The non-controversial Scottish single malt whisky poll

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Splitters!

Poll Results

OptionVotes
Laphroaig 12
Macallan 4
Glenlivet 3
Talisker3
Glenmorangie 3
Highland Park 2
Aberlour 2
Bruichladdich 1
Old Pulteney 1
Oban 1
Balvenie 1
Glengoyne 1
Glenfiddich 1
Ardbeg 1
Lagavulin 1
Clynelish 1
Arran 0
Tullibardine 0
Tormore 0
Inchmurrin 0
Tomatin 0
Deanston 0
Tomintoul 0
Ardmore 0
Auchroisk 0
Old Fettercairn 0
Glenrothes 0
Bushmills 0
Glen Deveron 0
Glen Keith 0
Dufftown 0
Glen Spey 0
Springbank 0
Isle of Jura 0
Balblair 0
Glen Scotia 0
Benrinnes 0
Bowmore 0
Teaninch 0
Tamnavulin 0
Strathmill 0
Glen Garioch 0
Craigellachie 0
Speyburn 0
Miltonduff 0
Caol Ila 0
Inchgower 0
Glen Moray 0
Edradour 0
Glenfarclas 0
Glenturret 0
Knockando 0
Longmorn 0
Scapa 0
Strathisla 0
Benriach 0
Cragganmore 0
Blair Athol 0
Dailuaine 0
Dalmore 0
Glendronach 0
Mortlach 0
Royal Lochnagar 0
Aberfeldy 0
Ben Nevis 0
Benromach 0
Dalwhinnie 0
Glendullan 0
Speyside 0
Tamdhu 0
Tobermory 0
Bladnoch 0
Bunnahabhain 0
Glenallachie 0
Glenkinchie 0
Glenlossie 0
Mannochmore 0
Glen Grant 0
Glen Elgin 0
Glen Ord 0
Linkwood 0
Royal Brackla 0
An Cnoc 0
Auchentoshan 0
Aultmore 0
Cardhu 0
Balmenach 0


ledge, Thursday, 1 November 2007 16:52 (seventeen years ago)

The following guide may be helpful:

Cluster A ( Full-Bodied, Medium-Sweet, Pronounced Sherry with Fruity, Spicy, Malty Notes and Nutty, Smoky Hints): Balmenach, Dailuaine, Dalmore, Glendronach, Macallan, Mortlach, Royal Lochnagar;

Cluster B ( Medium-Bodied, Medium-Sweet, with Nutty, Malty, Floral, Honey and Fruity Notes): Aberfeldy, Aberlour, Ben Nevis, Benrinnes, Benromach, Blair Athol, Cragganmore, Edradour, Glenfarclas, Glenturret, Knockando, Longmorn, Scapa, Strathisla;

Cluster C (Medium-Bodied, Medium-Sweet, with Fruity, Floral, Honey, Malty Notes and Spicy Hints ): Balvenie, Benriach, Dalwhinnie, Glendullan, Glen Elgin, Glenlivet, Glen Ord, Linkwood, Royal Brackla;

Cluster D (Light, Medium-Sweet, Low or No Peat, with Fruity, Floral, Malty Notes and Nutty Hints ): An Cnoc, Auchentoshan, Aultmore, Cardhu, Glengoyne, Glen Grant, Mannochmore, Speyside, Tamdhu, Tobermory;

Cluster E (Light, Medium-Sweet, Low Peat, with Floral, Malty Notes and Fruity, Spicy, Honey Hints ): Bladnoch, Bunnahabhain, Glenallachie, Glenkinchie, Glenlossie, Glen Moray, Inchgower, Inchmurrin, Tomintoul;

Cluster F (Medium-Bodied, Medium-Sweet, Low Peat, Malty Notes and Sherry, Honey, Spicy Hints ): Ardmore, Auchroisk, Bushmills, Deanston, Glen Deveron, Glen Keith, Glenrothes, Old Fettercairn, Tomatin, Tormore, Tullibardine;

Cluster G (Medium-Bodied, Sweet, Low Peat and Floral Notes ): Arran, Dufftown, Glenfiddich, Glen Spey, Miltonduff, Speyburn;

Cluster H (Medium-Bodied, Medium-Sweet, with Smoky, Fruity, Spicy Notes and Floral, Nutty Hints ): Balblair, Craigellachie, Glen Garioch, Glenmorangie, Oban, Old Pulteney, Strathmill, Tamnavulin, Teaninch;

Cluster I (Medium-Light, Dry, with Smoky, Spicy, Honey Notes and Nutty, Floral Hints): Bowmore, Bruichladdich, Glen Scotia, Highland Park, Isle of Jura, Springbank;

Cluster J (Full-Bodied, Dry, Pungent, Peaty and Medicinal, with Spicy, Feinty Notes): Ardbeg, Caol Ila, Clynelish, Lagavulin, Laphroaig, Talisker.

