Islay #3 (Laphroaig)

Boutique-y Batch 3

50.2% ABV • Whisky • 500ml • Sold Out

Single Malt Whisky from Islay in Scotland

$286.87 + tax and deposit

$272.53 for Whisky Folk Members

SOLD OUT

Out of stock

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PRODUCER
Laphroaig

BOTTLER
Independent Bottling by That Boutique-y Whisky Company

AGE
13 Years Aged

CASK TYPE
Unknown

RELEASE
Strath Exclusive In BC Small Batch Release Of 1479 Bottles

CHILL-FILTRATION
No

ADDED COLOUR
No

PEAT SMOKED
Yes

Tasting Notes From The Folks At Boutique-y

Nose: Lots of smoky aromas with a metallic tinge. An underlying fruity sweetness too; peaches and pineapple.
Palate: Sweet and smoky flavours fill the mouth but there’s also a lot of tropical fruit too. Honey sweetness.
Finish: A dry finish but with more sweet fruits emerging and lasting – there’s a final touch of that rich smoke too.

Tasting Notes From The Folks At Boutique-y

Nose: Lots of smoky aromas with a metallic tinge. An underlying fruity sweetness too; peaches and pineapple.
Palate: Sweet and smoky flavours fill the mouth but there’s also a lot of tropical fruit too. Honey sweetness.
Finish: A dry finish but with more sweet fruits emerging and lasting – there’s a final touch of that rich smoke too.

Discover Laphroaig

Laphroaig

Laphroaig’s reputation is so outsized that it can obscure the more interesting truth: beneath the medicinal smoke and maritime swagger lies a distillery shaped as much by stewardship as by peat. Founded in 1815 by Donald and Alexander Johnston on Islay’s south coast, it grew from a farm distillery into one of Scotland’s most distinctive names, helped along by a site whose relationship with sea, bog and weather feels less decorative than elemental. On the Kildalton shore, the Atlantic is not a view so much as a constant presence, and the land around it provides the peat that has long given Laphroaig its unmistakable medicinal, iodine-rich profile.

Its history, however, is not merely one of smoke and stubbornness, but of singular personalities, none more important than Bessie Williamson. Arriving in the 1930s as a temporary secretary, she went on to inherit the distillery in 1954, becoming the first woman to own and manage a Scotch whisky distillery in the twentieth century. More than a historical curiosity, she was instrumental in carrying Laphroaig beyond Islay and into wider international esteem, particularly at a time when single malt whisky had not yet become the category’s dominant romance. To write about Laphroaig without Bessie is rather like discussing a great house while omitting the architect who kept it standing.

Production remains rooted in the old grammar of Islay whisky. Laphroaig still malts a portion of its own barley on site, dries it with peat smoke, and distils in a notably large set of stills that help shape a spirit both oily and surprisingly precise. Maturation has long relied on ex-bourbon casks, though other woods appear in selected releases, and the resulting style is less brute force than studied contradiction: antiseptic and sweet, smoky and coastal, severe at first encounter yet deeply compelling thereafter. It is a whisky that seldom asks to be liked immediately, only understood.

Proudly Bottled By That Boutique-y Whisky Company

That Boutique-y Whisky Company arrived in 2012 with the good sense not to behave like a solemn old institution. Created by Atom Brands, it entered the whisky world with a rather different sort of confidence: playful in appearance, certainly, but serious in intent. Its now-familiar labels, drawn in a comic-book style and crowded with in-jokes, industry nods, and sly visual references, could easily have tipped into gimmickry in lesser hands. Instead, they became part of a broader identity, one that suggested whisky could be knowledgeable without becoming joyless, and distinctive without dressing itself in borrowed gravitas.

What has made the company endure is that the liquid has never been secondary to the label. The range has drawn from an unusually wide field, including Scotch single malt, grain whisky, bourbon, and other world whiskies, often from distilleries that are either seldom seen or no longer operating at all. That breadth has given the company a curatorial quality, less concerned with building a single house style than with presenting characterful spirits in small, memorable releases. It has also shown a marked preference for transparency, most notably when it moved away from non-age-statement labelling in favour of clearer age declarations, an unusually forthright step in an era when many producers were heading in the opposite direction.

If many independent bottlers trade on austerity, That Boutique-y Whisky Company has prospered by proving that wit and seriousness need not be enemies. Beneath the illustrated labels and slightly mischievous tone lies a firm understanding of what enthusiasts actually want: distinctive whisky, plainly presented, with enough individuality to justify its place on an increasingly crowded shelf. It manages, rather cleverly, to be both approachable and deeply insiderish, which is no small trick in whisky.

Other That Boutique-y Whisky Company Releases

Whisky Folk Review

As sampled by our members

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

4.4

Smoky & Earthy

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