Aroma
Clove Spice
28 bottles with this note
Train this aroma
Irish Whiskey Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for clove spice and related notes.

Tullamore D.E.W. 18 Year Old Single Malt
Tullamore D.E.W.
Eighteen years of careful cask management in Ireland's mild midlands climate result in a whiskey of real elegance. The sherry cask influence is integrated rather than dominant — proof that time and cellar conditions matter more than wood alone. A refined dram that rewards slow sipping.

Glen Grant 18 Year Old
Glen Grant
Glen Grant 18 is an exercise in restraint and transparency. Speyside character at its most precise — fruit-forward, nut-accented, and impeccably balanced. This is a malt for those who value clarity over volume.

Midleton Dair Ghaelach Knockrath Forest Tree No. 4
Midleton
This expression is a genuine cartographic exercise — each tree in Knockrath Forest imparts a unique fingerprint. The Irish oak finish adds tannins and flavors unlike anything found in standard bourbon or sherry casks. It's bold, complex, and unmistakably Irish in its sense of place.

Midleton Barry Crockett Legacy
Midleton
Named for the legendary Master Distiller who shaped Midleton's modern identity, this bottling is a masterclass in single pot still blending. The marriage of malted and unmalted barley at different ages and cask types creates complexity that rewards patient sipping. This is Irish whiskey at its most ambitious.

Monkey Shoulder Blended Malt Scotch Whisky
Monkey Shoulder
Monkey Shoulder exists to prove that blended malt can be serious without being complicated. The marriage of three Speyside single malts creates a whisky greater than any one component. It is the bartender's best friend and a useful benchmark for understanding blending ratios.

Dunville's Three Crowns Peated Irish Whiskey
Dunville's
Dunville's proves that Irish peat doesn't have to shout to be heard. This whiskey occupies that threshold between smoke and sweetness with uncommon grace. It rewards anyone who thinks peated Irish whiskey is a contradiction in terms.

Dingle Single Pot Still Irish Whiskey
Dingle
Dingle's single pot still expression captures the essence of this Kerry-based distillery's meticulous craft. The combination of malted and unmalted barley yields a richly textured whiskey that sits comfortably alongside more established pot still names. It rewards slow sipping.

Craigellachie 13 Year Old
Craigellachie
Craigellachie 13 is Speyside's contrarian — a malt that wears its worm-tub-condensed character like a badge of honor. It trades polished elegance for muscular honesty, rewarding drinkers who appreciate texture and funk over refinement.

Kilbeggan Single Pot Still Irish Whiskey
Kilbeggan
Kilbeggan's single pot still release is a quiet revelation — proof that this ancient distillery's revived copper stills can produce spirit with genuine character. At this price, it's one of the best introductions to the pot still style available.

Clonakilty Single Batch Double Oak Finish
Clonakilty
Clonakilty's double oak treatment isn't a gimmick — it genuinely rounds out a blend that might otherwise read as simple. The second cask adds depth and spice without losing the easy drinkability that defines great Irish whiskey. A strong value in an increasingly crowded field.

Benriach The Smoky Twelve
Benriach
Benriach has always played the complexity card in Speyside, and The Smoky Twelve is their most accessible argument for peated single malt outside Islay. The triple-cask maturation creates dimension beneath the smoke — this is a bottle that changes character entirely from first pour to the last drop in the glass.

Spot Whiskey Single Pot Still 'Red Spot' 15 Year Old
Spot Whiskeys
Red Spot represents the pinnacle of the Spot whiskey range, and its 15 years across bourbon, sherry, and Marsala casks give it a breadth that rewards patient exploration. The copper pot stills at Midleton are some of the largest in the world, yet they produce a spirit of remarkable delicacy. This is Irish whiskey operating at the highest level.

Balblair 12 Year Old Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky
Balblair
Balblair's tall copper pot stills are designed to maximize reflux, and the result is a spirit of unusual purity and fruit-forward character for the Highlands. This 12-year-old balances accessibility with genuine complexity. Non-chill-filtered and naturally colored, it rewards attentive nosing.

Tipperary Boutique Selection Single Malt
Tipperary
Tipperary is a micro-distillery operation producing whiskey with a clear point of view — gentle, fruity, and intentionally restrained. This single malt demonstrates that Irish whiskey's future includes small-scale producers who prize clarity over complexity. A contemplative pour for the predawn hours.

Redbreast 12 Year Old Cask Strength
Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard)
Redbreast 12 Cask Strength is the uncut, non-chill-filtered expression of the whiskey that revived Irish single pot still as a serious category. Midleton bottles it batch by batch at each cask's natural proof.

Redbreast Lustau Edition
Irish Distillers (Pernod Ricard)
The Lustau Edition is Redbreast's most layered expression — a whiskey that seems to change shape in the glass. That final year in Lustau's first-fill Oloroso butts doesn't overpower the pot still character; it adds a last chapter to an already complex story.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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

Teeling Small Batch
Teeling Whiskey Company (est. 2012)
The Teelings’ terroir isn’t soil — it’s Dublin itself. Jack and Stephen Teeling built their distillery in the Liberties, a neighborhood that had been the beating heart of Irish whiskey for two centuries before the industry collapsed. The Liberties once held more distilleries per square mile than anywhere on earth. The Teelings’ bet was that Dublin’s whiskey DNA still mattered — that making whiskey in the city, near the original water sources and in the cultural context that shaped Irish whiskey, would produce something different from the industrial parks where most Irish whiskey is now made. The Small Batch expression showcases their innovation: finishing in Central American rum barrels adds a tropical sweetness that no other Irish whiskey offers, while bottling at 46% ABV (non-chill filtered) preserves the full texture. It’s a whiskey that tastes like a city reclaiming its birthright.

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.

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.

Lagavulin 16 Year
Lagavulin
Lagavulin 16 is the benchmark by which heavily peated Islay malts are measured, and it earns that status through balance rather than brute force. The interplay between smoke, sweetness, and maritime character is meticulously calibrated after 16 years of patient maturation. This is a bottle that belongs on every serious whisky shelf — not as a trophy, but as a teacher.

Yamazaki 12 Year
Yamazaki
Yamazaki 12 is a masterclass in balance and subtlety. It doesn't shout — it earns your attention through precision, layering flavors in a way that rewards patience. This is the bottle that put Japanese whisky on the global map, and it remains a benchmark for what elegance in single malt can look like.