Let’s start the week with a new review from a new distillery on this site, the English Whisky Co. Distillery.
English Whisky Co., the brainchild of James Nelstrop (and his child Andrew), is the first distillery opened in England for over 100 years. They take pride for having pure water in an aquifer beneath them and access to local barley grown in the area (Norfolk).
So I thought that the best way to start the relationship between me and the distillery would be trying their classic whisky, but not their ordinary classic one. Instead, we’ll try the Whisky Exchange exclusive version, bottled at a whopping 53.4% with only 270 bottles lurking around.
English Whisky Co. Classic TWE Exclusive (53.4%, 270 bottles, £59.95)
Nose: Starts a bit musty and soft with lots of vanilla and soft honey notes, a dash of dried coconut flakes. After a minute soft fruit notes develops, most notably pears and to lesser extent peaches. Then some mellow fragrance rises and I must say it works great with the soft fruit. Overall it’s a very soft and lovely nose. Continue reading


Nose: Peat yeah! soft and surprisingly very gentle, lemon, gentle smoke, fruit, pears, barley sugar. After a few minutes some dough and fresh baked bread sprinkled with icing and lemon peels.

After the sea cross, a bus to Kirkwall, visiting the Orkney museum (A must!), our ride arrived:







Nose: feels youngish on the nose but it may be just the heavy cream and vanilla that confuses me (american oak sherry butts anyone?). Lots of toffee with lots of Werther’s original and dose of milk chocolate. Very smooth and rounded nose despite the big ABV. The sherry casks do impact the spirit but the dried fruits, sultanas and sherry spices are at the background playing 2nd violin here. With water – the chocolate notes are boosted to “chocolate with nuts” level.
Nose: Light peat at first and then mostly sweetness, vanilla, malt!! Hint of honey, slight dried fruits, overall very restrained pointing at high ABV. After a while sweetness is stronger and there are some tannins and it becomes more Oloroso. A bit of cloves and nutmeg and light sweet peat at the background. With water: less sherry, much more honey but still with a nice dose of nutmeg. Feels young and fierce even after a few drops of water.