Aroma
Honey
36 bottles with this note
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Scotch Whisky Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for honey and related notes.

Cragganmore 12 Year Old
Diageo
Cragganmore 12 is the Speyside malt that rewards the patient nose. Where many single malts deliver their story in one dramatic chapter, Cragganmore reads like a novel with slow-building subplots. Those unique T-shaped lyne arms create a spirit of genuine complexity that unfolds over an hour in the glass.

Roe & Co Blended Irish Whiskey
Diageo
Roe & Co is the resurrection of a name that once meant more to Irish whiskey than Jameson or Bushmills. George Roe’s original distillery was the largest in Europe, yet today most drinkers have never heard of him. Diageo’s revival blends rich malt and smooth grain whiskeys matured in a high proportion of first-fill bourbon barrels, then bottles at 45% ABV without chill filtration — a level of care that belies its modest price tag. At roughly thirty-five dollars, Roe & Co delivers the kind of creamy, spice-driven complexity that invites comparison with bottles twice its price.

Caol Ila 12 Year Old
Diageo
Caol Ila is Islay’s quiet giant. It is the largest distillery on the island, producing more whisky than any of its neighbors, yet most of that output disappears into Diageo’s blended Scotch portfolio. The 12 Year Old single malt bottling is what happens when you give Caol Ila a chance to speak for itself — and it speaks with an elegance that surprises anyone expecting another peat bomb. The smoke here is maritime and measured, threaded through with citrus brightness and a saline minerality that tastes like the shoreline where the distillery stands. At its price point, Caol Ila 12 is one of the most undervalued single malts in the Diageo portfolio — hidden in plain sight behind Lagavulin’s fame.

Slane Irish Whiskey
Brown-Forman
Slane is the story of what happens when a 150-year-old American whiskey company migrates its cooperage expertise to Ireland.

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.

Kilchoman Machir Bay
Kilchoman Distillery Co. (Independent)
Kilchoman is what happens when someone decides to do everything the hard way — and gets it spectacularly right. Anthony Wills didn't just build a new distillery on Islay; he built one that grows its own barley, malts it over its own peat-fired kiln, and distills in tiny copper pot stills.

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.

Dalwhinnie 15 Year Old
Diageo
Dalwhinnie 15 is the whisky world's best argument that altitude matters.

Blue Spot 7 Year Old
Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard)
Blue Spot is the most structurally ambitious of the Spot family — and the most rewarding to decode. Where Green Spot uses one cask type and Yellow Spot uses three, Blue Spot deploys four distinct cask influences and bottles at cask strength, letting you experience the full architectural plan without dilution. The bourbon cask lays the vanilla-cream foundation. Sherry butts add dried fruit weight. Marsala casks bring an unexpected Italian sweetness. And the Madeira finish — those Portuguese fortified wine barrels — apply a tropical, honeyed glaze that ties everything together. At cask strength, the pot still spice cuts through all that sweetness, giving the whiskey a backbone as strong as its complexity is wide.

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.

Glenmorangie The Original 10 Year Old
The Glenmorangie Company (LVMH)
Glenmorangie The Original is a masterclass in the Highland style — delicate, fruity, and approachable without sacrificing depth. Those famously tall stills, the tallest in Scotland, strip away heavier compounds and deliver a spirit of unusual purity.

Bushmills Black Bush
Proximo Spirits (José Cuervo)
Bushmills Black Bush is one of the great values in Irish whiskey. The high proportion of sherry-cask-matured single malt in the blend gives it a richness and complexity that belies its modest price, and the Old Bushmills Distillery — whose site has held a distilling license since 1608 — brings centuries of craft to bear.

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.

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.

Yellow Spot 12 Year Old
Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard)
Yellow Spot is the middle child of the Spot range, and arguably the most balanced. Three-cask blend: bourbon, sherry, and Malaga.

Johnnie Walker Green Label 15 Year Old
Diageo
Green Label is among the most underappreciated whiskies in the Johnnie Walker family. Pure malt — four single malts combined into one harmonious whole.

Bunnahabhain 12 Year Old Islay Single Malt
Distell International
Bunnahabhain is Islay's best-kept secret precisely because it refuses to play the smoke card. While its neighbours compete on peat levels, Bunnahabhain builds complexity through sherry cask maturation and an unpeated spirit that lets the malt character breathe. The 12 Year Old is the entry point to a distillery that rewards loyalty — drink it beside a heavily peated Islay malt and you'll understand the full range of what this island can do. The contrast is revelatory.

