Information
Japan, Nagano. Distillery closed and dismantled.
Mothballed in the early 2000s, Karuizawa closed definitively in Spring 2012. Located at the foot of one of Japan's most active volcanoes, Mont Asama, Karuizawa began distilling in 1956. Equipped with small direct coal-fired stills, Karuizawa produced a robust, full-bodied malt that took perfectly to long maturation in ex-sherry casks from Spain (first fill) and Scotland (second fill, such as Mortlach). Karuizawa was a malt distilled to produce the Ocean blends of the Daikoku group. Bottlings of single malts were at the time reserved for the distillery's visitor centre and a handful of private clients. These hand-bottled versions were offered as cask strength, single cask vintages. Only what was needed for the bottling was removed from the cask, with the rest left to continue ageing in barrel. This practice explains why the same barrel can exist in various bottlings of different ages and versions. This means that the 1970 cask #6177 exists under two labels, one a 31 Year Old Distillery Edition (2002) and the other a 42 Year Old Vintage Single Cask Edition (2012). It was under the aegis of Number One Drinks, who bought the 300 or so barrels still available at the distillery in 2006, that Karuizawa joined the ranks of legend.
A Karuizawa distilled in 1983 and bottled at cask strength in 2014 for The Whisky Exchange (Speciality Drinks). The label features a samurai in reference to Nakasendō, one of the five routes of the Edo period under the Tokugawa shogunate, one of which connected Kyoto and Edo (Tokyo). Karuizawa is found along this route, and the samurai, feudal lords and their servants were in the habit of stopping there to rest before continuing on their journey.
Consult price estimate for KaruizawaPrice estimate for wine from the same producer
Region: Japan - Honshu Nagano
Producers and wineries: Karuizawa
Colour: amber
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