The Still & The VineSchool of Wine & Spirits

School of Wine & Spirits

Scotch Whisky

45 reviews

Glenmorangie The Original 10 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Glenmorangie The Original 10 Year Old

The Glenmorangie Company (LVMH)

Glenmorangie The Original is a masterclass in the Highland style — delicate, fruity, and approachable without sacrificing depth. Those famously tall stills, the tallest in Scotland, strip away heavier compounds and deliver a spirit of unusual purity.

$3986 (43% ABV) proof
Benromach 10 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Benromach 10 Year Old

Gordon & MacPhail

Benromach sat silent for fifteen years. When Gordon & MacPhail brought it back to life in 1998, they didn't try to copy the old Speyside playbook. Instead, they introduced a light peat — unusual for the region — creating something that didn't exist before.

$4586 (43% ABV) proof
Johnnie Walker Green Label 15 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Johnnie Walker Green Label 15 Year Old

Diageo

Green Label is among the most underappreciated whiskies in the Johnnie Walker family. Pure malt — four single malts combined into one harmonious whole.

$5586 (43% ABV) proof
Bunnahabhain 12 Year Old Islay Single Malt
Scotch Whisky

Bunnahabhain 12 Year Old Islay Single Malt

Distell International

Bunnahabhain is Islay's best-kept secret precisely because it refuses to play the smoke card. While its neighbours compete on peat levels, Bunnahabhain builds complexity through sherry cask maturation and an unpeated spirit that lets the malt character breathe. The 12 Year Old is the entry point to a distillery that rewards loyalty — drink it beside a heavily peated Islay malt and you'll understand the full range of what this island can do. The contrast is revelatory.

$5592.6 (46.3% ABV) proof
Lagavulin 16 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Lagavulin 16 Year Old

Diageo plc

If bourbon taught you to love whisky, Lagavulin 16 will teach you to love Scotch. This is the definitive Islay expression — complex enough to reward repeated exploration but immediately compelling to any drinker willing to meet it halfway. The 16-year age statement matters: it's the minimum time needed for Lagavulin's peat to resolve into this degree of integrated complexity.

$9086 (43% ABV) proof
Compass Box Spice Tree
Scotch Whisky

Compass Box Spice Tree

Compass Box Whisky Company

$5592 (46% ABV) proof
GlenDronach 15 Year Old Revival
Scotch Whisky

GlenDronach 15 Year Old Revival

Brown-Forman (The GlenDronach Distillery Company)

$13092 (46% ABV) proof
Bruichladdich The Classic Laddie
Scotch Whisky

Bruichladdich The Classic Laddie

Remy Cointreau

Lingering malt sweetness, gentle spice, clean maritime freshness100 (50% ABV) proof
Springbank 10 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Springbank 10 Year Old

J. & A. Mitchell & Co., Ltd.

Medium-long with lingering peat embers, sea salt, and a malty sweetness that echoes back through the palate.92 (46% ABV) proof
Ardbeg 10 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Ardbeg 10 Year Old

LVMH (Moët Hennessy)

Extraordinarily long. Waves of smoked malt, dark chocolate, and maritime minerality ebb and flow, with a final note of sweet peat that lingers for minutes.92 (46% ABV) proof
The Balvenie 14 Year Old Caribbean Cask
Scotch Whisky

The Balvenie 14 Year Old Caribbean Cask

William Grant & Sons (The Balvenie, est. 1892)

The Balvenie Caribbean Cask 14 is a masterclass in the elegance of cask finishing.

$7086 (43% ABV) proof
Macallan 12 Year Old Sherry Oak
Scotch Whisky

Macallan 12 Year Old Sherry Oak

Edrington Group (The Macallan, est. 1824)

The Macallan 12 Sherry Oak is a masterclass in the patience of wood. While most distilleries treat cask selection as a purchasing decision, Macallan treats it as an art — commissioning their own sherry-seasoned casks in Jerez, waiting two years for the sherry to condition the wood, then waiting another twelve years for the whisky to mature inside it. That's fourteen years of patience before a single drop reaches a bottle. The result is a whisky where the cask and the spirit are in perfect dialogue: neither dominates, and the sherry influence reads as complexity, not sweetness. Macallan's tiny copper stills — the smallest on Speyside — concentrate the new make spirit, giving it the heft to stand up to such assertive wood. This is the benchmark against which all sherry-matured Scotch is measured, and it earns that status through the simplest and most difficult virtue: time.

