This single cask bottling of a 12-year-old Edradour single malt as an original bottling from the distillery was produced as a natural cask strength sherry cask. The whisky was distilled in 2010, matured in an ex-sherry cask and was bottled at cask strength in 2022 with 640 bottles.
The usual tubes for this bottling were replaced by the distillery due to supply problems (see label on the back of the tube).
Edradour (Gaelic for between two waters) is located east of Pitlochry and was for a long time the smallest whisky distillery in Scotland (it was expanded in February 2018). Whisky has been produced since 1823, the first bottling as a single malt took place in 1986, and since 2002 the distillery has belonged to the independent Scottish bottler Signatory. The distillery was extensively expanded and enlarged in 2014-2018.
Scotland and Scotch whisky is a global trend, a development that has led to a flourishing whisky scene in Scotland. There is hardly a week that goes by in which there is no news about another new distillery being built or the reopening of a distillery that has been closed for a long time.
Scotland, together with Ireland, is today considered the motherland of whisky, whose roots there go back to around 1500 AD.
This single cask bottling of a 12-year-old Edradour single malt as an original bottling from the distillery was produced as a natural cask strength sherry cask. The whisky was distilled in 2010, matured in an ex-sherry cask and was bottled at cask strength in 2022 with 640 bottles.
The usual tubes for this bottling were replaced by the distillery due to supply problems (see label on the back of the tube).
Edradour (Gaelic for between two waters) is located east of Pitlochry and was for a long time the smallest whisky distillery in Scotland (it was expanded in February 2018). Whisky has been produced since 1823, the first bottling as a single malt took place in 1986, and since 2002 the distillery has belonged to the independent Scottish bottler Signatory. The distillery was extensively expanded and enlarged in 2014-2018.
Scotland and Scotch whisky is a global trend, a development that has led to a flourishing whisky scene in Scotland. There is hardly a week that goes by in which there is no news about another new distillery being built or the reopening of a distillery that has been closed for a long time.
Scotland, together with Ireland, is today considered the motherland of whisky, whose roots there go back to around 1500 AD.