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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.
This Aberlour single malt whisky is bottled especially for the French market. But you'll find it on our shelves now too. The 10-year-old Speysider matured in French oak and is finished in bourbon and sherry casks. Bottled for a nice price at 40%.
Auchentoshan is one of the few Scottish distilleries that uses triple distillation. This produces a light, floral-fruity whisky. As is the case with this 12-year-old standard bottling at 40%. A beautiful, ripe Lowland malt. A good entry-level whisky!
A bottling from the Irish Midleton Distillery. A 12 year old single pot still whiskey, so made from malted and unmalted barley, and triple distilled. This Redbreast matured in bourbon and sherry casks. A fine Irish whiskey for a nice price. At 40%.
For the wine connoisseurs among you: this Irish single pot still whiskey has been finished in casks where first Château Montelena Zinfandel wine matured in. Before the finishing, this triple distilled Green Spot matured in bourbon and sherry casks. (46%)
This is a standard bottling from Speyside distillery Cardhu. This single malt whisky has matured for 18 years in bourbon and sherry casks and is bottled at 40% ABV. That makes this a typical, fruity and round Speysider, a pleasantly drinkable dram.
You can consider the Arran 10 years old as a standard bottling of the Arran Distillery. Nicely drinkable, light and uncomplicated, this is a single malt whisky for everyday or for an evening with friends. A nice introduction to the brand too.
This single malt whisky is a kind of scoop. It is the 1st whisky under that name by the Belgian distillery Filliers, in a limited edition. This single malt is 10 years old and aged in classic sherry casks made of European oak. Bottled at 43%.
Clynelish 1972 Rare Malts edition, scoring a massive 92 points on average. This Clynelish is easily one of the best from an already excellent vintage: 1972. Hard to find and becoming scarcer by the day.
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.
The Woodford Reserve Distillery is at the heart of 'bourbon country' and produces its whisky according to tradition with copper pot stills. But don't expect a bourbon in this bottle: it is a Kentucky Straight Wheat Whiskey. Be surprised! 45.2%
The Wild Turkey Distilling Co. in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky releases a solid straight bourbon whiskey with this bottling at 58.4%. A bourbon full of fruit, but also with chocolate and spices such as cinnamon. Not an average bourbon in any case.
In the more than 15 years that the Port Charlotte brand now exists, it has built up a solid reputation as a peated single malt whisky. This PC8 certainly contributed to that reputation. The 8 refers to the age of this malt that aged in bourbon casks.
Okay, from which of the 50 or so Speyside distilleries does this single malt whisky come? No idea. We do know that this malt aged for no less than 28 years in a bourbon cask, which means that the ABV percentage is almost at the critical limit: 40.1%!
The Milk & Honey Distillery comes here with its first 'Classic' single malt whisky. As the Israeli distillery only started production in 2014, this is also still a young whisky. But it already has body! Matured in bourbon, finished in wine casks. 46%
This Glenrothes, like much of the whisky from this distillery, is a single malt for lovers of sherried whisky. It matured in casks on which was first laid sherry that was made according to the soleo process (with sun-dried grapes). Filled at 48.8%.
This is No. 4 in the bottling series Icons of Arran: The Golden Eagle. This bottling of the Arran Distillery came out in 2012. The 12-year-old single malt whisky matured on 14 bourbon and 7 sherry casks, which resulted in a nice mix of cask-influences.
This bottling came out in the Icons of Arran series in 2011. 6,000 bottles of Arran single malt whisky, vintage 1998, that matured in sherry casks. So, dating from the early years of Arran. A nicely balanced malt in which the sherry does not dominate. 46%
This Craigellachie single malt whisky was bottled a while ago. It is a bottling in the Flora & Fauna series with which a number of Scottish distilleries present themselves. This bottle is a good introduction to Speysider Craigellachie. 43%
With this Glenlivet we have something special in our shop. It went into the cask in 1952 and was bottled by the Swiss Lateltin after an unknown period. The bottle has a screw cap, and whatever the label says, it's a single malt whisky!
A collector's item, that's how we can call this bottling of an 8-year-old Glen Mhor single malt whisky. The label already shows that this is an old bottling: Gordon & MacPhail bottled it in 1994 when the Glen Mhor Distillery was already closed.
A true classic in the world of sherryed single malt whisky, the Aberlour A'bunadh. This is the 65th batch already. Matured in oloroso-sherry casks and at a cask strength of 59.5%, this is a nice, warm whisky for the cold winter days.
In 1608 the Irish Bushmills received its first distillery license. That year is also proudly printed at this bottling's label. Released for the Italian market, this Black Bush single malt whiskey matured in sherry casks. It is bottled at 40%.
For those who missed it in 2018, here it is again: the Ardbeg Twenty Something 1996 single malt whisky. A full, complex, 22-year-old Ardbeg, subtle by its age, with a slightly tempered smokiness. The well-known Ardbeg profile with a refined edge.
After the Monkey Shoulder blended malt whisky Smooth and Rich, William Grant & Sons now comes with the Monkey Shoulder Smokey Monkey. As the name implies, this blend of Scottish malts has smoky notes, besides notes like peach, apple, chocolate, and coffee
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