(Whisky Classified: Choosing Single Malts by Flavour, David Wishart, Pavilion Books, London 2002.)

ledge, Thursday, 1 November 2007 16:53 (seventeen years ago)

Balvenie, because I am gurl.

Madchen, Thursday, 1 November 2007 16:54 (seventeen years ago)

Wait, you have Aberlour, Balvenie, Glen Grant etc. *and* Speyside?

Lemons
Limes
Oranges
Citrus fruits

Madchen, Thursday, 1 November 2007 16:57 (seventeen years ago)

You don't know how disappointed I am, Ledge.

Madchen, Thursday, 1 November 2007 16:57 (seventeen years ago)

"non controversial" was asking for trouble obv. I didn't do the classificationising, blame these guys.

ledge, Thursday, 1 November 2007 16:59 (seventeen years ago)

Laphroaig - cask strength!

Ned Trifle II, Thursday, 1 November 2007 17:01 (seventeen years ago)

That's a lot o' whisky

Tom D., Thursday, 1 November 2007 17:02 (seventeen years ago)

I can hear my dad reading down this list going, "Got it. Got it. Had it, not bad. Got it. Meh. Got it. Got it..."

He's awesome.

Kerm, Thursday, 1 November 2007 17:26 (seventeen years ago)

Is he still standing tho?

Tom D., Thursday, 1 November 2007 17:26 (seventeen years ago)

no I think Clegg's got it wrapped up

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 1 November 2007 17:28 (seventeen years ago)

He's got gallons of booze at home, but most of it will still be there in a year. He knows how to have a good time, and I've never seen him beyond thoroughly buzzed.

Kerm, Thursday, 1 November 2007 17:38 (seventeen years ago)

Aberlour because I don't like to drink fishy dirt.

libcrypt, Thursday, 1 November 2007 17:43 (seventeen years ago)

Talisker, Laphroaig: Good for cleaning up kitchen spills. Not much else.

libcrypt, Thursday, 1 November 2007 17:43 (seventeen years ago)

Once I started drinking Laphroaig I really couldn't drink any other. Everything else was just too...er...sweet I think. Alright in ginger ale or wine but I like mine neat (unless it is cask strength then it really does need some water) and peaty.

Ned Trifle II, Thursday, 1 November 2007 18:46 (seventeen years ago)

Laphroaig is great. It's like drinking a campfire.

Matt D, Thursday, 1 November 2007 19:12 (seventeen years ago)

I occasionally like the smoky Lagavulin, but otherwise Oban.

Why is Bushmills on here? it's Irish

Bill Magill, Thursday, 1 November 2007 19:22 (seventeen years ago)

I take it back, it's not in the poll, but in the descriptions.

Bill Magill, Thursday, 1 November 2007 19:23 (seventeen years ago)

Laphroaig for me please.

Jaq, Thursday, 1 November 2007 19:30 (seventeen years ago)

Impossible to pick favorites, but I voted Clynelish -- I love those feinty notes!

eater, Thursday, 1 November 2007 20:08 (seventeen years ago)

Bushmills is one of the few I've tried! haha. I want all these scotches.

Abbott, Friday, 2 November 2007 00:43 (seventeen years ago)

Talisker is one of the few things I will actually buy that isn't rail in a bar. I love it v v much.

John Justen, Friday, 2 November 2007 00:48 (seventeen years ago)

I'm pretty ignorant of all this whiskies, but I've had and loved Lagavulin. It's not available in MS or TN, and I balk at the $70 price tag when I see it in Arkansas.

Rock Hardy, Friday, 2 November 2007 00:55 (seventeen years ago)

I have only had Laphroaig once, and I am almost afraid to have it again, lest it not live up to its phenomenally great first impression.

