House of Hazelwood 'The Old Confectioner's' Scotch Whisky 46.3% 700ml

HHOCNV10 UCAU

$5,990.00

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House of Hazelwood is an independent, family-owned Scotch house, famed for releasing rare, ultra-aged blends drawn from the private cellars of the Gordon family.

Aged for 44 years in American oak, this blend was crafted to evoke the sweetshop aromas of toffee, caramel, and nut brittle.

Opulent, dessert-like Scotch with rich sweetness, silky mouthfeel, and a nostalgic, lingering finish.

Quantity
  • Available for Purchase   Estimated dispatch from Warehouse: Thursday, July 24, 2025
Type
Style
Country
Vintage

44 Years

Bottle Size

700ml

Alcohol %

46.3%

Sip Snapshot from Belford & Co

The Old Confectioner’s: Memory, Matured

The name suggests nostalgia, but this is no confection. The Old Confectioner’s is not a flight into whimsy, but a study in memory rendered with intent. A whisky built on the warm, rounded tones of traditional Speyside sweetness, shaped not by sentiment, but by structure. It is evocative, yes, but never indulgent. Every note is earned.

Drawn from the Gordon family’s private stock, this release captures something both timeless and precise. It leans into a softer, fruit-driven profile, yet holds its balance with quiet conviction. Each component, malt, grain, wood, was selected not simply for charm, but for coherence. This is sweetness supported by scaffolding, not syrup.

Crafted with Contrast

The Old Confectioner’s belongs to Hazelwood’s Legacy series, a line that pays tribute to characterful profiles from the past, reimagined through the lens of modern curation. Here, the brief was clear: evoke the textures of old-world sweetness, but build them with discipline.

Butterscotch, toffee, dried fruit, these are the signatures. But so too are bitterness, spice, and restraint. This is a whisky that knows how to please, but refuses to pander.

Structure in Sweetness

The nose opens generously. Golden syrup, soft fudge, toasted pecan, and the high floral lift of barley sugar rise first, familiar, welcoming, nostalgic. But beneath that: aged oak, citrus peel, and a trace of dried mint. A grounding element that keeps the dram from floating too far into reverie.

The palate builds on that promise. Toffee, candied orange, almond brittle, and stewed fruits bring breadth and richness, echoing great Speyside malts. Yet grain and maturity temper the experience, layering in a soft tannic grip, a whisper of oak spice, and just enough bitter contrast to keep things honest.

The finish is warm and persistent. Honeycomb, clove, dried fig. A dry sweetness that lingers like a memory, not sticky, not cloying, but vivid and complete.

Conclusion: Pleasure with Precision

The Old Confectioner’s is a reminder that memory has its place in whisky, but only when it's backed by substance. This is not “sweet” as shorthand for accessible. It is sweet with structure. Nostalgic in flavour, but modern in execution.

For the drinker who remembers barley sugar and brittle toffees, there is clear pleasure here. But for the one who understands how long it takes to balance those flavours, to integrate sweetness with spice, softness with structure, there is something more. Proof of patience. Proof of craft.

In the end, The Old Confectioner’s offers not just a flavour profile, but a philosophy: that great Scotch isn’t made in the naming. It’s made in the maturation. And this one delivers both the pleasure and the proof.

6
Body
3
Sweetness
6
Finish
7
Richness