Aroma
Green (Cut Grass)
6 bottles with this note
Train this aroma
Irish Whiskey Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for green (cut grass) and related notes.

Waterford Single Farm Origin Ballymorgan 1.1
Waterford Distillery
Waterford is doing something no other Irish distillery has attempted at this scale: proving that barley grown on different soil types produces distinctly different whiskey.

Kilbeggan Single Grain Irish Whiskey
Beam Suntory
The Kilbeggan distillery nearly vanished. After closing in 1957, it sat derelict until a group of local volunteers began restoring it in 1982 — cleaning pot stills by hand, patching stone walls, preserving equipment.

Powers Three Swallow Release
Irish Distillers / Pernod Ricard (Powers, est. 1791)
Powers’ obsession is pot still whiskey — the uniquely Irish style made from a mash of both malted and unmalted barley that produces a heavier, spicier, more characterful spirit than any other whiskey tradition on earth. When Irish whiskey collapsed in the twentieth century and blends took over, Powers never abandoned the pot still. The Three Swallow release takes its name from the quality mark that Powers’ tasters once stamped on approved casks — three swallows of whiskey, three stamps of approval. The 3% sherry component adds just enough dried fruit complexity to round the edges without softening the muscular pot still character. At $35–42, this is one of the most underpriced whiskeys in the world for what it delivers.

Tullamore D.E.W. Original
William Grant & Sons (Tullamore D.E.W., est. 1829)
Tullamore D.E.W. went against the grain in the most dramatic way possible: it came back from the dead. When the old Tullamore distillery closed in 1954, the brand survived as a label without a home, its whiskey sourced from other distilleries for sixty years. Then in 2014, William Grant & Sons built a brand-new €35 million distillery in Tullamore — the first new greenfield distillery in Ireland in over a century — bringing whiskey-making back to the town whose name is literally on the bottle. The triple blend of pot still, malt, and grain — triple distilled and triple cask matured — delivers surprising complexity at a price point that makes it one of the best introductions to Irish whiskey on the market.

Writers’ Tears Copper Pot
Walsh Whiskey Distillery (Bernard & Rosemary Walsh, founders)
Writers’ Tears earns its literary name. Oscar Wilde, James Joyce, Brendan Behan — Irish writers and Irish whiskey have been inseparable for centuries, and the Walshes bottled that romance into something genuinely beautiful. The blend of single pot still and single malt creates a texture that’s both silky and spiced, with the unmalted barley adding the characteristic Irish “pot still bite” that gives it backbone. At under $40, it punches well above its price point and serves as a perfect introduction to what makes Irish whiskey different from Scotch.

Green Spot Single Pot Still
Pernod Ricard (Irish Distillers) — bonded for Mitchell & Son
Green Spot is the whiskey equivalent of a hidden gem that everyone secretly knows about. The name comes from the colored spots Mitchell & Son dabbed on barrels to indicate age — green for youngest, yellow and red for older. What makes it special is the single pot still method: both malted and unmalted barley distilled together in copper pot stills, creating that signature creamy, spicy texture that defines great Irish whiskey. At this price, it punches well above its weight.