Cart
You have no items in your shopping cart
Here you will find all of our new whiskies. New bottlings from distilleries and independent bottlers, but also special and rare bottles that we found for you. Single malt whisky, blends, bourbon and more from all over the world. Some new arrivals will be gone before you know it! Subscribe to our newsletter for information about the most interesting new whiskies and check this page regularly.
It doesn't matter that the Speyside distillery has to remain a secret: the fact that the Thompson Brothers selected this single malt whisky gives us enough confidence. An excellent daily dram, matured for 11 years in 2 refill sherry casks. (48.5%)
The Balcones Baby Blue is the first Texan whisky since the Prohibition in the 1920s. Made from roasted 'blue corn', an oily kind of corn. Balcones Distilling deliberately makes a young but complex dram with this whisky. Bottled at 46% ABV.
The young Texan distillery Balcones is always looking for whisky that stands out. It certainly succeeded with its Brimstone corn whisky. Smoked with sun-dried Texan oak, this is a combination of notes of fresh fruit and a bold smokiness. At 53%.
We didn't have many bottlings of the traditionally distilled Templeton Rye Whiskey in the shop so far. And we probably even didn't have a rye whiskey finished in stout beer casks here before. This is one of those bottlings that makes one curious! (46%)
The Laphroaig 18 Year Old replaced the 15 Year Old standard bottling in 2009. The new, 18-year-old standard single malt whisky from Laphroaig is a more powerful dram due to its longer maturation. This bottle is one of an early edition. Bottled at 48%.
This is the Ardbeg Dark Cove in celebration of Ardbeg Day 2016. The heavily peated single malt whisky matured in bourbon casks and casks that previously held heavy, dark sherry. Earthy, coffee, smoked ham, chocolate, full, with light citrus notes. (55%)
The first Dingle single malt whisky was released in 2015. Quite a few bottlings later, Dingle is now working on a Wheel of the Year series, in which this is the 4th release. The artisanal single malt whisky is finished in 1st class bourbon casks. (50.5%)
Islay distillery Laphroaig has hit the mark with its 10-year-old cask strength bottlings. The editions of this single malt whisky have consistently scored very well over the years. This bottling (2015) now has more than 88 points. Bottled at 56.3%.
Islay distillery Laphroaig has hit the mark with its 10-year-old cask strength bottlings. The editions of this single malt whisky have consistently scored very well over the years. This bottling (2012) now has more than 89 points. Bottled at 58.3%.
Islay distillery Laphroaig has hit the mark with its 10-year-old cask strength bottlings. The editions of this single malt whisky have consistently scored very well over the years. This bottling (2014) now has more than 89 points. Bottled at 58.0%.
This is an extra striking edition in the already special Boutique Barrels bottling series of the Jura distillery: while Jura's single malt whisky is unpeated as standard, the bourbon-aged whisky in this bottling is peated (for the insider: 30ppm)! (55%)
A Bowmore bottling from 2005: the 12-year-old standard single malt whisky with the classic seagull label. Interesting, especially for many fans of the peated whisky from this Islay distillery, one of the oldest distilleries in Scotland. (40%)
With a little fantasy you could call Lindores the oldest Scotch whisky brand, but it is only after centuries that single malt whisky is released again under the Lindores brand: since 2021. This Friar John Cor matured in peated rum and other casks. (60.9%)
At 18 years old, the sharp edges are gone, but this Ballechin single malt whisky still has the smokiness characteristic of this brand. This is the first batch of an 18-year-old malt in the new Cask Strength series, bourbon matured, bottled at 50.9%.
A new label design adorns this Ballechin bottling. Ballechin is the heavily peated version of Edradour's single malt whisky. This Ballechin is released in the Cask Strength Edition series. It is 13 years old and matured in bourbon and sherry casks. 54.9%
This is a bottle of batch #1 of Benromach 2013 single malt whisky in the Cask Strength series. The Speysider matured for about 10 years in sherry and bourbon casks. A full dram with characteristic notes of stewed fruit, citrus and a hint of smoke (59.7%)
Not very well known, the Dailuaine distillery, and then this nicely priced bottling is a great option to get acquainted with their single malt whisky. The whisky matured for 10 years in bourbon casks that were first scraped and then re-charred. (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?
Fettercairn works with traditional distillation equipment but uses an unorthodox technique to cool the stills, resulting in a 'lighter' spirit. The single malt whisky in this Chapter 7-bottling matured for 11 years in a bourbon cask. (51.6% cask strength)
Bottler Chapter 7 started in Switzerland but moved to Scotland to better search for exceptional whiskies. The bottler found this 10-year-old Blair Athol single malt whisky that had matured on a bourbon hogshead, for example, and bottled it at 50.5%.
In the Contrasts series, Benromach has released two bottlings of their virgin oak matured single malt whisky. This bottling matured for 10 years in kiln-dried virgin oak casks: creamy, tropical fruit, lime, apple, sweet barley, menthol, peat smoke. (46%)
In 2015, the Japanese whisky producer Nikka decided to mention the age of their bottlings no longer. This 10-year-old single malt whisky from the renowned Yoichi distillery is one of the last with the age mentioned on the label. Bottled at 45%.
This bottling from the first decade of this century is a 15-year-old single malt whisky from the renowned Japanese Yoichi distillery, matured in bourbon, sherry and virgin oak casks and bottled at 45%. An intense, well-balanced and accessible dram.
You could call the Irish The Great Northern Distillery a contract distillery. They supply various types of whisky on order (including single malt, grain, pot still). The distillery produced this single malt for The Whisky Blues. 5 years old, 58.2%.
was added to your shopping cart
Out of stock