Casuistry, Friday, 2 November 2007 02:07 (seventeen years ago)

It remains awesomely consistent, Chris :)

Morley Timmons, Friday, 2 November 2007 02:45 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

ILX System, Saturday, 3 November 2007 00:01 (seventeen years ago)

It's all about the Laphroaig.

Joe, Saturday, 3 November 2007 02:48 (seventeen years ago)

Laphroaig is great. It's like drinking a campfire.
^^ this

stet, Saturday, 3 November 2007 03:03 (seventeen years ago)

There was that time I was drinking London Pride (bitter) and following every drink with a sip of Laphroaig, and I swear the effect was to make the Laphroaig much sweeter and nuttier. I still have yet to set aside the time to scrutinise this phenomenon more rigorously.

ledge, Saturday, 3 November 2007 15:58 (seventeen years ago)

I like talisker

RJG, Saturday, 3 November 2007 16:02 (seventeen years ago)

laphroaig, but i can feel the ghosts of my family (speysiders) coming to drop ice cubes down my back.

grimly fiendish, Saturday, 3 November 2007 19:57 (seventeen years ago)

(by which i mean: they were speysiders who worked in the distilleries [1] not just that they'd have voted for glenlivet etc on this poll.)

[1] and were largely alcoholics.

grimly fiendish, Saturday, 3 November 2007 19:58 (seventeen years ago)

In enjoyed a good few nips of Isle of Jura the other week but I can't see past Laphroaig, which looks like being a runaway winner.

onimo, Saturday, 3 November 2007 20:22 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

ILX System, Sunday, 4 November 2007 00:01 (seventeen years ago)

yay 4 tha peat

ledge, Sunday, 4 November 2007 00:56 (seventeen years ago)

predictable, really.

grimly fiendish, Sunday, 4 November 2007 10:57 (seventeen years ago)

Predictable but correct. I am pouring out one now in celebration.

Ned Trifle II, Sunday, 4 November 2007 17:58 (seventeen years ago)

curses, I missed this. Lagavulin all the way (not that i don't fucking love laphroaig)

Matt, Sunday, 4 November 2007 20:49 (seventeen years ago)

Matt D, if you are reading this, save some Laphroaig for the next time I am in town so I can see what the big deal is.

Will M., Tuesday, 6 November 2007 15:33 (seventeen years ago)

urgh, Laphroaig is so damn peaty

mh, Tuesday, 6 November 2007 16:21 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

i was robbed!!!

The Macallan 18 Year, Monday, 31 December 2007 17:46 (seventeen years ago)

for real. Any cabinet that'd favor Laphroig over Macallan isn't worth opening.

J0hn D., Monday, 31 December 2007 18:55 (seventeen years ago)

I wonder who else voted for Aberlour.

libcrypt, Monday, 31 December 2007 22:10 (seventeen years ago)

(Caol Ila)

blunt, Tuesday, 1 January 2008 08:13 (seventeen years ago)

I would like to try St. George
http://www.stgeorgespirits.com/

milo z, Tuesday, 1 January 2008 08:20 (seventeen years ago)

three months pass...

what happened to the results?!

baaderonixx, Tuesday, 15 April 2008 15:08 (seventeen years ago)

three months pass...

Laphroaig quarter cask is blowing my mind and is going to get me through submitting my dissertation.

ljubljana, Wednesday, 13 August 2008 20:41 (sixteen years ago)

thank you duty free for the relatively cheap bottle of Talisker

HI DERE, Wednesday, 13 August 2008 20:43 (sixteen years ago)

I can't remember why this poll was controversial. But I just had some Cragganmore, which was pleasingly nutty and sweet, as the tasting notes suggest. And threw into even sharper relief the Laphroaig that followed.

ledge, Wednesday, 13 August 2008 22:17 (sixteen years ago)

When I want something a bit cheaper i'm down with the Aberlour 10(i think?) year.

