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Aroma

Cocoa (Dark)

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Scotch Whisky Aroma Kit

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Bottles with Cocoa (Dark)
Redbreast Lustau Edition
Irish Whiskey

Redbreast Lustau Edition

Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard)

The Lustau Edition is Redbreast's most layered expression — a whiskey that seems to change shape in the glass. That final year in Lustau's first-fill Oloroso butts doesn't overpower the pot still character; it adds a last chapter to an already complex story.

$8092 (46% ABV) proof
Aberlour A’Bunadh
Scotch Whisky

Aberlour A’Bunadh

Pernod Ricard (Chivas Brothers)

A’Bunadh is Aberlour’s love letter to the sherry butts of Jerez.

~$100~120 (varies by batch; cask strength, typically 59–61% ABV) proof
Glendalough Double Barrel
Irish Whiskey

Glendalough Double Barrel

Glendalough Distillery (Mark Anthony Brands)

The double barrel treatment here is a study in how fire shapes wood, and wood shapes whiskey. The first-fill bourbon barrels — charred by fire before they ever held spirit — give the Glendalough its vanilla and caramel backbone. The Oloroso sherry casks — toasted to a different specification — add dried fruit and chocolate complexity.

$3084 (42% ABV) proof
Auchentoshan Three Wood
Scotch Whisky

Auchentoshan Three Wood

Beam Suntory

Auchentoshan Three Wood is structural engineering in liquid form. The blueprint is deceptively simple — triple distillation for smoothness, then three deliberate cask chapters that each add a specific dimension. Bourbon barrels lay the vanilla-toffee foundation. Oloroso sherry casks introduce dried fruit depth and nutty complexity. Then Pedro Ximénez barrels — those treacly-sweet Spanish dessert wine casks — apply the final coat of dark fruit richness. The architecture works because each layer is legible: you can taste the bourbon sweetness, the oloroso depth, the PX finish, all integrated but distinct, like the floors of a well-designed building.

$6586 (43% ABV) proof
Benromach 10 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Benromach 10 Year Old

Gordon & MacPhail

Benromach sat silent for fifteen years. When Gordon & MacPhail brought it back to life in 1998, they didn't try to copy the old Speyside playbook. Instead, they introduced a light peat — unusual for the region — creating something that didn't exist before.

$4586 (43% ABV) proof
GlenDronach 15 Year Old Revival
Scotch Whisky

GlenDronach 15 Year Old Revival

Brown-Forman (The GlenDronach Distillery Company)

$13092 (46% ABV) proof
Jameson Black Barrel
Irish Whiskey

Jameson Black Barrel

Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard; Jameson, est. 1780)

Jameson Black Barrel is what happens when the world's most approachable Irish whiskey gets a lesson in patience. The key difference from standard Jameson is the double-charred bourbon barrels — a process where spent barrels are re-charred before the whiskey goes in, reactivating the wood's sugars and deepening the flavor extraction. It's an extra step that takes extra time, and the result is a whiskey with noticeably more weight, complexity, and character. The pot still component adds a creamy, spicy backbone that the grain whiskey alone couldn't provide, and the char gives everything a toasty, caramelized edge. At its price point, Black Barrel may be the best value in Irish whiskey — complex enough to sip neat, versatile enough for cocktails, and proof that patience in the cooperage pays dividends in the glass.

$3080 (40% ABV) proof
Glenfarclas 12 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Glenfarclas 12 Year Old

J. & G. Grant (family-owned, 6th generation)

Glenfarclas is what happens when a family says “no” to trends. While other Speyside distilleries have chased younger consumers with NAS releases and cask finishes, the Grants have stayed stubbornly committed to sherry cask maturation and generous age statements. The 12 Year Old is the gateway — unapologetically sherried, rich, and full-bodied at a price that makes the big-name competitors look overpriced. The fact that they’ve resisted every takeover offer for 160 years tells you everything about their priorities.

$4586 (43% ABV) proof