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Items 31-42 of 42
This is a richly honeyed Cardhu - thanks to a finishing in Jamaican Rum casks, a vibrant tropical sweetness awakens. The lush rum cask-rounded flavours and peppery wood-spice combine to create a vibrant taste of paradise.
Glenfiddich 31 Year Old Grand Château is an exceptional single malt Scotch whisky originating from the Speyside region of Scotland. This rare expression is aged for 31 years, with the final nine years spent finishing in Bordeaux red wine casks from France's prestigious wine region.
Distiller’s Art is a single-cask range of bottlings released by Hunter Laing. Hunter Laing was founded in Glasgow, similar to the Douglas Laing story and became their own entity in 2013. They are behind other great bottlings such as Old Malt Cask and Old & Rare. They also are the owners of the new Islay distillery, Ardnahoe.
Glenfiddich 1973 Rare Collection Scotch is a premium single malt whisky that embodies the mastery and expertise of the Glenfiddich distillery. Aged for 30 years in American and European oak casks, this rare and highly sought-after whisky offers a smooth, rich and complex taste with a distinct character that sets it apart from other whiskies.
Tales of The Macallan Volume II celebrates the legacy of Alexander Reid, the founder of The Macallan Distillery. Reid established the distillery on Easter Elchies Estate in 1824, remaining steadfast in his belief that small stills created better whisky.
Alba refers to Quercus Alba, the type of American White Oak that are used to mature A’Bunadh Alba. Coincidently, Alba is also the Scots Gaelic name for Scotland. The English name refers to the light colour of the bark of some species. American Oak trees grow much faster than most European Oak species and can live for hundreds of years.
Founded in 1837 by farmers George and John Rate, twenty miles from the heart of Edinburgh, Glenkinchie was completely rebuild in the 1890s to become a large model distillery.
“Madly sited”, perched high between two mountain ranges on a pass once a meeting point for cattle drovers on their way to market. The name Dalwhinnie translates from Gaelic as “Plain of Meetings”. Surviving periods of closure, the distillery has produced its distinctive single malt since 1947, only being completely modernized in 1996.