Old Bushmills 9 Year Old / Bot.1960s Blended Irish Whiskey
£750.0075cl / 43% – A very old bottle of Bushmills whisky from sometime in the 1960s, bottled after 9 years of maturation.
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75cl / 43% – A very old bottle of Bushmills whisky from sometime in the 1960s, bottled after 9 years of maturation.

75cl / 40% / Distillery Bottling – A rare old bottling of Old Comber Pure Pot Still. This is one of the very last whiskies to have been produced at the Old Comber distillery before it was closed in 1953. A great opportunity to taste a long-aged Irish pure-pot-still whiskey.

75cl / 40% – Named after James Crow, the Scottish doctor who changed the course of American whiskey production by inventing the sourmash process.

75cl / 43% / Gordon & MacPhail – A 1940 vintage Old Elgin malt from an undisclosed Highland distillery released by independent bottlers Gordon & Macphail with their Book of Kells style label. “G&M” are specialists in bottling very old whiskies and left this for 40 years before releasing this one in the early 1980s.

75cl / 40% / Distillery Bottling – An old 1980s bottling of trusty Highlander Old Fettercairn.

75cl / 43% / Distillery Bottling – An old 8 year bottling of Old Fettercairn. A massive site with 14 warehouses and room for 32,000 casks of maturing spirit, bottlings from Fettercairn have never been that common. We estimate this was bottled in the 1970s, a time when Whyte & Mackay took control of the…

75cl / 45.2% – Bottled in the 1960s, this whiskey surely contains a good proportion of bourbon distilled during the glorious Van Winkle ownership period. The expression is named 1849 after the year in which the W.L. Weller Company was established.

70cl / 45% – The first bourbon to be bottled & labelled as a brand, Old Forester was created in 1870 by a pharmacist called Brown to help prevent counterfeiting and guarantee the quality of the spirit. Today his descendants control Jack Daniel’s.

70cl / 43% – Old Forester Bourbon is made in the same style as when it was first introduced by George Garvin Brown in 1870. High in rye content, this is full bodied and rich.

75cl / 47.5% – The drink of Statesmen, this bourbon is sadly not made in a distillery shaped like a bottle but does offer notes of buttery leather, bold spice and sharp citrus. Enjoy as part of your Doomsday Scenario, or while learning how to use a skipping rope – er, lasso.

100cl / 50% – You’ll find more of the same high corn bourbon, amped up by its bottling at 100 proof. This is thick and chewy stuff with notes of butterscotch, caramel and liquorice, complemented by tobacco, nutmeg, white pepper and dried cherries.

100cl / 40% – This is a litre bottle of the marvellously chewy and spicy bourbon from Old Grand Dad. You can expect notes of butterscotch, caramel, and liquorice, complemented by tobacco, nutmeg, white pepper, and dried cherries.