$6586 (43% ABV) proof
Talisker 10 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Talisker 10 Year Old

Diageo (Talisker Distillery, est. 1830)

Talisker doesn’t just taste like Skye — it tastes like it was made by the island itself. The distillery’s unique setup includes swan-neck lyne arms that loop back on themselves, sending heavier flavor compounds back through the still for a second pass of copper contact. This creates a spirit that’s simultaneously smoky and sweet, peaty and peppery. The peat used to dry the malt is local, carrying Skye’s distinctive maritime character into the smoke. And then there’s the maturation: sea air penetrates the warehouses year-round, the casks breathing in salt and iodine with every expansion and contraction. Diageo named Talisker one of their Classic Malts in 1988, representing the Islands — and there is no whisky that more completely embodies its geography. At 45.8% ABV (higher than most standard bottlings), it has the strength to deliver every ounce of that Skye character.

$5591.6 (45.8% ABV) proof
Oban 14 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Oban 14 Year Old

Diageo (Oban Distillery, est. 1794)

Oban’s obsession is constraint. The distillery sits wedged between the harbor and a cliff — physically unable to expand — with just two of the smallest pot stills in Scotland. Where other distilleries chase scale, Oban has embraced its limitations: the tiny stills force a slow, careful distillation that produces a spirit with remarkable concentration. The lantern shape of those stills creates more copper contact, stripping away harsh sulfur compounds and leaving behind a whisky that bridges two worlds — the gentle honey and fruit of the Highlands with the maritime salt and smoke of the western coast. Diageo named it one of their six “Classic Malts” in 1988 for a reason: at 14 years old, it’s one of the most perfectly balanced whiskies in Scotland.

$5586 (43% ABV) proof
Laphroaig 10 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Laphroaig 10 Year Old

Suntory Global Spirits (Laphroaig Distillery, est. 1815)

Laphroaig 10 is the whisky that people either love or hate — and that’s exactly the point. While most Scotch distilleries have softened their profiles to broaden appeal, Laphroaig has doubled down on everything that makes it divisive: the medicinal peat smoke, the seaweed, the iodine. They still floor-malt roughly 20% of their barley on-site, drying it over local Islay peat — a labor-intensive practice almost every other distillery abandoned decades ago. The result is a whisky with a sense of place so vivid you can taste the Atlantic. Prince Charles liked it so much he granted it a Royal Warrant in 1994. You’ll either get it or you won’t, and Laphroaig is perfectly fine with that.

$5086 (43% ABV) proof
Glenfarclas 12 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Glenfarclas 12 Year Old

J. & G. Grant (family-owned, 6th generation)

Glenfarclas is what happens when a family says “no” to trends. While other Speyside distilleries have chased younger consumers with NAS releases and cask finishes, the Grants have stayed stubbornly committed to sherry cask maturation and generous age statements. The 12 Year Old is the gateway — unapologetically sherried, rich, and full-bodied at a price that makes the big-name competitors look overpriced. The fact that they’ve resisted every takeover offer for 160 years tells you everything about their priorities.

$4586 (43% ABV) proof
Highland Park 12 Year Old
Scotch Whisky

Highland Park 12 Year Old

The Edrington Group

Highland Park 12 is the great balancing act in Scotch whisky. It’s peated but not aggressively so, because Orkney’s peat is infused with heather rather than the woody roots found on Islay — the result is floral smoke rather than campfire smoke. Add in the sherry cask sweetness and the unmistakable coastal salinity from water drawn from Cattie Maggie’s Spring for over two centuries, and you get a whisky that bridges the gap between Speyside smoothness and Island intensity. It’s the single malt that converts people who think they don’t like peat.

$5086 (43% ABV) proof
Glenfiddich 15 Year Old Solera
Scotch Whisky

Glenfiddich 15 Year Old Solera

William Grant & Sons

The solera process is what sets this apart from every other 15-year-old Scotch on the shelf. By marrying whiskies in a vat that’s been continuously replenished for nearly three decades, Glenfiddich creates a consistency and depth that batch-by-batch production can’t replicate. It’s rich without being heavy — a Speyside that welcomes newcomers and still rewards experienced palates.

$6580 (40% ABV) proof
Lagavulin 16 Year
Scotch Whisky

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.

$9086 proof
Yamazaki 12 Year
Scotch Whisky

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.

$15086 proof
Ardbeg Wee Beastie
Scotch Whisky

Ardbeg Wee Beastie

Ardbeg

Wee Beastie is Ardbeg's deliberate argument that age statements don't tell the whole story. At five years old, it trades refinement for raw, feral energy — and that's entirely the point. It's an essential bottle for peat lovers who want the distillery's DNA in its most unrestrained form, and it punches well above its price.

$4594.6 proof