First seen on Feb 28, 2025
The 11-years bottling opens malty-sweet and with aromas of smoked paprika, cinnamon, pear and mint. Of course, we also find the typical Lagavulin charred oak wood.
Peaty-sweet and massively dry, the Lagavulin tastes less heavy than the nose would have us expect. We are encountered with a dryness that makes us think of baking cocoa and coffee powder. Characterised by cereal aromas, the Scotch is very soft and well balanced - perhaps too soft for a Lagavulin? We perceive the Guinness cask with roasted malt aromas. Unfortunately, only in nuances.
The finish is dry and long with a fair amount of peat smoke, as we would expect from a Lagavulin.
Data from WHISKY:EDITION (CC BY 4.0)
STATE STORE #52