Listing of bottles of Blended Whisky
If it is not here, it doesn't exist!
Well, not exactly. This listing provides bottles of Blended Whisky that have been sold in the last years by some of the most reputated online retailers. If the bottle you are looking for isn't listed, you are looking for a quite unique bottle.
Hibiki
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Suntory Hibiki 12 Year Old Sample Blended Japanese Whisky
£6.35 -
Suntory Hibiki 17 year
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Suntory Hibiki 17 year
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Suntory Hibiki Japanese Harmony Sample Japanese Blended Whisky
£5.85 Ian Macleod
- “Ian Macleod and Company was founded on the 26th October 1933. Today the company produces a number of spirits products, though it is most centred on Scotch whisky. Leonard Russell Sr was a whisky broker and it was his family that acquired Ian Macleod on the 18th March 1963 with Peter Russell as the managing director. The first brand was acquired during that year, namely Isle of Skye blended whisky. Peter’s brother, David became the director in 1964 and he stayed with the company until 2000. Over the course of the 20th century, Ian Macleod acquired a gin brand as well as further Scotch brands. At the turn of the millennium, Watson’s rum was acquired and the named was changed to Ian Macleod Distillers in 2003 with the acquisition of the Glengoyne distillery and the Langs brand.”
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The Six Isles Blended Malt
Ichiro
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Ichiro's Malt Double Distilleries Japanese Blended Malt Whisky
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Ichiro's Malt& Grain
£72.55 Imperial
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Imperial / Hiram Walker / Bot.1970s Blended American Whiskey
Islay Mist
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Islay Mist 12 Year Old Blended Scotch Whisky
£30.45 -
Islay Mist Blended Scotch Whisky
£25.27 -
Islay Mist Deluxe
£25.27 -
Islay Mist Deluxe / Peated Blended Scotch Whisky
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Islay Mist Peated Reserve Blended Scotch Whisky
£24.45 Isle Of Skye
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Isle of Skye 21 Year Old / Pale Blue Decanter Blended Scotch Whisky
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Isle of Skye 50 Year Old Blended Scotch Whisky
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Isle of Skye 50 Year Old Blended Scotch Whisky / Bot.2008
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Isle of Skye 8 Year Old / Bot.1990s Blended Scotch Whisky
Jameson
- “When John Jameson a Scottish businessman [2] acquired the Bow Street Distillery in 1780 it was producing about 30,000 gallons annually. By the turn of the century it was the second largest producer in Ireland and one of the largest in the world producing a million gallons annually. Dublin at the time was the epicentre of world whiskey production. It was the second most popular spirit in the world after rum, and internationally Jameson had, by 1805, become the world's number one whiskey. Today Jameson is the third largest Single Distillery Whiskey in the world. Historical events, for a time, set the company back. The temperance movement in Ireland had an enormous impact domestically but the two key events that affected Jameson internationally were the Irish war of Independence and subsequent trade war with the British which denied Jameson the export markets of the Commonwealth, and shortly thereafter, the introduction of prohibition in the United States. While Scottish brands could easily slip across the Canadian border, Jameson was excluded from its biggest market for many years. It was also a fact that the introduction of basic grain whiskey production using column stills by the Scottish blenders in the mid 1800's enabled them to produce vast amounts of almost neutral flavoured components for blending with some malt whiskey. This enabled them to create low cost blends that the Irish, still using the original Pure Pot Still technique could not compete with. This differing opinion of what a true whiskey consisted of culminated in a legal enquiry in 1908. It was a huge turning point in the history of whiskey. The Scottish blenders won the case and the blend became recognised in law as being whiskey. The Irish in general and Jameson in particular stubbornly continued with the traditional Pure Pot Still production process for many years and, to this day, a large proportion of Jameson is still composed of Pure Pot Still component. Jameson also produces a special limited edition Pure Pot Still Whiskey, Redbreast to celebrate the ancient Irish whiskey making craft. In 1966 John Jameson joined forces with their rivals the Cork Distillers company and John Powers to form the Irish Distillers Group. The new Midleton distillery built by Irish Distillers now produces most of the Irish whiskey sold in Ireland. The new facility adjoins the old one, which is now a tourist attraction.”
