#WhiskySanta's £1,000,000 Giveaway!

Master of Malt's #WhiskySanta has returned to give away free orders, £100 vouchers, tens of thousands of pressies inside packages, and to grant Christmas wishes too!

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CHRISTMAS DELIVERY IS GUARANTEED!

Order online before Sunday 22nd December by 9:30pm for guaranteed delivery in mainland UK.

You can also choose to collect from our Tonbridge office, which is open until 4pm on Christmas Eve (orders must be in by 3pm).

Whisky guides

Different types of whisky

From the difference between whisky and whiskey, to knowing your single malts from your blends, learn about whisky traditions and definitions from Scotland, America, Ireland, Japan, and around the world.

Explore by category

Scotch whisky
Bourbon & American whiskey
Irish whiskey
Japanese whisky
World whisky

Authors:

Adam O'Connell, writer at Master of Malt
Jake Mountain, doer of things at Master of Malt
Reading time: 5 minutes

What is whisky? For a relatively simple product, that question doesn’t have a very simple answer. Legislation is different across the world where traditionally different kinds of whisky are found, hence why we’re categorising whisky types by country. So, if you’ve found yourself searching ‘difference between whisky and bourbon’, ‘what is the difference between malt whisky and blended’, or even just ‘types of whisky’, the below should help.

The answer to ‘what does the word whisky mean?’ is easier to answer because we know the word comes from the Gaelic word uisge/uisce beatha, or 'usquebaugh', meaning 'water of life'. That, in turn, originated from the Latin aqua vitae, which means the same thing, but was applied more to spirits in general. Over time uisge beatha became uisge. If you sound that out phonetically you should be able to see how that has susquently become whisky, or indeed whiskey.

What's the difference between whisky and whiskey? The simple addition of an ‘e’ has long carried the notion that it’s a distinctive and meaningful way to separate categories, but truthfully, whether you label the spirit ‘whisky’ or ‘whiskey’ across the world is essentially down to the producer because the ‘e’ isn’t actually regulated. Its use is typically more of a style guide thing. Scotch is pretty much always labelled without the ‘e’, whereas in Ireland and America the ‘e’ is usually used. This doesn’t indicate a difference in quality or define the spirit made in those countries, however, and it’s all whisk(e)y in the end. The true differences lie in the laws that govern these spirits, which are often reflective of different production traditions.

Scotch whisky (inc. single malt and blended)

Scotch whiskies

Bourbon and American whiskey (rye, corn, wheated)

Bourbon & American style whiskeys

Irish whiskey (incl. single pot still)

Irish whiskeys

Japanese whisky

Japanese whiskies

World whisky (incl. English, Canadian)

World whiskies

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