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Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s


Highest Price: 2022 £52.50

Total Lots Sold:
10
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Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 0823-113

Winning Bid
£32.50

End Date: 18 Oct 2023
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 549

Winning Bid
£42.50

End Date: 14 Sep 2022
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 902

Winning Bid
£52.50

End Date: 05 Jan 2022
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 613

Winning Bid
£22.50

End Date: 01 May 2019
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 1009

Winning Bid
£42.50

End Date: 06 Sep 2017
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 287

Winning Bid
£27.50

End Date: 07 Dec 2016
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 636

Winning Bid
£25.00

End Date: 07 Sep 2016
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 419

Winning Bid
£37.50

End Date: 17 May 2015
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 615

Winning Bid
£45.00

End Date: 06 Aug 2014
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s
LOT ID: 724

Winning Bid
£47.50

End Date: 07 May 2014

Glen Keith 10 Year Old - 1990s

Glen Keith 10 Year Old. Bottled 1990s. 70cl. 43%.

Distillery:  Glen Keith

Distillery Status:  Working

Bottler: Distillery Bottling

Region: Speyside

Bottling Year: 1990s

Age: 10

Category: Single Malt

Country: Scotland

Bottle Size: 70cl / 700ml

ABV: 43%

Glen Keith is a large Speyside distillery that maintains an extremely low profile. The distillery was founded in 1957 by Seagram’s and was experimental from the start: triple distillation was practised until the 1980s, and Glen Keith also experimented with gas-fired direct heating, Saladin box maltings and distilling with peated water in the 1970s. Some of these experimental spirits were bottled later as Craigduff and Glenisla by Signatory Vintage.

The main business of Glen Keith, though, was always to supply high quality Speyside malt for Seagram’s blends, particularly 100 Pipers. Mothballed in 1999, Glen Keith remained silent until being revived in 2013 after extensive refurbishment by Pernod Ricard, who had taken over Seagram’s Chivas Brothers portfolio in 2001. At auction, independent bottlers are a safer bet than the generally mundane Seagram-era official bottlings, with some outstanding fruity, waxy vintages from the 1960s and 1970s highly sought after.

Distillery bottlings are, as the name suggests, bottled by or for the distillery from which the whisky has originated and are thus often referred to as Official Bottlings or OBs. Distillery bottlings are generally more desirable for collectors and usually fetch higher prices at auction than independent bottlings. They are officially-endorsed versions of the whisky from a particular distillery and are therefore considered the truest expression of the distillery’s character.

This ideal of the distillery character is regarded so seriously by the distilleries and brand owners that casks of whisky that are considered to vary too far from the archetype are frequently sold on to whisky brokers and independent bottlers. When this happens, it is often with the proviso that the distillery’s name is not allowed to be used when the cask is bottled for fear of diminishing or damaging the distillery’s character and status.