Teeling Single Grain Irish Whiskey
Teeling Whiskey Company
Grain whiskey gets little respect until you taste Teeling's version. Matured in Californian Cabernet Sauvignon casks, this single grain has the silkiness of a premium spirit and the depth of a well-aged whiskey. It's the secret that every Irish blend drinker has been unknowingly appreciating for decades, now bottled on its own terms. Serve it slightly chilled, neat, to anyone who claims Irish whiskey is predictable — this changes the conversation immediately.

Lagavulin 16 Year Old
Diageo plc
If bourbon taught you to love whisky, Lagavulin 16 will teach you to love Scotch. This is the definitive Islay expression — complex enough to reward repeated exploration but immediately compelling to any drinker willing to meet it halfway. The 16-year age statement matters: it's the minimum time needed for Lagavulin's peat to resolve into this degree of integrated complexity.

Redbreast 15 Year Old
Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard)
Redbreast 15 is where Irish whiskey proves its claim to greatness. Every additional year beyond the 12-year expression adds another dimension — more dried fruit, deeper oak integration, and a creaminess that recalls the finest aged spirits from anywhere in the world.

Midleton Very Rare 2024
Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard)

Compass Box Spice Tree
Compass Box Whisky Company

Method and Madness Single Pot Still
Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard)

GlenDronach 15 Year Old Revival
Brown-Forman (The GlenDronach Distillery Company)

The Balvenie 14 Year Old Caribbean Cask
William Grant & Sons (The Balvenie, est. 1892)
The Balvenie Caribbean Cask 14 is a masterclass in the elegance of cask finishing.

Bushmills 10 Year Old Single Malt
Proximo Spirits (Bushmills, est. 1608)
Bushmills 10 is the quiet aristocrat of 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.

Macallan 12 Year Old Sherry Oak
Edrington Group (The Macallan, est. 1824)
The Macallan 12 Sherry Oak is a masterclass in the patience of wood. While most distilleries treat cask selection as a purchasing decision, Macallan treats it as an art — commissioning their own sherry-seasoned casks in Jerez, waiting two years for the sherry to condition the wood, then waiting another twelve years for the whisky to mature inside it. That's fourteen years of patience before a single drop reaches a bottle. The result is a whisky where the cask and the spirit are in perfect dialogue: neither dominates, and the sherry influence reads as complexity, not sweetness. Macallan's tiny copper stills — the smallest on Speyside — concentrate the new make spirit, giving it the heft to stand up to such assertive wood. This is the benchmark against which all sherry-matured Scotch is measured, and it earns that status through the simplest and most difficult virtue: time.

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.

Oban 14 Year Old
Diageo (Oban Distillery, est. 1794)
Oban’s obsession is constraint. The distillery sits wedged between the harbor and a cliff — physically unable to expand — with just two of the smallest pot stills in Scotland. Where other distilleries chase scale, Oban has embraced its limitations: the tiny stills force a slow, careful distillation that produces a spirit with remarkable concentration. The lantern shape of those stills creates more copper contact, stripping away harsh sulfur compounds and leaving behind a whisky that bridges two worlds — the gentle honey and fruit of the Highlands with the maritime salt and smoke of the western coast. Diageo named it one of their six “Classic Malts” in 1988 for a reason: at 14 years old, it’s one of the most perfectly balanced whiskies in Scotland.

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.

Redbreast 12 Year Old
Pernod Ricard (Irish Distillers)
Redbreast 12 is the definitive pot still Irish whiskey — the one that shows you what the fuss is about. The 50/50 split of malted and unmalted barley creates a texture that’s impossible to achieve with malt alone: creamy, spicy, and full-bodied in a way that triple distillation normally smooths out. The combination of ex-bourbon honey and sherry dried fruit is seamless. The name comes from a bird-loving Gilbeys chairman in 1912, but the whiskey itself has roots stretching back much further — it’s one of only two single pot still brands produced nearly continuously since the early 1900s.

Highland Park 12 Year Old
The Edrington Group
Highland Park 12 is the great balancing act in Scotch whisky. It’s peated but not aggressively so, because Orkney’s peat is infused with heather rather than the woody roots found on Islay — the result is floral smoke rather than campfire smoke. Add in the sherry cask sweetness and the unmistakable coastal salinity from water drawn from Cattie Maggie’s Spring for over two centuries, and you get a whisky that bridges the gap between Speyside smoothness and Island intensity. It’s the single malt that converts people who think they don’t like peat.

Glenfiddich 15 Year Old Solera
William Grant & Sons
The solera process is what sets this apart from every other 15-year-old Scotch on the shelf. By marrying whiskies in a vat that’s been continuously replenished for nearly three decades, Glenfiddich creates a consistency and depth that batch-by-batch production can’t replicate. It’s rich without being heavy — a Speyside that welcomes newcomers and still rewards experienced palates.

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.