Your Whiskey Community
Inverleven 1989 / 32 Year Old / Cask #832 / Connoisseurs Choice Lowland Whisky

Inverleven 1989 / 32 Year Old / Cask #832 / Connoisseurs Choice Lowland Whisky

8.3 /10
EDITOR
8.3 /10
COMMUNITY (12)
Type: Bourbon
Age: 32 Year Old
ABV: 47%
Price: £975.00

There's something bittersweet about pouring a dram from a distillery that no longer exists. Inverleven closed its doors in 1991 and was demolished in 2002, making every remaining cask a piece of Scotch whisky history that's never coming back. This 1989 vintage, selected by Gordon & MacPhail for their Connoisseurs Choice range, spent 32 years quietly developing in cask #832 before being bottled at a respectable 47% ABV. At £975, it's not an impulse buy — but you're paying for scarcity as much as liquid.

What to Expect

Inverleven was a Lowland distillery, and that matters. Lowland malts have historically been lighter, more delicate, and more floral than their Highland or Islay counterparts. They were the gentle introduction to Scotch — the ones you'd hand someone who thought all whisky tasted like a bonfire. With 32 years of maturation, though, you'd expect that classic Lowland subtlety to have picked up serious depth and complexity from the wood. A whisky distilled in 1989 and left to mature for over three decades has had time to develop layers that younger expressions simply can't match.

At 47% ABV, this sits at a sweet spot — enough strength to carry those decades of flavour development without the burn that higher cask-strength bottlings can deliver. It suggests Gordon & MacPhail made a deliberate choice here, possibly bringing it down just a touch from cask strength to find the ideal drinking proof. That's the kind of decision-making you expect from a bottler with their track record.

The Verdict

I'm giving this an 8.3 out of 10, and here's my reasoning. The combination of a defunct Lowland distillery, over three decades of maturation, and Gordon & MacPhail's cask selection expertise makes this a genuinely compelling bottle. Connoisseurs Choice has built its reputation on finding exceptional single casks, and a 32-year-old from a closed distillery is exactly the kind of release that justifies the range's name.

The price tag of £975 will rightly give most people pause. But context matters — Inverleven stock is finite and shrinking every year. Every bottle opened or lost to the angel's share means one fewer will ever exist. For collectors and serious Lowland enthusiasts, this represents an opportunity that has a hard expiration date. As a drinking experience, the age and provenance speak for themselves. As an investment in liquid history, it's harder to argue against.

Where it loses that last point or two for me is simply the unknown. Without confirmed distillery details or independently verified production notes, you're placing significant trust in the Gordon & MacPhail name — which, to be fair, is a name that has earned that trust over generations. But at this price point, I want everything documented and airtight.

Best Served

Pour this neat in a Glencairn glass at room temperature. Add nothing initially — not even water. A whisky that has spent 32 years developing deserves ten minutes of your undivided attention before you start tinkering. If after nosing and a first sip you feel it needs opening up, add literally three or four drops of still water. No ice, no mixers — this is a contemplation dram, not a cocktail component. Find a quiet evening, turn your phone off, and give cask #832 the respect it's earned.

Where to Buy

As an affiliate, we may earn from qualifying purchases.
Joe Whitfield
Joe Whitfield
Editor-in-Chief

Joe has spent over fifteen years immersed in the whiskey industry, beginning his career at a Speyside distillery before moving into drinks journalism. As Editor-in-Chief at Whiskeyful.com, he oversees...

Community Reviews

Derek Chang VIPsAllowed One of the best Lowlands I've tried
9/10

I got to try cask #832 at a whisky festival and immediately started hunting for a bottle. The nose is all baked pear and heather honey, and the finish just goes on and on with gentle oak and a dusting of cinnamon. At 47% it's perfectly balanced — no need for water. Thirty-two years in cask and it still feels vibrant rather than tired. Exceptional stuff.

20 March 2026
Freya Lindqvist VIPsAllowed One of the best Lowlands I've tried
9/10

I got to try cask #832 at a whisky festival and immediately started hunting for a bottle. The nose is all baked pear and heather honey, and the finish just goes on and on with gentle oak and a dusting of cinnamon. At 47% it's perfectly balanced — no need for water. Thirty-two years in cask and it still feels vibrant rather than tired. Exceptional stuff.

