Product image 1
HomeStore

Loch Lomond 28 Year Old 1996 - Mission Gold (Murray McDavid) Single Grain Scotch Whisky| 700ML

Loch Lomond 28 Year Old 1996 - Mission Gold (Murray McDavid) Single Grain Scotch Whisky| 700ML

Whiskey: Loch Lomond 28 Year Old 1996 - Mission Gold (Murray McDavid) Single Grain Scotch Whisky| 700ML

This bottle will make a fine addition to any whisky lover.

Order from the Largest & Most Trusted Premium Spirits Marketplace!

Featured in

  • ROLLING STONE
  • MEN'S JOURNAL
  • US WEEKLY

ALL ORDERS PLACED ARE GUARANTEED and WILL NOT be cancelled like with other retailers. Many other small liquor store sites will end up cancelling your order due to the high demand and unavailability.

Size: 700ML

Proof: 102.4 (51.2%ABV)

Origin: Scotland

Distillery: Loch Lomond

Technically a single grain, but made from malted barley, this is one of Loch Lomond’s many curveballs. Aged for 28 years and finished in Sauternes dessert wine casks, it’s rich, complex, and hard to pin down – and that’s exactly the point.

Loch Lomond 28 Year Old 1996 - Mission Gold (Murray McDavid) Single Grain Scotch Whisky| 700ML Tasting Notes

Nose: Floral honey, candied peach, orange blossom.

Palate: Creamy lemon curd, dried apricot, melon sorbet, soft spice.

Finish: Ginger heat, vanilla cream, tropical fruit salad.

Distillery Information

Over the course of Loch Lomond’s existence, the distillery has released seven different malts. Four of them were destined for blending, the remaining three were intended to be bottled as single malt whiskies, though most have been released as such over the years. Bottlings have been under the names: Inchmurrin, Inchmoan, Inchfad, Crotengea, Glen Douglass, Craiglodge and, naturally, Loch Lomond, each with varying peat levels. The name Loch Lomond is used for single malt releases though it is also used for a blended Scotch produced onsite using both grain and malt whisky. Loch Lomond was in such a good position to release so many different whiskies as it had an unusual set up of stills. There were three sets of stills, two were fitted with rectification columns as well as five continuous stills. Loch Lomond sits in an industrial complex, once home to Britain’s earliest car factory. The distillery was built in 1965 by the Littlemill Distillery Company Ltd, under the ownership of Duncan Thomas and American Barton Brands. Production began a year later.

$180.00

Original: $599.99

-70%
Loch Lomond 28 Year Old 1996 - Mission Gold (Murray McDavid) Single Grain Scotch Whisky| 700ML

$599.99

$180.00

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Whiskey: Loch Lomond 28 Year Old 1996 - Mission Gold (Murray McDavid) Single Grain Scotch Whisky| 700ML

This bottle will make a fine addition to any whisky lover.

Order from the Largest & Most Trusted Premium Spirits Marketplace!

Featured in

  • ROLLING STONE
  • MEN'S JOURNAL
  • US WEEKLY

ALL ORDERS PLACED ARE GUARANTEED and WILL NOT be cancelled like with other retailers. Many other small liquor store sites will end up cancelling your order due to the high demand and unavailability.

Size: 700ML

Proof: 102.4 (51.2%ABV)

Origin: Scotland

Distillery: Loch Lomond

Technically a single grain, but made from malted barley, this is one of Loch Lomond’s many curveballs. Aged for 28 years and finished in Sauternes dessert wine casks, it’s rich, complex, and hard to pin down – and that’s exactly the point.

Loch Lomond 28 Year Old 1996 - Mission Gold (Murray McDavid) Single Grain Scotch Whisky| 700ML Tasting Notes

Nose: Floral honey, candied peach, orange blossom.

Palate: Creamy lemon curd, dried apricot, melon sorbet, soft spice.

Finish: Ginger heat, vanilla cream, tropical fruit salad.

Distillery Information

Over the course of Loch Lomond’s existence, the distillery has released seven different malts. Four of them were destined for blending, the remaining three were intended to be bottled as single malt whiskies, though most have been released as such over the years. Bottlings have been under the names: Inchmurrin, Inchmoan, Inchfad, Crotengea, Glen Douglass, Craiglodge and, naturally, Loch Lomond, each with varying peat levels. The name Loch Lomond is used for single malt releases though it is also used for a blended Scotch produced onsite using both grain and malt whisky. Loch Lomond was in such a good position to release so many different whiskies as it had an unusual set up of stills. There were three sets of stills, two were fitted with rectification columns as well as five continuous stills. Loch Lomond sits in an industrial complex, once home to Britain’s earliest car factory. The distillery was built in 1965 by the Littlemill Distillery Company Ltd, under the ownership of Duncan Thomas and American Barton Brands. Production began a year later.