A voyage across Scotland's most storied distilling regions. Three expressions from three distinct houses—each shaped by its own water source, barley, peat, and generations of craft. Taste them side by side to discover how the land itself becomes the spirit.
From the northernmost distillery in Scotland, where Atlantic winds and Orcadian peat forge a spirit of remarkable balance. Heather-honey sweetness meets gentle smoke in a dram that speaks of wild, windswept islands.
Heather honey, gentle peat smoke, dried orange peel, vanilla oak
Warm honey, aromatic smoke, dark chocolate, toasted malt, cinnamon spice
Long and warming, smoky sweetness fading to gentle oak and sea salt
The gentle side of Islay. Bunnahabhain defies the island's smoky reputation with an unpeated malt of surprising elegance—maritime freshness, sherry cask richness, and a coastal character unlike any other.
Fresh sea air, dried fruits, toffee, roasted nuts, hints of sherry
Rich malt, dark fruit, walnuts, gentle brine, brown sugar
Medium-long, nutty and sweet with a salty coastal edge
Straddling the Highland Line, Glengoyne is one of Scotland's slowest distilleries. No peat, no hurry. Air-dried barley and the slowest distillation in Scotland produce a malt of extraordinary clarity and fruit-forward sweetness.
Green apples, toffee, vanilla, fresh oak, subtle floral notes
Crisp malt, stewed apples, butterscotch, cinnamon, nutmeg
Clean and sweet, lingering toffee apple with gentle oak warmth
Three distilleries. Three stories. One flight. Experience the Highland Passage for yourself.