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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.
'Finealta' is Gaelic for 'elegant', and this 2010 bottling from Glenmorangie certainly is! The single malt whisky matured in Oloroso sherry casks and American oak casks. Creamy and full in the mouth with fruity, wood, vanilla and sherry notes. (46%)
Highland distillery Ardmore produces a lightly peated single malt whisky. In this bottling, the peated element is enhanced because Signatory Vintage allowed the whisky to mature for 13 years in casks that previously contained peated Islay whisky. (46%)
You will often find the single malt whisky from Benrinnes distillery as a sherried bottling. Perhaps that is why this Benrinnes, aged in bourbon casks for 26 years, is extra attractive. The malt aged in two casks, which together yielded 527 bottles. 53.5%
In 1985, Highland distillery Glenury Royal closed permanently. Before and after, relatively few bottlings of their single malt whisky were released, but they almost always scored very high. This also applies to this 29-year-old Rare Malts edition. (57%)
Next to Highland distillery Glen Ord there is a malting house for regional barley. This supplies the malt from which the Glen Ord single malt whisky is distilled. In 1997, a 23-year-old bottling of that whisky appeared in the Rare Malts Selection. (59.8%)
You can find distillery bottlings of Cardhu single malt whisky in most liquor stores, but bottlings like this... This is a real collector's item: the Speysider was vatted in 1973. After 27 years of maturation, it was bottled at a cask strength of 60.2%.
Aultmore, like other Speyside distilleries, mainly supplies its malt whisky to the blending industry. Fortunately, independent bottlers always ensure that we can taste Aultmore's single malt. This bottling is 10 years old and bourbon-matured. (46%)
In general, single grain whisky only becomes interesting after several decades of maturation. So that's a good thing with this North British edition: the grain whisky matured for 32 years in a bourbon cask before being bottled by Brachadair at 43.1%.
You see them more and more, bottlings of Staiosha, the peated version of Bunnahabhain single malt whisky. That says something about its popularity. A special bottling is this 6-year-old from Brachadair: 64 bottles came from a small sherry cask at 62.1%.
And yet another special WhiskySponge bottling: it is a 34-year-old Bladnoch single malt whisky that matured in a bourbon cask from which the bottler had already extracted 50 bottles in 2023. This created more room for flavour-inducing reactions. (55.1%)
A new 100 whisky by the Dutch Zuidam distillery. A 100 Rye Whisky: 100 proof, about 100 months old, 100% rye, 100% milled by Dutch mills, 100% small pot still distillation, 100% aged in new American oak and... well, too many 100% to mention! A 100% whisky
In the single malt core series from Glenallachie, which previously produced almost exclusively for blended whisky, this 18-year-old has matured in sherry casks and finished in virgin oak. A very drinkable standard bottling at 46%.
Subtly balanced and with a complex palette of flavours and aromas, that is how this Longrow, the Campbeltonian peated single malt, is characterized. It was bottled in 2019 for the Belgian market after 17 years of maturation in a sherry cask. (49.7%)
The Springbank Distillery still produces whisky from barley to bottling, which is why the single malt whisky is appreciated by many. In 2016, Springbank released this 21-year-old, very high-scoring, sherried single-cask bottling. It is bottled at 47.5%.
To celebrate its 35th anniversary, the Italian quality bottler Samaroli released this almost 30-year-old, sherry-matured Banff single malt whisky in 2003. Banff whisky is already a collector's item, but this Samaroli edition is extra special! (45% ABV)
To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Springbank Society, a celebratory bottling was released for members in 2014. It is a 14-year-old single malt whisky made from local barley and matured in a sherry cask. The members were very enthusiastic! (57.8%)
Under the brand The Hearach, the young, artisanal The Isle of Harris Distillery on the Scottish island of the same name distils single malt whisky. The whisky aged in various bourbon and sherry casks. (46%)
If you like strong whisky, then this Gouden Carolus single malt, with its 67.5%, is for you! The bottle is a single cask bottling by the Belgian De Molenberg distillery for the 2020 Ghent whisky festival. It was matured in a beer and then a bourbon cask.
By putting HP in brackets on the label after 'Orkney 18', bottler Signatory Vintage gives a clear hint from which distillery this single malt whisky comes. The whisky from the Orkneys matured for 18 years in a 1st-fill Oloroso sherry cask. (55.8%)
Glenmorangie is one of the pioneers of whisky finishing. This bottle is an excellent example of this: we estimate that it was bottled sometime in the 1990s, as the label also indicates. The single malt whisky is finished in sherry casks. (43%)
The Ross & Squibb Distillery in Indiana, which is little known outside America, has more than 175 years of experience in distilling bourbon and rye whiskey. That is certainly reflected in this Rossville Union Master Crafted straight rye whisky. (47%)
This Remus Repeal Reserve is a blend of five straight bourbon whiskeys from 8 to 14 years old. The share of rye in the mashbill of this bourbons ranges from 21% to 36%. The Ross & Squibb Distillery in Lawrenceburg, Indiana released here a top bourbon. 50%
The Ross & Squibb Distillery in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, produces rye whisky in addition to bourbon. This Rossville Union is an excellent example of that. Traditionally produced, it aged for 7 years in charred American oak casks, and bottled at 58.5%.
With the George Remus Straight Bourbon Whiskey, the Ross & Squibb Distillery in Indiana goes back to the years of Prohibition in the US when whisky was distilled illegally. This bourbon has a sweet-but-distinctive rye flavour. (47% - 94 proof)
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