Bunnahabhain
2013 Signatory Vintage VWF Cask
Single Malt Whisky
63.4% • 700ml • Islay
10+ Bottles Available
$163.39
Featured • Save 10%

Tucked into a quiet cove on Islay’s rugged northeast coast, Bunnahabhain feels almost like a secret kept by the sea. Far from the peated pageantry of its southern siblings, it has long charted a gentler course, offering a style of Islay whisky that whispers rather than bellows.
Founded in 1881 during the whisky boom, Bunnahabhain grew around its own tiny village, built to house the workers who tended the stills and warehouses in this remote spot north of Port Askaig. For much of the 20th century, it was known as a blending workhorse, its lighter spirit used to lend grace to the likes of Black Bottle. Yet those who sought out the single malt discovered something rare - an Islay whisky with a soft heart and a briny soul.
The distillery’s unpeated style (at least historically) stems from its tall stills and gentle distillation, which produce a spirit full of orchard fruit, coastal salt, and nutty sweetness. Maturation in sherry casks plays a prominent role, particularly in the beloved 12-year-old expression, where notes of dried fruit, toffee, and spice bloom against a backdrop of sea breeze and damp oak.
In more recent years, Bunnahabhain has added some peated variants to its range, proving that even the quietest voices can learn to roar. Yet its essence remains rooted in elegance, a maritime malt that favours nuance over noise and lingers like mist on the Sound of Islay.
There is a certain stubborn individuality to Blackadder, a sense that it has never felt obliged to follow prevailing fashion. Founded in 1995 by Robin Tucek, the company quickly established a reputation for doing things in a manner that was at once traditional and quietly contrarian. At a time when many bottlers were still content to present whisky in a polished, standardised form, Blackadder leaned instead toward immediacy, favouring bottlings that felt as close to the cask as possible.
That philosophy is most clearly expressed in its Raw Cask range, which has become something of a calling card. These whiskies are bottled with minimal intervention, often containing visible flecks of charred oak from the cask itself, a deliberate choice rather than a lapse in filtration. The intention is not theatricality, but fidelity, an attempt to present whisky in a state that reflects its maturation environment as directly as possible. It is a divisive approach in some quarters, yet it has given Blackadder a distinct identity among independent bottlers, one rooted in texture, variation, and a refusal to overly refine.
Beyond Raw Cask, the company’s releases span a wide spectrum of Scotch and international whisky, often in small batches or single casks, with an emphasis on individuality over uniformity. There is rarely an attempt to impose a house style beyond that guiding principle of minimal interference. In this sense, Blackadder operates less as a curator of consistency and more as a champion of whisky’s irregularities, presenting each cask with its edges intact. It is a quietly uncompromising stance, and one that has earned the company a loyal following among drinkers who prefer their whisky unvarnished and unhurried.
The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.