Cameronbridge
2009 Signatory Vintage 100 Proof Edition #3
Single Grain Whisky
57.1% • 700ml • Lowlands
10+ Bottles Available

Cameronbridge sits in Fife, close to the River Leven, and it feels less like a quaint distillery visit and more like serious infrastructure. That is not a criticism. Grain whisky is the engine room of Scotch, and this is one of the biggest engines in the business.
It began in 1824, founded by John Haig, at a moment when whisky was starting to shift from farm craft to industry. By 1830 the site was already using the continuous distillation approach associated with Robert Stein, which tells you everything about its intentions: make a clean, consistent spirit at scale. Over time it became part of the bigger consolidation story of Scotch, including the Distillers Company Limited lineage, and today it is owned by Diageo.
The production is column distillation, tuned for a lighter style that blends beautifully. Cameronbridge feeds an astonishing amount of the industry, including major blends such as Johnnie Walker and J&B, and it also makes grain neutral spirit used in brands like Smirnoff, Tanqueray, Gordon's, and Pimm's. When it does step out under its own name, it tends to do so as single grain, historically as Cameron Brig and more recently via Haig Club, a reminder that even the workhorses can have charm when given time in cask.
Jean Boyer has always seemed to belong to that particularly French tradition of spirits merchants who treat whisky not merely as stock, but as something to be selected with appetite, curiosity, and a certain cultivated stubbornness. The company’s roots reach back to the work of Abbé Jean Boyer in the 1970s, but the present house, based in Saint-Geours-de-Maremne, was founded in 1994 and built its name through direct relationships with producers and a marked preference for authenticity over flash. From the beginning, it has had the air of a merchant bottler with strong opinions, less interested in grandeur than in finding whiskies that justify being bottled in the first place.
What gives Jean Boyer its particular character is the sense that it has never been confined to a single register. Over the years it has released several ranges, but Gifted Stills is especially emblematic of the house style. The series draws on distilleries across Scotland and tends to favour whiskies that show charm early, whether through freshness, precision, an elegant cask finish, or simply the quality of the distillate itself. Jean Boyer’s own description of the range emphasises well-mastered distillation and the idea that these are malts of immediate gustatory appeal, not ponderous trophies demanding ceremonial reverence. There is something rather appealing in that: a bottler willing to champion whisky for its liveliness as much as for its pedigree.
Gifted Stills also seems to illustrate Jean Boyer’s wider philosophy of selection. The bottlings have included a broad spread of distilleries and vintages, and the range has been noted for whiskies that feel clean, vivid, and close to the spirit rather than overworked by wood. That makes it less an exercise in swagger than in discernment. If some independent bottlers trade chiefly on austerity or brute rarity, Jean Boyer often gives the impression of aiming for drinkability without dumbing anything down, which is a subtler and, in its own way, more difficult achievement.
The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.