Highland Park
12 Year Old Viking Honour
Single Malt Whisky
43% • 350ml • Islands
4 Bottles Remaining

Perched on Orkney’s wind-battered mainland, Highland Park is a distillery shaped as much by its remote island home as by its long and colourful history. Just outside Kirkwall, it sits closer to the Arctic Circle than to Speyside, its warehouses regularly scoured by salt-laden gales from the North Sea. This isolation lends the whisky a distinctive maritime edge that complements its robust, smoky core.
Founded in 1798 by Magnus Eunson, a butcher, church officer, and, by most accounts, an enthusiastic smuggler, Highland Park’s early days blended sanctity and subterfuge. Legal operations began in 1826, and over time the distillery expanded, its reputation spreading far beyond the windswept archipelago. Today, it is owned by Edrington, sharing stewardship alongside The Macallan, yet retaining its uniquely Orcadian identity.
Highland Park’s production remains deeply traditional. It is one of the few distilleries to still malt a portion of its barley on-site, using local Orkney peat, rich in heather rather than the seaweed-heavy peat of Islay. This imparts a floral, aromatic smoke that weaves gently through the spirit. Long fermentation, relatively short stills, and careful cask selection, particularly European sherry oak, contribute to a whisky known for its complexity and balance.
The resulting style marries honeyed sweetness, dried fruit, and warming spice with a measured, heathery peat smoke. Highland Park’s age-stated expressions, from the approachable 12-year-old to more mature releases, are widely admired for their consistency and depth. It is a whisky that reflects its rugged home, where ancient Norse heritage meets meticulous craftsmanship.
Founded in 1988 by Andrew Symington, Signatory Vintage Scotch Whisky Company emerged during a period when independent bottling was still a relatively understated part of the Scotch whisky landscape. Symington’s approach was clear from the outset: to source individual casks and present them with minimal interference, often at natural cask strength, allowing the character of both distillery and maturation to remain fully intact. It was a philosophy rooted not in consistency, but in variation, and in the belief that each cask had something distinct to say.
Over time, the company built a reputation for both breadth and depth. Its releases have spanned an extraordinary range of distilleries, from well-known names to those long since closed, preserving liquid that might otherwise have disappeared into blends or obscurity. This archival instinct has become one of Signatory’s defining traits, offering drinkers access to styles and profiles that no longer exist in active production. The acquisition of Edradour Distillery in 2002 added a physical anchor to its operations, while leaving its core identity as a bottler unchanged.
What distinguishes Signatory most clearly is its transparency and structure. Bottlings typically carry detailed information, including distillation and bottling dates, cask type, and outturn, presented without embellishment. Much of the range is released without chill filtration or added colouring, reinforcing a sense of fidelity to the cask. Alongside its single cask releases, the introduction of the 100 Proof range has provided a more structured offering, where whiskies are selected and batched to be bottled at a consistent strength of 57.1% ABV. These releases retain the company’s emphasis on clarity and integrity, while offering a slightly more approachable framework for regular availability, balancing individuality with a degree of continuity.
Across series such as the Un-Chillfiltered Collection, Cask Strength releases, and the 100 Proof range, the underlying principle remains consistent: each bottle represents a moment in time, shaped by wood, spirit, and patience, and presented with a minimum of intervention.
The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.