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Glenlivet 21 Year Old Whisky 70cl
AED 1,399.00 Original price was: AED 1,399.00.AED 1,199.00Current price is: AED 1,199.00.
Rich, Speyside single malt with 21 years of patience baked in, think honeyed orchard fruit, toasted oak, and a little dark chocolate on the back end. If Glenlivet 12 is your easy sipper, this is the grown-up step, made for slow, neat pours when you want your whisky to actually hold your attention.
| Size | 70cl / 700ml |
|---|
Deep, dessert-leaning Speyside flavour, without the smoke show, this 21 Year Old Glenlivet is the bottle you pour when you want the night to slow down.
Those 21 years of ageing aren’t just a flex, they’re why everything tastes more layered. The fruit feels riper, the sweetness lands like honey instead of sugar, and the oak shows up as toast and spice, not splinters. It’s a single malt Scotch that rewards a quiet pour and a little patience.
- Nose: Honey, baked apple, vanilla, and polished oak, like walking past a bakery with a fruit tart in the window.
- Taste: Ripe pear and toffee up front, then warming baking spice and a darker, cocoa-like richness as it opens up.
- Finish: Long and gently drying, with lingering oak spice and sweet malt that hangs around for the next sip.
How to drink it: Neat first, always. Then add a few drops of water to pull out more fruit and chocolate, or pour it over one big cube if you’re stretching the moment.
This is Speyside Scotch, meaning it leans into fruit, honey, and elegant oak instead of heavy peat smoke. If you’ve been living on Glenfiddich 15 or Glenlivet 12 and you’re ready for a bigger, slower, more “sit with it” kind of dram, this is a seriously satisfying next step.
It’s also a sneaky power move for gifting, not because it’s flashy, but because it’s unmistakably special the second you smell the glass. The kind of whisky that makes people pause mid-sentence.
Fun Fact: The Glenlivet was one of the first legal distilleries in Speyside, and its success was so huge that other producers tried to copy the name, so many that “The Glenlivet” had to fight to keep the “The.”