Dalmore
Adelphi Selection
Single Malt Whisky
59.1% • 700ml • Highlands
5 Bottles Remaining
$179.91
Featured • Save 10%

St. Kilian is a thoroughly modern distillery with the curious good sense to have looked backward before it began. Founded in 2012 at Rüdenau in Bavaria, and brought into production on St Patrick’s Day 2016, it was conceived as a German whisky distillery working in a distinctly Scottish style, with Forsyth copper pot stills from Scotland and wooden washbacks lending the enterprise an air of deliberate traditionalism rather than mere imitation. The name itself nods to Saint Kilian, an Irish missionary associated with Franconia, which rather neatly suits a house that seems to delight in cultural triangulation: German engineering, Scottish method, a faint Irish echo in the background.
What makes St. Kilian interesting is not simply that it exists outside the usual whisky heartlands, but that it has embraced that position with considerable energy. The distillery works with both peated and unpeated German barley, uses double distillation, and has built its style through an energetic and sometimes exuberant use of cask types, including ex-bourbon, sherry, rum, wine, and other finishing woods. Its output has been broad from the start, with smoky and unpeated expressions alike, and the house character tends to favour intensity, texture, and a willingness to let wood play a visible role rather than merely standing politely at the back. If old Scottish distilleries often project inherited authority, St. Kilian has something else: the confidence of a newcomer that knows exactly what it admires, and is determined to prove that serious single malt need not be born in the Highlands to speak with conviction.
Adelphi has always had an air of old-world confidence about it, which is fitting enough given that the name itself reaches back to a lost Glasgow distillery of the nineteenth century. The modern company, however, began in 1993, when Jamie Walker revived Adelphi as an independent bottler, later passing into new ownership in 2004. What emerged from that revival was not a museum piece trading on Victorian dust, but a bottler with a sharp eye for cask selection and a rather exacting sense of style.
From the outset, Adelphi built its reputation on scarcity and discernment rather than breadth for its own sake. Its bottlings are typically selected as single casks or small batch releases, with an emphasis on texture, structure, and character over sheer familiarity. There is often a pleasing severity to the presentation: clear age statements where available, proper strength, and a general reluctance to smooth away a whisky’s edges for the sake of easy charm. In that sense, Adelphi has long appealed to drinkers who enjoy a whisky that still feels like a particular cask, rather than a carefully ironed brand profile.
The company’s later move into distilling through Ardnamurchan does not diminish its standing as a bottler, but rather gives it an interesting dual identity. Adelphi remains associated with thoughtful, limited releases from across Scotland, while its own distillery reflects the same values of transparency and precision that shaped the bottling arm in the first place. That continuity of philosophy is perhaps what makes Adelphi so compelling. It is not merely selecting whisky to sell, but selecting according to a house view of what whisky ought to be: characterful, honest, and never overworked.
The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.