity
      • High Acidity

    Description

    The Lost Estate: A Return to What Was Left Behind

    Some whiskies arrive with fanfare. Others arrive like rediscovered letters, quiet, personal, and profoundly transporting. The Lost Estate belongs to the latter. A 43-year-old blended grain Scotch whisky, drawn from the vaults of two now-silent distilleries, it carries not just flavour, but memory. It is an expression shaped by time, scarcity, and the House of Hazelwood’s enduring belief that legacy is not just something preserved, it’s something shared.

    Composed entirely of grain whiskies long forgotten by the industry’s front-facing stage, The Lost Estate is both a rarity and a reminder: that what is overlooked is often what reveals the most. This is not a whisky about reinvention. It is about recovery. And it speaks with the calm clarity of something that was never supposed to be found again.

    A Voice from the Silent

    Drawn from the Charles Gordon Collection, The Lost Estate brings together parcels from two closed grain distilleries, ghosts of a former landscape, unified here with subtlety and intent. These are spirits that were never made for public acclaim. They were made for blending houses, for internal reserves, for some future moment that no one could quite define. That moment, it seems, is now.

    This is not nostalgia in a bottle. It’s resonance. A whisky built from the past, but offered fully in the present.

    Where Silence Finds Form

    The nose is soft, but vivid. Creamed vanilla, mandarin orange, and pear drops rise from the glass, underscored by a confectionery brightness, barley sugar, white chocolate, and a hint of old oak polish. It is inviting, but composed. This is sweetness shaped, not spilled.

    On the palate, the years show their work. Stewed apple, pineapple, and almond cream glide across a silky texture, lifted by citrus oils and framed by well-worn oak. There’s no rush here, just unfolding. A gradual release of depth and detail that speaks of slow maturation in American white oak, and the gentle alchemy of time.

    The finish is long and lifted. Strawberry jam, soft wood spice, and a faint, creamy residue, like the aftertaste of old-fashioned sweets or sun-warmed grain. It fades with poise, not absence.

    Conclusion: The Estate Remembered

    The Lost Estate is not loud. It does not strive to assert itself. Instead, it reveals, a dram that invites the drinker to step back, listen, and rediscover what was once nearly lost. It proves that grain whisky, when matured with patience and blended with reverence, can offer not just elegance, but emotional depth.

    For the collector, it is a time capsule. For the drinker, a contemplative window into Scotch’s quieter corners. And for the House of Hazelwood, it is another chapter in a legacy defined not by what shouts loudest, but by what endures longest.

    This is the estate not forgotten, but found, and finally shared.



    Tasting Profile

    • Light
    • Full
    • Low Tannin
    • Tannic
    • Sweet
    • Dry
    • Low Acidity
    • High Acidity

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