Scapa 2000 GM

Overall rating
85.50/100
ratings
6
Whiskybase ID
WB178187
Category
Single Malt
Distillery
Bottler
Gordon & MacPhail (GM)
Bottling series
Connoisseurs Choice - Cask Strength
Vintage
2000
Bottled
30.11.2020
Stated Age
20 years
Cask Type
Refill Sherry Hogshead
Cask number
1098
Number of bottles
208
Strength
56.2 %
Size
750 ml
Bottle code
batch 20/117
Bottled for
K&L Wine Merchants
Market
United States United States
Added on
02 mar 2021 2:20 pm by whiskyaddicted
UncoloredNon-chill FilteredCask StrengthSingle Cask Whisky
Overall rating
85.50/100
ratings
6

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Whisky reviews for Scapa 2000 GM

2 users have left 2 reviews for this whisky. Average rating is 85.50 points.

Read the reviews
  1. jerry_vcmg scored this whisky 89 points Expert Senior

    Nose barnyard spicy. Taste starts out same with some heathery overtones. Relatively short finish. There is a mild sulfur throughout, which detracts for me. Am revising lower.

    Tasted again almost 4 years after bottling. Sulfur overtones have disappeared. Finish seems longer. Heather and spice extant. Toasted oak in agreement with what it says on bottle. Increase rating.

    January 2025. Nose still spicy, no sulfur. 20 years in a refill sherry hogshead gives it a wonderful woody flavor. Scapa usually not high end as competing with Highland Park, but this is the exception. Wonderful long finish with stewed fruits predominant.
    Very nice but gets in high 80's evaluation.

    March 2025. May be overpriced, but taste keeps improving. Negative sherry aspect gone. If tasted blind I wouldn't know if this was a refill sherry cask or bourbon cask. Another example of waiting it out. In competition with sister distillery Highland Park, and definitely up to snuff. High marks.

    January 2026. Tasted first. Color and sherry influence muted, consistent with a refill sherry hogshead. Longer aftertaste with baked apples, spice, marzipan and orange peel. Not subtle and expect some after 20 years in cask. Distilled in 2000 when distillery partially closed. At $179.99 for a 20 year old excellent dram, maybe not overpriced.

  2. WhiskeryTurnip scored this whisky 76 points Connoisseur

    It is not every day one comes across a Scapa from an independent bottler which made this a real treat to try. Even though I was not a massive fan of the flavor profile, the novelty of the bottle gave it a certain appeal, and I can easily see why K&L picked it out from Gordon and MacPhail.

    Yet the dram was more intriguing than just being an uncommon distillery. Scapa was mothballed from 1994 to 2004. During that period, the distillery only opened a few weeks out of the year when Highland Park employees came over to fire up the Lomond stills. They kept enough product maturing that the distillery remained on life-support and ready to reopen when the whisky market improved in the 2000s. The fact that this bottle originated from that mothball period made it an intriguing piece of whisky history to taste or have on the shelf.

    Mental Image: Over-baked Toffee Blondies
    • Nose
      Fruit, salt, and wood. The sherry cask proffered notes of dried fruit, musty leather, and salted plum. A surprising spirit heat came through between bruised stone fruits, black licorice, and toffee.
    • Taste
      Medium-bodied with musty sherry, leather, and salt on the finish. Dried fruits and leather shoes came to mind with mellow notes of tobacco, treacle, and dark chocolate. Stone fruit pits, leather, and salt provided a dry finish— hints of campfire appeared on the edges with bitter orange and grapefruit.
    • Finish
      Lingering dry dark chocolate and salt.

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