
Kilchoman Whisky Flight
Kilchoman is actually the first distillery on the island of Islay in over 124 years! Kilchomanâs founder, Anthony Wills, loves tradition (and great Scotch). He revived farm distillation, a lost art predating mass distilleries in the 1800s.
On that farm, they harvest Islayâs fertile grounds for barley before using the traditional floor-malting method. The barley is peated with ocean-soaked peat bogs, then mashed, fermented, and matured in bourbon barrels and sherry butts from the world-renowned Buffalo Trace distillery and Bodega Miguel Martin.
Oh, and this stuffâs the real deal: Kilchomanâs 100% Islay range remains the only Islay Single Malt produced completely on-site, from barley to bottle.
Kilchoman Sanaig Single Malt Scotch Whisky is a spirited ode to a babbling brook that meanders near the distillery. Aged in both ex-bourbon and Oloroso sherry casks, Sanaig offers a complex profile of peaty smoke intertwined with the sweetness of raisins and dark chocolate.
Kilchoman Machir Bay is the crown jewel of the Kilchoman fleet. A gold-medal champion that's as complex as it is captivating, Machir Bay charts a course through unchartered waters with its vatting of young spirits matured in bourbon casks and finished in Oloroso barrels. Itâs an Islay Scotch, yes, but not as you know it.
Kilchoman Batch Strength is a titan among whiskies; matured in a mĂ©lange of re-charred red wine casks, Oloroso sherry butts, and bourbon barrels, melding the fiery zest of Kilchomanâs natural peat smoke with the opulent tapestry of dark fruits, rich spices, and salted caramel, all encased in a strength of 57% abv.Â
Taste the heartbeat of a new era. Hereâs to Islayâs young guns!
Â
Smartass Corner
1) To be considered a Single Malt Scotch, a bottle may only contain whisky distilled from malted barley and produced at a single distillery. Â
2) Good things come in small batches: Kilchoman is one of the smallest Scotch distilleries, producing around 120,000 liters a year. By comparison, Ardbegâone of Islayâs most famous distilleriesâpumps out over one million liters annually.
3) All they do is win, win, win: Kilchomanâs Machir Bay, a vatting of four and five-year-old bourbon cask matured and Oloroso-finished malt, was awarded a Gold Medal at the 2012 International Wine and Spirit Competition and named Whisky of the Year at the International Whisky Competition.Â
4) âSanaigâ is the name of a little natural stream that runs by the distillery. And it makes sense for Kilchomanâs eponymous bottleâit tastes light and fresh without losing its peaty Islay character.
5) The island of Islay itself plays a large role in the taste of its whiskies. Thatâs because Islay is largely composed of peat. In fact, most of the water there has a brown-ish hue due to its abundance. But thatâs not allâthe winter gales that blow sea salt inland also factor into some of the briney notes youâll find in their whiskies.
6) What exactly is peat? Peat is thousands of yearsâ worth of decaying vegetation, animals and moss which have evolved into layers that eventually form a bog. It grows at approximate 1mm per year, meaning a bog thatâs one meter thick has been around for about a thousand years.
7) Ever heard someone say that got âblind drunkâ? The term comes from the product of early whisky distilling practices. Brewers didnât realize the beer they were condensing into liquor contained methanol, a raw form of antifreeze that made people blind.
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Description
Kilchoman is actually the first distillery on the island of Islay in over 124 years! Kilchomanâs founder, Anthony Wills, loves tradition (and great Scotch). He revived farm distillation, a lost art predating mass distilleries in the 1800s.
On that farm, they harvest Islayâs fertile grounds for barley before using the traditional floor-malting method. The barley is peated with ocean-soaked peat bogs, then mashed, fermented, and matured in bourbon barrels and sherry butts from the world-renowned Buffalo Trace distillery and Bodega Miguel Martin.
Oh, and this stuffâs the real deal: Kilchomanâs 100% Islay range remains the only Islay Single Malt produced completely on-site, from barley to bottle.
Kilchoman Sanaig Single Malt Scotch Whisky is a spirited ode to a babbling brook that meanders near the distillery. Aged in both ex-bourbon and Oloroso sherry casks, Sanaig offers a complex profile of peaty smoke intertwined with the sweetness of raisins and dark chocolate.
Kilchoman Machir Bay is the crown jewel of the Kilchoman fleet. A gold-medal champion that's as complex as it is captivating, Machir Bay charts a course through unchartered waters with its vatting of young spirits matured in bourbon casks and finished in Oloroso barrels. Itâs an Islay Scotch, yes, but not as you know it.
Kilchoman Batch Strength is a titan among whiskies; matured in a mĂ©lange of re-charred red wine casks, Oloroso sherry butts, and bourbon barrels, melding the fiery zest of Kilchomanâs natural peat smoke with the opulent tapestry of dark fruits, rich spices, and salted caramel, all encased in a strength of 57% abv.Â
Taste the heartbeat of a new era. Hereâs to Islayâs young guns!
Â
Smartass Corner
1) To be considered a Single Malt Scotch, a bottle may only contain whisky distilled from malted barley and produced at a single distillery. Â
2) Good things come in small batches: Kilchoman is one of the smallest Scotch distilleries, producing around 120,000 liters a year. By comparison, Ardbegâone of Islayâs most famous distilleriesâpumps out over one million liters annually.
3) All they do is win, win, win: Kilchomanâs Machir Bay, a vatting of four and five-year-old bourbon cask matured and Oloroso-finished malt, was awarded a Gold Medal at the 2012 International Wine and Spirit Competition and named Whisky of the Year at the International Whisky Competition.Â
4) âSanaigâ is the name of a little natural stream that runs by the distillery. And it makes sense for Kilchomanâs eponymous bottleâit tastes light and fresh without losing its peaty Islay character.
5) The island of Islay itself plays a large role in the taste of its whiskies. Thatâs because Islay is largely composed of peat. In fact, most of the water there has a brown-ish hue due to its abundance. But thatâs not allâthe winter gales that blow sea salt inland also factor into some of the briney notes youâll find in their whiskies.
6) What exactly is peat? Peat is thousands of yearsâ worth of decaying vegetation, animals and moss which have evolved into layers that eventually form a bog. It grows at approximate 1mm per year, meaning a bog thatâs one meter thick has been around for about a thousand years.
7) Ever heard someone say that got âblind drunkâ? The term comes from the product of early whisky distilling practices. Brewers didnât realize the beer they were condensing into liquor contained methanol, a raw form of antifreeze that made people blind.











