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The 2007 release of this 'Traditional Cask' was the first official single malt from the Ardmore distillery, this is a young whisky, but it was aged in quarter casks, which proffers a speedy maturation thus discounting its youth.
Full of caramel. Toasted oak is evident and rich and just the faintest peat has muscled its way through.
Lots of barley and cereal notes, oodles of rich bourbon, smoke and peat still present. Charming interplay through the caramel sweetness and the vanilla spiced oak.
Has a sharp edge, more caramel and sugary barley notes and a lanolin smoothness and more tapering smoke.
£4.39 - £28.99
I got this at my duty free shop. Very strong. Not my taste.
Am a big fan of the Islay Single Malts, Laphroaigh in particular, and got this bottle as a Christmas gift. Had never heard about it and wasn't impressed at the first sip. It simply lacks in complexity, but nevertheless offers a quite nice smokiness. The body of this Whisky appears if you add an ever so small dash of water, something I usually never do, but in the case of Ardmore, it works wonders. Having a problem rating this one though, in comparison with other Single Malts, it falls short, on the other hand, adding that dash of water, it's a more than sufficient companion for a dull night at home.
Maybe a tad to smoked for my taste, but broke the rules and added a single ice cube that did the trick. Even without the ice I would still say its a good drop and easy to drink and would not say it tastes medical at all.
This stuff is so bad it should be illegal. Gut-wrenchingly awful. I know my malts, and there are many beautiful drams out there at this price, but this certainly isn't one of them. NAS is ruining the good name of Scotch.
Enjoyed with a drop of water. I would suggest those who say it tastes like TCP aren't fans of peated malts?