Caol Ila
Aged 12 Years
Single Malt Whisky
43% • 750ml • Islay
5 Bottles Remaining

Hidden away along the craggy eastern shores of Islay, just north of Port Askaig, Caol Ila operates with quiet industriousness. Its name, meaning “Sound of Islay” in Gaelic, refers to the narrow stretch of water that separates the island from Jura, a vista visible from the still house through enormous windows that seem almost reverent in their framing.
Founded in 1846, the distillery has undergone many transformations, including a complete rebuild in the 1970s. Yet despite its modern appearance and industrial scale, it continues to produce a whisky that is unmistakably Islay in character, though often more restrained than its southern counterparts. Historically, much of its output vanished into blends, particularly within the Johnnie Walker empire, but in recent decades its single malt has rightfully claimed more of the spotlight.
Caol Ila’s production leans toward precision. Long fermentations and tall stills encourage a lighter spirit, allowing the peat to express itself with clarity rather than brute force. The result is a dram that is smoky yet elegant, carrying notes of seaweed, smoked fish, lemon peel, and sometimes a hint of medicinal sweetness, all delivered with a silky texture that belies its strength.
Its location and scale make Caol Ila something of a workhorse, but its flavour suggests a quiet poet working overtime. For those who seek a whisky that captures the soul of Islay without raising its voice, Caol Ila offers a perfectly measured pour.
Founded in Elgin in 1895 by James Gordon and John Alexander MacPhail, Gordon & MacPhail began life not as a grand whisky house, but as a grocery and wine merchant, which feels somehow fitting. The company’s greatness lies partly in that old merchant sensibility: an eye for quality, a respect for provenance, and an understanding that time is often the most important ingredient in the room. Within a year, John Urquhart had joined the firm, and under his influence the business moved steadily into whisky broking, cask ownership, and bottling, establishing a model that would become one of the most revered in the independent bottling world.
What set Gordon & MacPhail apart was not merely access to casks, but the manner in which it used them. For decades, the company sent its own casks to distilleries across Scotland to be filled with new make spirit, then matured those casks either at the distillery or in its warehouses in Elgin. That gave it an unusual degree of influence over maturation, and helped create a vast archive of whisky from distilleries both famous and obscure, active and closed. In this sense, Gordon & MacPhail became not just a bottler, but a custodian of Scotland’s liquid history.
Its bottlings are typically marked by clarity and restraint: detailed age statements, cask information, and an emphasis on allowing distillery character to remain legible through long maturation. The company is also known for extraordinarily old releases, where patience is treated not as a marketing flourish, but as a house discipline. In recent years, Gordon & MacPhail has shifted its long-term focus toward its own distilleries, Benromach and The Cairn, and ceased filling casks at distilleries it does not own from 2024 onwards. Even so, its existing stocks are so extensive that whiskies under the Gordon & MacPhail name are expected to continue for decades, which seems entirely in keeping with a company that has always thought in generations rather than seasons.
The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.