• Category Scotch
  • Country Scotland
  • Region Lowland
  • Distillery Carsebridge
  • Age 30 Year Old
  • Style Grain Whisky
  • Alcohol 48.8%*
*please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary California residents: Click here for Proposition 65 WARNING.
  • fruit
  • tropical
  • oak
  • coffee
  • chocolate
  • sweet
  • green apple
  • pineapple
  • vanilla

Carsebridge

30 Year Old 1979 - Rare Auld (Duncan Taylor) (0.7l, 48.8%*) *please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary

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Character Goatson
Single grain bottled by Duncan Taylor. This was distilled at Carsebridge in March 1979 and matured for 30 years in cask number 33043 before bottling at natural cask strength in March 2010. A release of just 69 bottles.
  • Category Scotch
  • Country Scotland
  • Region Lowland
  • Distillery Carsebridge
  • Age 30 Year Old
  • Style Grain Whisky
  • Alcohol 48.8%*
*please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary California residents: Click here for Proposition 65 WARNING.
Flavor Spiral TM
About the Flavor Spiral
What does Carsebridge 30 Year Old 1979 - Rare Auld (Duncan Taylor) taste like?

The Flavor Spiral™ shows the most common flavors that you'll taste in Carsebridge 30 Year Old 1979 - Rare Auld (Duncan Taylor) and gives you a chance to have a taste of it before actually tasting it.

We invented Flavor Spiral™ here at Flaviar to get all your senses involved in tasting drinks and, frankly, because we think that classic tasting notes are boring.

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  • fruit
  • tropical
  • oak
  • coffee
  • chocolate
  • sweet
  • green apple
  • pineapple
  • vanilla
Dog Dogson's Smartass corner
Character Dogson
Can Scotch go bad? Technically, an unopened bottle of Scotch can last forever. Air is the only true evil to Whisky; once the liquid is oxidized it is no longer immortal. After opening, as long as you store your Whisky in a cool, dry place, it will last another 5 years.
Is Scotch always Scottish? What do you think? Yes. The answer is yes.
Categories of Scotch Whisky: Single malt, Blended malt (formerly called Vatted malt), blended, single grain and blended grain Scotch.
Beer and malt Whisky seem to have quite a bit in common. Both drinks begin with malted barley, which deliver the enzymes and sugars needed for fermentation when steeped in hot water. The two go their separate ways at the wash stage, where they're fermented or aged to become the adult beverages you know and love.
Carsebridge has one claim to fame: it was one of the first to use the variable, continuous Coffey stills, which greatly increased output.
Single malt stands for around 10% of the Scotch market. This is a malt containing only one grain, legally required to be barley in Scotland, and made at a single distillery.

A blended Scotch is a combination of different malts from different distilleries. It is typically made from grain Whisky but does include malt Whisky to give it a more complex body.
Similar drinks
Dog Dogson's Smartass corner
Character Dogson
Can Scotch go bad? Technically, an unopened bottle of Scotch can last forever. Air is the only true evil to Whisky; once the liquid is oxidized it is no longer immortal. After opening, as long as you store your Whisky in a cool, dry place, it will last another 5 years.
Is Scotch always Scottish? What do you think? Yes. The answer is yes.
Categories of Scotch Whisky: Single malt, Blended malt (formerly called Vatted malt), blended, single grain and blended grain Scotch.
Beer and malt Whisky seem to have quite a bit in common. Both drinks begin with malted barley, which deliver the enzymes and sugars needed for fermentation when steeped in hot water. The two go their separate ways at the wash stage, where they're fermented or aged to become the adult beverages you know and love.
Carsebridge has one claim to fame: it was one of the first to use the variable, continuous Coffey stills, which greatly increased output.
Single malt stands for around 10% of the Scotch market. This is a malt containing only one grain, legally required to be barley in Scotland, and made at a single distillery.

A blended Scotch is a combination of different malts from different distilleries. It is typically made from grain Whisky but does include malt Whisky to give it a more complex body.
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