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Single malt whisky is a mixture of malt whisky from casks of the same distillery. Malt whisky is made from barley malt and distilled in pot stills, and has matured for at least 3 years in oak barrels. This whisky usually has a for the distillery characteristic flavor. Is considered the classic whisky.
Some call this a 'summer whisky' or aperitif because of its light, fruity and uncomplicated character. This 12-year-old single malt whisky from Highland distillery Fettercairn matured in bourbon barrels and is bottled at 40%.
The two-century-old Fettercairn distillery in the East Highlands is not well-known. Yet their stills sometimes produce surprisingly good bottlings. This is an Archives bottling from 2022. The single malt whisky aged in a bourbon cask for 13 years. (56.3%)
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)
This is one of the first whisky bottlings from the Belgian Grain Distillery Filliers, which has been active in the distillate business for two centuries. The single malt whisky matured for 4 years in bourbon casks before being bottled in 2023 at 43% ABV.
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%.
This 15-year-old single malt from the Belgian Filliers is certainly a whisky with a distinctive character; the distillery profile is clearly recognisable. The influence of the first-fill sherry casks in which the whisky matured is also unmistakable. (43%)
Distillery Filliers sought out high-quality European oak sherry casks and found, among other things, the PX casks in which this single malt whisky matured. This resulted in a sweet sherry bomb with notes of red and dried fruit and raisins. (58.5% ABV)
For those who want to try a smoky Islay single malt whisky at cask strength, this Finlaggan is, the price considered, a good entry-level model. Any smoky Islay whiskey can be found behind the Finlaggan label. We don't know which one is in this bottling.
For those who want to try a smoky Islay single malt whisky at a favorable price, this Finlaggan is a good entry. Behind the Finlaggan label could be any smoky Islay whisky. It is not known from which distillery this bottling comes from. (40%)
Does it matter which Islay distillery this bottling is from? For those who love smoky, sherryed whisky, this Finlaggan is an affordable option: not complex, balanced and pleasant to drink, with the peated and maritime notes of an Islay whisky.
Not very well known, the Speyside distillery Glen Elgin, but with this 12-year-old standard bottling they present a nice and affordable 'entry-level' single malt. Not too heavy, not too complex, and therefore very pleasant to drink. At 43%.
The single malt whisky from Speyside distillery Glen Elgin is almost exclusively available as an independent bottling, and here's another one! From James Eadie this time. The 12 years of cask maturation includes a 21-month finish in a Malaga cask. (52.7%)
A true Speyside malt, this 12-year-old Glen Elgin bottled by casQueteers, with lots of fruity notes: apple, grapes, peach, lemon, banana, and more. In addition, notes such as cinnamon, sawdust, pencil and malt. The single malt whisky is bottled at 57.7%.
The Glen Elgin Distillery does not really come to the fore with its single malt whisky, the vast majority of which is intended for blended whisky. You can discover what Glen Elgin malt tastes like with this 12-year-old, bourbon-aged Cree bottling. 52.2%
A nice, robust standard whisky from this Highland distillery. Matured in bourbon and sherry casks and bottled at 48%. And that at a very acceptable price. That you pronounce Glen Garioch as Glen Geeree does not matter then.
A real old-school sherried whisky, this at cask strength bottled Glen Garioch. Striking is the 'grown-up' balance between the influence of the sherry casks on which this malt matured and the spirit. This makes the whisky taste older than 15 years.
Founded in 1797, the Glen Garioch distillery is one of the oldest in Scotland. In addition to own bottlings, there are also third-party editions of this Highland single malt whisky. Like this one that matured in a bourbon cask for almost 11 years. (58.1%)
The Small Batch series from Signatory Vintage is very suitable for exploring the world of Scotch whisky, also due to its favourable price. A good example is this Glen Garioch single malt whisky that matured for 12 years in first-fill bourbon casks. 48.2%
A pleasant and fairly complex standard bottling, this Founder’s Reserve from Glen Garioch. This malt combines the tones and tastes of the spirit and the bourbon and sherry casks on which it matured in a surprising way. At 48%.
You can't go wrong with a Glen Grant single malt whisky, but with this bottle you really get something exceptional! The spirit for this 21-year-old Speysider was vatted in a bourbon cask almost 75 years ago. It came out of that cask in 1984. (45%)
In 1973, the spirit for this Glen Grant single malt went into the (sherry) cask, where it matured for 36 years, before being bottled in 2010 by The Whisky Agency at a relatively high cask strength (53.6%). Keywords: intense, complex, perfect, balanced.
The distinctive, slender shape of the stills at Glen Grant Distillery are said to produce the light, fresh profile of one of the world's best-selling single malt whiskies. A special Glen Grant bottling is this 26 to 27 year old one from BB&R. (49,1%)
This is another solid bottling from the Japanese bottler Acorn. Behind the classic label lies a 24-year-old Glen Grant single malt whisky, released in the Friends of Oak series. The whisky matured in a bourbon cask, from which 141 bottles came at 55.6%.
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