wilter, Wednesday, 13 August 2008 22:19 (sixteen years ago)

highland park has been pretty great in small samples, right balance of big flavors and being actually pleasant to drink

call all destroyer, Tuesday, 11 November 2014 01:01 (ten years ago)

yh i undersold highland park upthread, it rly was hi quality

imago, Tuesday, 11 November 2014 01:28 (ten years ago)

laphroaig is, i discovered by drinking both from a tumbler in each hand, a smoother ride than talisker - the latter really is peat in excelsis

imago, Tuesday, 11 November 2014 01:29 (ten years ago)

talisker is less heavily peated than laphroaig although its bottled at higher abv which makes it harsher in some respects

http://whiskyforeveryone.blogspot.co.uk/2008/04/explain-about-peat.html

has anyone had talisker storm? considering buying some while i can get it cheap

disconnected externalized and unrecognizable signifying structure (nakhchivan), Friday, 14 November 2014 19:17 (ten years ago)

highland park is awesome

jenny holzer, ilxor (mh), Friday, 14 November 2014 20:25 (ten years ago)

hmm I might have some whisky now

legit new threat wrt to a norman invasion (seandalai), Friday, 14 November 2014 23:09 (ten years ago)

drinking a Balvenie

legit new threat wrt to a norman invasion (seandalai), Saturday, 15 November 2014 00:45 (ten years ago)

so talisker storm is fairly similar to the 10 yr old

the spiel says it is sweeter and slightly more intense which is probably correct

theres some degree of suspicion about no age statement scotches, the trend probably reflecting increase in demand and the need to sell off younger whiskies, although blends of different ages are normal in cognac

disconnected externalized and unrecognizable signifying structure (nakhchivan), Sunday, 16 November 2014 17:45 (ten years ago)

so the storm us no age stmt and looks like even on sale it would be about $10 more than the ten year? that would be a tough sell for me.

call all destroyer, Sunday, 16 November 2014 19:39 (ten years ago)

yeah its not worth that at all, although i paid....$37 a bottle...so for that its fine

good article here about the 10 yr

http://thekrav.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/taliskravaganza-day-1-talisker-10-year.html

disconnected externalized and unrecognizable signifying structure (nakhchivan), Sunday, 16 November 2014 21:37 (ten years ago)

three months pass...

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/like/271771254022

poc het ino (nakhchivan), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 22:35 (ten years ago)

one month passes...

the other week i had some of that yamizaki 12 that you will have raved about and whilst i thought it was rather good it's not remotely worth the money, not that much whisky is (although falling scotch exports and lowered excise should help)

talisker seem to have a new entrylev no age statement whisky, fittingly most of these involve seem to involve scraping barrels to impart oak phenols more quickly

Albanic Kanun Autark (nakhchivan), Saturday, 4 April 2015 23:26 (ten years ago)

this was a reply to deems in the other thread that for some reason i posted here, hopefully the irish is able to follow anyway

Albanic Kanun Autark (nakhchivan), Saturday, 4 April 2015 23:27 (ten years ago)

If whiskey (of any sort) is a solvent to extract hardwood phenols, why haven't any enterprising producers used sawdust and milling waste for faster aging. Granted, it sounds cheap, but surely we can do better in the 21st century. We have the technology.

Oreskes Klein Watts (Sanpaku), Sunday, 5 April 2015 02:30 (ten years ago)

two months pass...

ardmore legacy is a worthy entrant in the scraping-the-barrel no-age statement peated scotch category, better than laphroaig select and well worth £16 and maybe a bit more than that

The Fields of Karlhenry (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 10 June 2015 00:02 (ten years ago)

if I misremember the yamizaki I dont regret it a bit, some of my fondest memories were fixed in post

Killarney Hilton (darraghmac), Wednesday, 10 June 2015 00:05 (ten years ago)

xp to sanpaku that presumably already happens in whisky since it happens in wine
http://winefolly.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/oak-chips-in-wine-stephen_bolen.jpg
difficult to imagine at least some whisky isnt adulterated
http://www.nytimes.com/1998/06/04/world/bordeaux-winemaker-is-charged-with-fraud-over-contents-of-its-products.html

The Fields of Karlhenry (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 10 June 2015 00:11 (ten years ago)

two months pass...

Old Pulteney is a toothsome delight!

Yul Brynner playing table tennis with a deviled kidney (imago), Friday, 28 August 2015 21:44 (nine years ago)

Suntory Yamazaki 12-year is my preferred single-malt, plus it's cheaper than most actual Scotches.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 28 August 2015 22:00 (nine years ago)

otm you will have noted my telling for it itt and others

deejerk reactions (darraghmac), Friday, 28 August 2015 22:12 (nine years ago)

Old Pulteney is a toothsome delight!

