Aroma
Floral (Rosewater)
20 bottles with this note
Train this aroma
Irish Whiskey Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for floral (rosewater) and related notes.

Arran 14 Year Old Single Malt Scotch Whisky
Arran
Arran 14 is island whisky without the smoke, a distillery that trusts its spirit to carry the weight. Non-chill filtered and natural color, it's a transparent window into careful cask management and clean, fruity distillation. One of Scotland's better-kept secrets at this price point.

Bushmills Causeway Collection 2008 Muscatel Cask
Bushmills
This Causeway Collection release demonstrates how carefully chosen cask finishing can elevate an already accomplished distillate. The muscatel influence is assertive but never domineering — a study in controlled extravagance.

Glenburgie 15 Year Old Ballantine's Single Malt Series
Ballantine's
One of Speyside's quieter distilleries finally gets its solo turn. This 15-year Glenburgie is unapologetically gentle, but there's real complexity hiding in that softness — a malt that asks you to lean in rather than brace yourself.

Linkwood 15 Year Old Gordon & MacPhail Discovery Range
Gordon & MacPhail
Linkwood remains one of Speyside's under-appreciated distilleries, and this Gordon & MacPhail bottling shows exactly why it deserves more attention. The 15-year maturation hits a sweet spot of fruit-forward charm and structural refinement. This is a whisky for the moment you want something beautiful without effort.

Waterford Gaia 1.1 Organic Single Malt Irish Whiskey
Waterford
A philosophical whiskey as much as a sensory one — Gaia argues, persuasively, that organic Irish barley grown across multiple certified farms can speak with a distinct, layered voice.

Ardbeg Uigeadail
Ardbeg
Uigeadail is one of the great arguments for marrying peated malt with sherry casks. The interplay between smoke and fruit is endlessly rewarding, and the cask strength bottling lets the drinker find their own balance with water. An essential Islay experience.

Waterford Fenniscourt Edition 1.1 Single Malt Irish Whiskey
Waterford
Waterford's single-farm origin concept is more than marketing — it's a genuine attempt to prove terroir in whiskey. Fenniscourt 1.1 delivers a barley-forward profile where the grain's provenance genuinely seems to matter. The 50% ABV bottling strength lets every nuance come through without dilution.

Fercullen Falls Estate Series Single Malt Irish Whiskey
Fercullen
Powerscourt Distillery's flagship single malt reflects its Wicklow surroundings — green, elegant, unhurried. The interplay between orchard fruit and cereal sweetness makes for a whiskey that feels composed rather than complicated. A strong showing from one of Ireland's newer operations.

Teeling Renaissance Series 3 Single Malt 18 Year Old
Teeling
Teeling's Renaissance series pushes Irish whiskey into territory usually occupied by premium Scotch single malts. The Muscat cask finish at 18 years shows that Dublin's newest distillery has access to remarkable old stock and the judgment to finish it with restraint. This is whiskey that rewards patience.

Teeling Brabazon Bottling Series 02 Port Casks
Teeling
The Brabazon Series 02 demonstrates what happens when port casks and Irish malt genuinely cooperate rather than compete. The port influence is assertive but never dominates the underlying spirit's grain-forward character. At 49% ABV, it carries enough weight to stand up to the cask influence without requiring dilution.

Tullamore D.E.W. 14 Year Old Single Malt
Tullamore D.E.W.
The marriage of four different cask types across fourteen Irish seasons gives this whiskey a layered complexity that defies its approachable price. It captures the moderate, damp Irish midlands climate that keeps angel's share low and maturation gradual. A textbook example of how patience and Ireland's mild climate produce uncommon depth.

Glenkinchie 12 Year Old
Glenkinchie
Glenkinchie sits in the quiet Lowland countryside, and its whisky reflects that calm. The 12 Year is an exercise in restraint — nothing shouts, everything harmonizes. Perfect for those who want to understand what a mild maritime climate and low-lying warehouses can do to spirit over a decade.

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.

Glencadam 10 Year Old Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky
Glencadam
Glencadam is one of the Highlands' best-kept secrets, and this 10-year expression demonstrates why. It's a study in poise — every element precisely calibrated, nothing fighting for dominance. An ideal gateway to understanding Highland subtlety.

AnCnoc 12 Year Old
AnCnoc
AnCnoc 12 is a Highland malt that favors clarity over volume. It's an ideal entry into the style for those who equate 'light' with 'uninteresting' — there's real depth here, just expressed in a lower register. A weeknight dram that never bores.

McConnell’s Irish Whisky 5 Year Old
Conecuh Brands
McConnell’s is proof that a resurrection can be its own catalyst. Rather than chasing the pot-still complexity of Dublin’s heritage brands or the peated novelty of Connemara, McConnell’s chose the most difficult path: a straightforward, well-made blend that stands on flavor rather than story. The five-year bourbon-cask maturation delivers approachable butterscotch sweetness without thinness, and the triple-distilled malt component adds just enough texture to hold your attention. At under thirty-five dollars, this is a bottle that earns its place not by trading on Belfast nostalgia but by being good whiskey at a price that invites exploration.

Lambay Small Batch Blend
Lambay Whiskey (Baring Family & Maison Camus)
Lambay Small Batch Blend is a whiskey born from an unlikely marriage — Irish triple-distilled spirit and French cognac cooperage, united by an island in the Irish Sea. The Cognac cask finish is not a gimmick; it adds a genuine floral and stone-fruit dimension that most blended Irish whiskeys lack entirely. And the sea-air finishing gives the whole package a maritime lightness that makes it dangerously easy to drink. At around $30, it's one of the most interesting experiments in Irish whiskey — and a reminder that where your casks breathe matters as much as what's inside them. Cocktail — "The Island Sour": Combine 2 oz Lambay Small Batch, 1 oz fresh lemon juice, 0.75 oz honey syrup, and 1 egg white. Dry shake vigorously, then shake with ice. Strain into a coupe and garnish with a few drops of Angostura on the foam. The honey and Cognac-cask character play beautifully against the citrus acid.

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.

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.

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