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Jameson / Bar Bottle Blended Irish Whiskey
£122.09 -
Jameson / Bot.1970s Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson 12 Year Old / Bot.1970s Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson 12 Year Old / Bot.1970s Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson 12 Year Old Distillery Reserve Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson 15 Year Old / Bot.1970s Blended Irish Whiskey
£350.00 -
Jameson 15 Year Old / Bot.1970s Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson 15 Year Old / Special Reserve Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson 1780 / 12 Year Old / Bot.1980s Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson 18 Year Old Blended Irish Whiskey
£89.47 -
Jameson 18 Year Old Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson 7 Year Old / Bot.1960s Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson Caskmates Stout Edition Blended Irish Whiskey
£23.48 -
Jameson Crested Ten / Bot.1980s Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson Distillery Collection / Cooperage Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson Distillery Collection / Distillery Horse Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson Gold / Old Presentation Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson Irish Whiskey / Bar Bottle Blended Irish Whiskey
£40.99 -
Jameson Irish Whiskey / Half Litre Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson Irish Whiskey Miniature Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson Miniature Blended Irish Whiskey Miniature
£2.45 -
Jameson Select Reserve + 4 Glasses / Gift Pack Blended Irish Whiskey
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Jameson The Blender's Dog Blended Irish Whiskey
£49.73 -
Jameson The Cooper's Croze Blended Irish Whiskey
£49.73 -
Jameson The Distiller's Safe Blended Irish Whiskey
£49.73 -
Jameson with Copper Cup Blended Irish Whiskey
£24.45 -
Jameson"Marconi" Blended Irish Whiskey
Jim Beam
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Jim Beam Kentucky Dram / Litre Blended Whisky
£55.54 -
Jim Beam Kentucky Dram Sample Blended Whisky
£4.95 Johnnie Walker
- “Johnnie Walker is the story of a brand that started in a humble grocery at Scotland and became one of the best selling whisky company in the world. Johnnie Walker openend many countries to Scotch whisky: Keep walking. John Walker, born at Kilmarnock in 1805, was a shopkeeper at Kilmarnock, in Ayrshire, Scotland. He founded his grocery in 1819 with only fourteen years. John Walker managed to sell almost everything, even his own whisky, under the Walker’s Kilmarnock Whisky, which was surely a single or blended malt, as blended whisky was forbidden up to 1860. In 1843, with the arrival of the railway at Kilmarnock, John and his son Alexander realize the potential of the train for their enterprise. In 1860 they decide to use squared bottles, that remains an icon of the mark, together with the slanted johnnie walker label, that is inclined 24 degrees. Having squared bottles was good because they stock in less space and there were less broken bottles. Five years later, Alexander Walker create their first blend. Each type of blend: Old Highland Whisky, Special Old Highland Whisky and Extra Special Old Highland Whisky, had its label of a different color. Alexander so renamed each bottle according to their label color in 1909. In 1908, Tom Browne, a cartoonist, created during a meal the striding man, that has become the icon of Johnnie Walker to nowadays. More expressions were introduced, in 1920, Johnnie Walker Gold Label was created and it was a special blend given only to the most successfull directors of the brand and in 1932 Johnnie Walker Swing, a blend which bottle was specially created for ships so that the bottle would swing with the movement of the waves. In 1934, King George V gave the Royal Warrant, one of the highest distinctions in the United Kingdom. In 1966 they obtained too the Queen’s Award for export achievement. In 1991, they created Johnnie Walker Premier, a blend of malt and grain whiskies with many of them from closed distilleries. In an attempt to gain the premium market they created the Johnnie Walker Blue Label, that although it is non age statement whisky, contains many old whiskies some of them from already closed distilleries. Expanding the firm, Johnnie Walker Gold Label was introduced in 1995 and Johnnie Walker Green Label in 1997, which is a blended malt. In 2008, they created the Johnnie Walker Blue Label King George V, that contained whisky from oak casks that date of the period of king George V, the one that gave the royal warrant to Johnnie Walker. Now, Johnnie Walker is part of Diageo, and they no longer blend the whisky at Kilmarnock. Also Diageo announced that they were moving what remained of the production out of Kilmarnock too.”
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John Walker 1805 Celebration Blend Blended Scotch Whisky
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John Walker& Sons Private Collection / 2014 Edition Blended Whisky
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John Walker's Oldest (15 Year Old - 60 Year Old) Blended Scotch Whisky
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Johnnie Walker / Bill Amberg Blue Label Overnighter Blended Whisky
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Johnnie Walker / Bill Amberg Blue Label Traveller Bag Blended Whisky
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Johnnie Walker 12 Year Old - Black Label / Small Bottle Blended Whisky
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Johnnie Walker 12 Year Old - Black Label Blended Scotch Whisky
£27.73 -
Johnnie Walker 12 Year Old / Black Label / Bot.1980s Blended Whisky