― Yul Brynner playing table tennis with a deviled kidney (imago), Friday, August 28, 2015 9:44 PM (3 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

ah but then you crack out the Lagavulin afterwards and it's dismissed into memory as the pleasant distraction it always was

Yul Brynner playing table tennis with a deviled kidney (imago), Monday, 31 August 2015 21:57 (nine years ago)

better than that, really, but not Lagavulin

Yul Brynner playing table tennis with a deviled kidney (imago), Monday, 31 August 2015 21:58 (nine years ago)

four months pass...

Would like to rep for 18 yr glendronach

The difficult earlier reichs (darraghmac), Thursday, 7 January 2016 01:15 (nine years ago)

Would like a chance to.

ledge, Thursday, 7 January 2016 12:51 (nine years ago)

It's a rich comforter, for sure

I was gifted a bottle 2 years ago and it lasted me well

sounding like a silly Iain Banks on a track (imago), Thursday, 7 January 2016 13:04 (nine years ago)

Had some Ardbeg Corryvreckan over Christmas and that was quite a ride.

Matt DC, Thursday, 7 January 2016 13:20 (nine years ago)

xp hey all those best man gigs have to have some benefit, right?

The difficult earlier reichs (darraghmac), Thursday, 7 January 2016 17:41 (nine years ago)

today i bought longrow peated nas b/c when i looked up tasting notes i was told it smells like a harbourmaster's jacket. it's pretty good!

call all destroyer, Tuesday, 19 January 2016 03:22 (nine years ago)

three years pass...

Was on islay. Got a wee bottle of an oa at the ardbeg distillery.Enjoying it

Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Saturday, 5 October 2019 05:09 (five years ago)

Laphroaig is great. It's like drinking a campfire.

― Matt D, Thursday, 1 November 2007 19:12 (eleven years ago) bookmarkflaglink

spelled 'camphor' fyi

nakh otm re laphroaig, which dials peat to eleven without much care for the balance for my taste

pitting the peaty/non peaty in the one poll prob doesnt serve much purpose, of all above im gonna have glenmorangie, glenlivet on the shelf but tbrr theyre as well to be categorised as irish single pot still as they are to be included in this grouping (i mean, bushmills is up there an all)

too many cuckth thpoil the broth (darraghmac), Saturday, 5 October 2019 09:57 (five years ago)

laphroaig tastes like tcp

to regain his mental focus, he played video-game golf (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 5 October 2019 10:35 (five years ago)

yep, like a chemist's foot

too many cuckth thpoil the broth (darraghmac), Saturday, 5 October 2019 11:24 (five years ago)

I don't like the regular Laphroaig much at all, I'm not really into peaty whisky, although I don't mind Talisker, but I lucked into going to a whisky-tasting evening a few years ago (my friend had bought tickets to go with his wife, but she couldn't go for some reason) and tried a 25 year old Laphroaig and it was really nice, nowhere near as over the top as the normal one (12?). Just also ludicrously expensive, normally. But I will drink it for free quite happily.

Colonel Poo, Saturday, 5 October 2019 12:34 (five years ago)

I’m surprised Bruichladdich only got one vote.

El Tomboto, Saturday, 5 October 2019 16:57 (five years ago)

No ice. No stirrer. No glass. We're redefining how whisky can be enjoyed. Introducing The Glenlivet Capsule Collection #noglassrequired pic.twitter.com/F4MGErsfZM

— The Glenlivet (@TheGlenlivet) October 2, 2019

Number None, Saturday, 5 October 2019 18:26 (five years ago)

aye you can fuck right off with that shite

to regain his mental focus, he played video-game golf (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 5 October 2019 18:42 (five years ago)

I’m surprised Bruichladdich only got one vote.

― El Tomboto, Saturday, October 5, 2019 11:57 AM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink

he'll continue straggling behind Harris until he can make inroads with black voters

blows with the wind donors (crüt), Saturday, 5 October 2019 18:43 (five years ago)

I would've voted for Springbank.

Those scotch pods seem like a weird size.

