Jura
14 Year Old American Rye Cask
Single Malt Whisky
40% • 750ml • Islands
10+ Bottles Available
$89.48
Featured • Save 10%

Few distilleries wear their geography quite so literally as Jura. The island itself contains barely a few hundred inhabitants, more deer than one can sensibly count, and a single road that seems less engineered than politely persuaded into existence. For long stretches of the twentieth century, the local distillery sat silent, its buildings slipping into the melancholy dignity that abandoned Scottish industrial sites often acquire. Then, in the early 1960s, two local landowners, Robin Fletcher and Tony Riley-Smith, resolved that if Jura were to retain a viable community, it needed industry as much as romance. The distillery was rebuilt almost entirely anew, reopening in 1963 and becoming, in a very real sense, an act of island preservation rather than mere whisky production.
Architect William Delmé-Evans designed the stillhouse with unusually tall stills whose elegant necks encourage a notably light and oily spirit, quite distinct from many of its Hebridean neighbours. Jura’s whisky has long occupied a curious middle ground, neither aggressively maritime nor entirely inland in character. There is often a gentle waxiness, a thread of nuts and citrus, and, in peated expressions, smoke that tends toward hearth embers rather than medicinal drama.
Water arrives from the lofty Paps of Jura, filtering through peat on its descent, though peat itself historically played a surprisingly restrained role in the spirit. American oak ex-bourbon casks form the backbone of maturation, frequently joined by sherry wood, wine casks, or more exotic finishes in modern releases. Over the decades Jura has moved through various ownerships, including Whyte & Mackay, yet the distillery’s essential identity remains tied to the island itself: remote, slightly eccentric, quietly resilient, and impossible to mistake for anywhere else.
Hunter Laing has the reassuring air of a family firm that knows exactly what it is about. Established in 2013 by Stewart Laing after the division of Douglas Laing, the company carried forward not only decades of experience in the whisky trade but also a substantial inherited culture of cask selection, blending, and bottling. Its own account places the family in the Scotch whisky business for more than three generations, which helps explain the sense of continuity that runs through the range.
What has distinguished Hunter Laing is its preference for clarity over fuss. The portfolio includes Old Malt Cask, a long-running series of rare and older malts bottled at 50% ABV, alongside the Old & Rare range for cask strength bottlings of greater age and gravitas. There are also more accessible lines such as Hepburn’s Choice and Highland Journey, giving the company a breadth of offering without losing its identity as a bottler concerned with provenance and character. The emphasis is less on theatrical presentation than on letting cask, distillery, and age speak plainly.
In recent years, Hunter Laing has added a distilling chapter of its own through Ardnahoe on Islay, the company’s first distillery. That move feels less like a change of course than a natural extension of the same family ambition: to remain deeply involved in whisky not only at the point of selection and maturation, but at the beginning of the process as well. Even so, the core appeal of Hunter Laing remains much as it has always been, a house style built not around uniformity, but around the conviction that individual casks, honestly presented, are interesting enough on their own.
The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.