Ardbeg

17 Years Old

40% ABV • Whisky • 750ml • 10+ In Stock

Single Malt Whisky from Islay in Scotland

$299.91 + tax and deposit

$284.92 for Whisky Folk Members

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19 in stock

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PRODUCER
Ardbeg

BOTTLER
Official Distillery Release by Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy

AGE
17 Years Aged

CASK TYPE
Unknown

RELEASE
Standard Limited Edition Release

CHILL-FILTRATION
Yes

ADDED COLOUR
No

PEAT SMOKED
Yes

From The Official Website

Unusually delicate, yet unmistakably Ardbeg. Released over 25 years ago in 1997, 17 Years Old was one of the first bottles to leave the Distillery after reopening. Unusually delicate, yet unmistakably Ardbeg, this whisky found a place in the hearts of the Committee, and set an extraordinary standard for our future.

Retired in 2004, Ardbeggians thought that was the last they’d see it. But, while times have been moving quietly on, its return has been years in the making. Dr Bill Lumsden has meticulously crafted this release to mirror the original, retracing the flavour profile note by note, and choosing to bottle at 40% strength, just as it was back then.

Nose Fresh and clean, with hints of pine resin, aniseed, sea spray and lavender soap- very gentle, very restrained, and rather elegant for an Ardbeg. With water, there is a distinctive, flinty minerality, along with subtle hints of sweet peat smoke, malted barley, and a touch of toasting bread.

Palate A beautiful, creamy texture is followed by a lovely combination of flavours, with aniseed toffee, café latte, fennel and gentle antiseptic soap. The peat smoke is present, but in a very restrained manner, and leads into a lingering aftertaste with chewy oak, cocoa powder and tar.

Finish The peat smoke is present, but in a very restrained manner, and leads into a lingering aftertaste with chewy oak, cocoa powder and tar.

From The Official Website

Unusually delicate, yet unmistakably Ardbeg. Released over 25 years ago in 1997, 17 Years Old was one of the first bottles to leave the Distillery after reopening. Unusually delicate, yet unmistakably Ardbeg, this whisky found a place in the hearts of the Committee, and set an extraordinary standard for our future.

Retired in 2004, Ardbeggians thought that was the last they’d see it. But, while times have been moving quietly on, its return has been years in the making. Dr Bill Lumsden has meticulously crafted this release to mirror the original, retracing the flavour profile note by note, and choosing to bottle at 40% strength, just as it was back then.

Nose Fresh and clean, with hints of pine resin, aniseed, sea spray and lavender soap- very gentle, very restrained, and rather elegant for an Ardbeg. With water, there is a distinctive, flinty minerality, along with subtle hints of sweet peat smoke, malted barley, and a touch of toasting bread.

Palate A beautiful, creamy texture is followed by a lovely combination of flavours, with aniseed toffee, café latte, fennel and gentle antiseptic soap. The peat smoke is present, but in a very restrained manner, and leads into a lingering aftertaste with chewy oak, cocoa powder and tar.

Finish The peat smoke is present, but in a very restrained manner, and leads into a lingering aftertaste with chewy oak, cocoa powder and tar.

Discover Ardbeg

Ardbeg

There are distilleries whose character is shaped by intention, and others that seem almost claimed by their surroundings. Ardbeg Distillery belongs firmly to the latter. Founded in 1815 on Islay’s southern coast, it has endured long periods of dormancy, most notably in the late twentieth century, before its revival under Glenmorangie Company at the close of the 1990s. That modern resurgence did not attempt to soften its identity, but rather to reassert it with clarity and confidence.

Its position on the Kildalton shore places it among a small cluster of neighbours, though Ardbeg’s personality is distinctly its own. The Atlantic is never far removed, its influence carried inland on salt-laden air that mingles with the dense, phenolic smoke that defines the distillery’s output. The landscape is elemental, low-slung buildings set against peat bog and sea, with little in the way of ornament. Even the water source, drawn from Loch Uigeadail, passes through peat-rich ground, contributing further to the distillery’s unmistakable profile.

Production at Ardbeg is unapologetically focused. Malted barley, heavily peated to upwards of 50 ppm, provides the foundation, yet the resulting spirit is not simply forceful but remarkably precise. Long fermentations encourage citrus and estery brightness, while relatively slow distillation in tall, narrow-necked stills promotes a surprising delicacy within the weight of smoke. Maturation is centred on ex-bourbon casks, though sherry wood appears in select expressions, most notably in releases such as Uigeadail. The house style is often described in superlatives, but more accurately it is a study in contrast, dense peat intertwined with clarity, sweetness, and a certain mineral tension that keeps the whole composition in balance.

Whisky Folk Review

Our club members sampled this in September 2025 at Ardbeg Whisky Folk Exploration

The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.

4.6

Smoky & Earthy

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