Yerac, Saturday, 5 October 2019 18:53 (five years ago)

Why is Bushmills on here? it's Irish

― Bill Magill, Thursday, 1 November 2007 19:22 (eleven years ago) bookmarkflaglink

Bill Magill otm

Let them eat Pfifferlinge an Schneckensauce (Tom D.), Saturday, 5 October 2019 18:55 (five years ago)

no votes but. giruy

stoffle (||||||||), Saturday, 5 October 2019 19:00 (five years ago)

five years pass...

On the shelf right now: Bowmore 15, The Macallan 12, Bruichladdich Islay Barley, Highland Park 12

Tasted in the past (meaning, I drank a bottle of): Cragganmore, Aberlour, Bunnahabhain, Glenfiddich, Dalmore, Suntory Yamazaki, Lagavulin, Balvenie.

Getting a new appreciation for peaty whiskys through the Lagavulin 18 rekindled my interest for Scotch whiskies and now I have to stop myself from ordering too many so that I keep the appreciation for each... uh, expression is the term I believe. Ultimate drink for late nights at home, often alone, as the counterpart to red wine which is shared / social. I used to steal my father's bottles, then I started buying them myself for Christmas, now I'm breaking that ritual by buying whenever. Laphroaig / Talisker / Oban definitely on the wishlist when the time comes.

Naledi, Tuesday, 25 February 2025 11:45 (five months ago)

And to go with this revive, Richard Paterson from Dalmore explains it best:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVG1U-faqHY

Naledi, Tuesday, 25 February 2025 11:49 (five months ago)

ill run through the shelf later but i bought the gimmick at the obam dostillery and poured my own bottle from the cask based on a sample of what they had, and i think we picked up another decent 12 yr old from one of the names when there

ive been sampling and enjoying a fair few bottles from various new irish labels which im glad to report have been far more hit than miss

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Tuesday, 25 February 2025 11:57 (five months ago)

dalwhinnie 15 year fruity and quite sweet and high on the nose

abelour 12 single malt, very lovely rich effort

oban 11 year as above, spicier than the others

none peaty because peatiness above say a glenfiddich 12 is a gimmich

ill run through the irish bottles in a more appropriate thread sometime

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Tuesday, 25 February 2025 12:26 (five months ago)

Bruichladdich Islay Barley

is this the one in the goofy teal bottle?

I just bought a bottle of Laphroaig at Costco, but I have this $20 Trader Joe's mystery malt called 'Finlaggan' that's really good.. it's Islay, but nobody knows who distills & ages it. Some folks think it's Caol Ila or maybe a young Bowmore. Either way it's nice on a cold, wet day when you get in from a walk

Andy the Grasshopper, Tuesday, 25 February 2025 17:53 (five months ago)

I love Laphroaig but would happily agree it's not really the "correct" answer

Couldn't pick a favourite beyond that tho, not familiar enough maybe. Tamnavulin and Yamazaki 10 definitely on my "will always want" list

Zurich is Starmed (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 25 February 2025 18:06 (five months ago)

Check out some Campbeltown stuff like Glen Scotia and Springbank. Latter incorporates some nice balanced peat to the malt but it's no bomb like the Islay stuff.

Also for Speyside loveliness don't overlook GlenAllachie which was recently taken over by Billy Walker who revived Glendronach (who's juice has taken a step back since left, unfortunately)

octobeard, Tuesday, 25 February 2025 18:07 (five months ago)

I went on a tour of Highland Park (maybe my overall favorite) and I asked the tour guide 'Is that a pile of peat? or Coal.. because it looks like coal.' He looked around to make sure no one else was listening and then confirmed that it was coal from Poland

Andy the Grasshopper, Tuesday, 25 February 2025 18:14 (five months ago)

four months pass...

My father used to collect whisky bottles. Bought from his British colleagues whenever they were doing the trip. He was never a whisky drinker though. So here I am with one more bottle - an old edition of a 10Y Glenkinchie and I'm not unhappy to have a liter of the thing - on the sweet honey side but with a good profile.

Naledi, Friday, 11 July 2025 18:07 (four weeks ago)

Bruichladdich Islay Barley

is this the one in the goofy teal bottle?

― Andy the Grasshopper, mardi 25 février 2025 17:53 (four months ago) bookmarkflaglink

Yes. My concern with this whiskey is the alcohol rate (50°). I'm not used to add water.

Naledi, Friday, 11 July 2025 18:08 (four weeks ago)


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