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Specially for sale at airports, this Dark Storm is from the Talisker distillery on the Scottish island of Skye. A standard bottling in a liter bottle. For a long time Talisker was the only distillery on the island, recently there is a second one. Hence.
With the Port Ruighe bottlings, Talisker releases a single malt whisky matured on Ruby port casks. This probably young dram is sweet and uncomplicated, with clear port influences, peat and salty notes in the background. A pleasantly drinkable dram.
Smoke and the sea, those are the first words that come to mind with this Talisker Storm single malt whisky. In addition to yellow and red fruit, salty notes, seaweed, bacon, smoked fish play a key role. That produces an interesting dram!
Speyside distillery Tamdhu makes its single malt whisky to mature almost exclusively in sherry casks. This also applies to his 12-year-old standard bottling. For those who love sherried whisky: this is a pleasantly drinkable, nicely balanced dram.
Speyside distillery Tamdhu, specialized in sherryed single malt whisky, releases a whisky with a modern profile. It matured in sherry casks for 15 years. In addition to the abundant sherry influences, this also results in an oily mouthfeel.
Seven years ago, Archives bottled this single malt whisky from Speyside distillery Tamdhu in their series The Fishes of Samoa. Most of the distillery's single malts are matured in sherry casks, but this bottling aged for 10 years in a bourbon cask. 57.8%
Douglas Laing has several series in its Old Particular bottlings. The Midnight Series is one of them. This 15-year-old, sherry-matured Tamdhu single malt whisky is from this series. Experience notes of chocolate, cherries, fruitcake and cinnamon. (54.6%)
An oldie, this Tamdhu single malt whisky. Not in terms of age, we don't know that, but in terms of bottling year (2005). This Tamdhu was once the cheapest entry-single malt on the market. Now no longer the cheapest, but still a good entry-level dram. 40%
The Tamnavulin Distillery is one that was built to meet the demand from whisky blenders for single malt whisky. But apart from blends, you can also taste Tamnavulin 'pure', for example with bottlings like this 14-year-old one from Cadenhead. (46%)
Little is known about the Dutch bottler Sherwoods, except that it bottles standard at cask strength. We think this is its fourth bottling. It is a 13-year-old Tamnavulin single malt whisky at 57.6%, that matured in a bourbon hogshead. Curious?
A good introduction to the single malt whisky from Speyside distillery Tamnavulin, this Double Cask edition. Certainly also considering the price. The whisky matured in bourbon casks and was finished in sherry casks. At 40% no powerhouse, but a light dram
Established in the last century as a supplier to the blended whisky industry, Speyside distillery Tamnavulin has already released quite a few single malt whisky bottlings. In early 2020, Tamnavulin released another batch in their Sherry Cask Edition. 40%
For a reasonable price, you can get a very pleasantly drinkable dram with this blended Scotch whisky. This blend by Thompson Bros, of which the youngest whisky is 6 years old, is a balanced sherried one and sometimes reminds you of old-skool blends. (46%)
You can see from the label that this is an old edition of Teacher's Highland Cream. The fact that this blended Scotch whisky comes in a litre bottle also points to that. A collector's item actually, for a super low price! (40%)
'The Highlands meet Andalucia', that's how you could describe this bottling from James Eadie. It is an 11-year-old single malt whisky from the Teaninich Distillery in the northern Highlands that is finished in classic, European oak Malaga casks. (48.3%)
Gordon & MacPhail bottled this 10-year-old Teaninich single malt whisky for the Dutch importer Van Wees in 2009. The Highland malt matured in a refill sherry cask. For its age, it is a surprisingly smooth whisky, full of sweet fruits. (58.4%)
Young and powerful, that's this Teaninich single malt whisky in two words. The House of MacDuff bottled this malt at cask strength (62.3%) after 9 years of aging. Apart from independent bottlings like this, you won't find Teaninich whisky in the store.
This Teaninich single malt whisky matured for more than 12 years, most of which in a bourbon cask, but the last year in a small cask that previously had Hungarian wine matured. Berry Bros & Rudd bottled 163 bottles of Teaninich at 55.5% from that cask.
Gordon & MacPhail bottled this Teaninich single malt whisky for the Dutch market. The Highland malt matured for 12 years in a large sherry cask and is bottled at cask strength. Notable notes include ginger and cinnamon, orange, strawberry and cocoa. 57.9%
To celebrate that Irish whiskey is on the rise again, the Teeling family is releasing a number of special single malt whiskies in the Rising Reserve series. The first in this series is a malt that first matured in bourbon and then in Carcavelos casks. 46%
The Teeling Distillery sometimes collaborates with others to release special whiskies. This happens, for example, in the Small Batch Collaboration series. In this edition Teeling collaborated with DOT Brew. The blend is finished in porter beer casks. 46%
The Small Batch Collaboration is an interesting bottling series from the Teeling Distillery in Dublin, and not just because of the price. Take this edition in that series: the Irish whiskey is finished in India Pale Ale casks from the Dot Brew brewery.
The Irish Teeling Whiskey Company is also not afraid to mature its single malt whisky in less common casks. Teeling used both red port and Carcevelos White port casks to for the maturation of this bottling. The 13-year-old whisky was bottled at 49.5%.
The young Irish Teeling Distillery likes to experiment, using whisky from other distilleries such as Cooley. This blended whisky finished in rum casks is a good example of this. Give the rum tones some time to develop in the glass.
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