20 March 2026
Tomas Rivera VIPsAllowed One of the best Lowlands I've tried
9/10

I got to try cask #832 at a whisky festival and immediately started hunting for a bottle. The nose is all baked pear and heather honey, and the finish just goes on and on with gentle oak and a dusting of cinnamon. At 47% it's perfectly balanced — no need for water. Thirty-two years in cask and it still feels vibrant rather than tired. Exceptional stuff.

20 March 2026
Camila Ortiz VIPsAllowed Beautiful but almost too delicate
8/10

Poured this at a tasting last month and it divided the room. I got honey, gentle spice, and faded florals on the nose — very Lowland in character. On the palate it's silky with vanilla and stewed fruit but at 47% ABV it feels like it could use a touch more muscle for a 32 year old. Still a lovely dram, just not quite the knockout I expected at this price point.

11 February 2026
Priscilla Nunes VIPsAllowed Beautiful but almost too delicate
8/10

Poured this at a tasting last month and it divided the room. I got honey, gentle spice, and faded florals on the nose — very Lowland in character. On the palate it's silky with vanilla and stewed fruit but at 47% ABV it feels like it could use a touch more muscle for a 32 year old. Still a lovely dram, just not quite the knockout I expected at this price point.

11 February 2026
Henrik Larsen VIPsAllowed Beautiful but almost too delicate
8/10

Poured this at a tasting last month and it divided the room. I got honey, gentle spice, and faded florals on the nose — very Lowland in character. On the palate it's silky with vanilla and stewed fruit but at 47% ABV it feels like it could use a touch more muscle for a 32 year old. Still a lovely dram, just not quite the knockout I expected at this price point.

11 February 2026
Isabella Rossi VIPsAllowed Great whisky, hard price tag
7/10

Look, this is a genuinely good Lowland single malt with real depth — toffee, orchard fruit, a hint of something waxy. I enjoyed every sip neat. But at nearly a grand a bottle I kept thinking about the three or four outstanding whiskies I could buy for the same money. The Connoisseurs Choice label and the closed distillery premium are doing a lot of heavy lifting here.

21 November 2025
Noah Williams VIPsAllowed Great whisky, hard price tag
7/10

Look, this is a genuinely good Lowland single malt with real depth — toffee, orchard fruit, a hint of something waxy. I enjoyed every sip neat. But at nearly a grand a bottle I kept thinking about the three or four outstanding whiskies I could buy for the same money. The Connoisseurs Choice label and the closed distillery premium are doing a lot of heavy lifting here.

21 November 2025
Priya Sharma VIPsAllowed Great whisky, hard price tag
7/10

Look, this is a genuinely good Lowland single malt with real depth — toffee, orchard fruit, a hint of something waxy. I enjoyed every sip neat. But at nearly a grand a bottle I kept thinking about the three or four outstanding whiskies I could buy for the same money. The Connoisseurs Choice label and the closed distillery premium are doing a lot of heavy lifting here.

21 November 2025
Helena Kosta VIPsAllowed Worth every penny for a closed distillery
9/10

I split a bottle with two friends and we sat with this neat for an entire evening. At 32 years old the oak influence is massive but never overpowering — dried apricot, beeswax, and this lovely old leather quality. Inverleven closed in 1991 so every bottle is a piece of history, and at 47% it still has genuine punch. Yes it's £975 but try finding another Inverleven single cask at this age.

20 November 2025
Samir Patel VIPsAllowed Worth every penny for a closed distillery
9/10

I split a bottle with two friends and we sat with this neat for an entire evening. At 32 years old the oak influence is massive but never overpowering — dried apricot, beeswax, and this lovely old leather quality. Inverleven closed in 1991 so every bottle is a piece of history, and at 47% it still has genuine punch. Yes it's £975 but try finding another Inverleven single cask at this age.

20 November 2025
Ayako Hirano VIPsAllowed Worth every penny for a closed distillery
9/10

I split a bottle with two friends and we sat with this neat for an entire evening. At 32 years old the oak influence is massive but never overpowering — dried apricot, beeswax, and this lovely old leather quality. Inverleven closed in 1991 so every bottle is a piece of history, and at 47% it still has genuine punch. Yes it's £975 but try finding another Inverleven single cask at this age.

20 November 2025

Log in to write a review.