That Boutique-y Whisky Co Blends

In early 2019, I decided it would be fun to invest in a special tasting set for those quiet times between tasting sessions. My choice was to go super unique with the That Boutique-y Whisky Company 2018 Advent Calendar. 

Then my life changed with a move from India to Germany, followed by the world changing with COVID. Fast forward to the fall of 2025, when I was packing and unpacking and repacking between Germany, two homes in India, and Canada… I found myself on our Maharashtra farm contemplating a potential weekend getaway in Manitoba and remembered this delightful box full of quirky and curious drams!

My Manitoba getaway companion is a fellow whisky lady plus our fabulous cottage host, who also enjoys a good dram or two! As I would be just missing her birthday, I decided to pack a few drams to enjoy together in a quiet celebration! Even better – they could be considered an early “appetizer” for the 2025 Whisky Show in London coming up the following weekend! I remembered a brilliant exploration of special blends with TBWC at the Whisky Show in 2022 plus an exceptional 45 year blended grain featured in Paris Live!

What did I pick?

After so much time, it was tough to track down official bottle images and tasting notes; however, I could find a few insights into what the good folks at TBWC had to say about two expressions!

I decided to start with the Japanese and Scottish blend… with no idea what to expect! Here are our impressions, splitting a wee 30 ml mini between three!

Blend of Scottish and Japanese malt and grain whiskies 21 Year Old (2018) Batch 1, 43%

  • Nose – Oh my! Lots of bananas, caramel, ripe fruits, a sweet tropical fruit bowl, and warm vanilla cream. As it opened, it even had a caramel buttery quality.
  • Palate – Light chilli spice plus chai masala – mostly cloves, joined by coffee mocha, chased by nutty nougat
  • Finish – Lingers with an espresso tail, hint of wood

Overall, we enjoyed this one. It had a nice balance between sweet and spice. Nothing complex, and one described it as particularly promising on the nose, hints of sherry cask; however, it “flatlined’ after some time.

Whilst I couldn’t find tasting notes in That Boutique-y Whisky Company’s archive, Master of Malt has this to say:

The very first bottling of Blended Whisky made using malt and grain whisky from Scotland and Japan is here! This 21 year old expression is a globe-spanning delight, with oodles of vanilla and cooking spice notes alongside a deft touch of smoke. Also, the label is generally just rad, so that’s a plus.

Tasting Note by The Chaps at Master of Malt

  • Nose: A very malty nose opens with Seville orange marmalade and buttered burnt toast. There’s some vanilla, juicy toasted barley and a touch of donuts underneath. Charred oak and red chilli add warmth and savoury spice throughout.
  • Palate: Nutmeg and clove add a drying spice which contributes depth to butterscotch and hazelnuts. There’s a subtle tropical fruit note underneath.
  • Finish: Medium length, with touches of burnt oak.

Next, we turned our tasting towards a young Scottish expression… I began with what was their #4 expression – the youngest of the bunch!

Blended Malt Scotch Whisky 4 B1.jpg

Scottish Blended Malt #4 6 Year Old (February 2018) Batch 1, 53.6%

  • Nose – Fresh and light, youthful apple cinnamon, lemon drops, bay leaf, slipping into wet leaves, dark molasses treacle, and more vegetal elements
  • Palate – Sour mash, pepper, with the sense that it simply wasn’t really ready to be bottled
  • Finish – Limited

Alas, a massive disappointment after a potentially interesting nose. Now, in fairness, we were three people sampling from a 30 ml miniature. However, given that is the 10 ml Whisky Show pour, we certainly should have enough to get an impression!

What do the folks at TBWC have to say?

This time it’s almost exclusively a single malt from one of our more recently built Scottish distilleries that’s been ‘teaspooned’ (that to say, an imponderable amount of another well-loved single malt has been added). All hail Superspoon who is out to save the world!

Tasting notes:

  • Nose: Sourdough bread mix and waxy floral notes. It’s a little herbal/vegetal at first, damp grass, buts sweetens with time giving butterscotch. Hints of cinnamon too.
  • Palate: Cream soda, dessert wine grapes and some bramley apple tartness. A hot peppery kick then sweetening with vanilla buttercream.
  • Finish: Sweetened chocolate malt, with a hint of barrel char.

After a youthful 6 year, I thought it would be nice to shift back to something a wee bit more mature… This just so happens to be the 1st Blended Whisky expression from their 3rd batch. What did we think?

Scottish Blended Malt #1 18 Year Old (2018) Batch 3, 47.3% 1,049 Bottles

  • Nose – Lightly fruity, soapy and floral, summer Scotch, vanilla, yet then becomes oddly musty or dusty, like a neglected wood closet
  • Palate – Different – from the sprightly aromas, we weren’t anticipating something quite so “charged up”. Lots of pepper and a few flashes of fruit, imbalanced
  • Finish – Stays, but doesn’t say much – a bit peppery and then perhaps sweet

I managed to track down a photo from Batch 3, however, try as I might, I could only find tasting notes for this expression from Master of Malt, who had this to say:

It’s another brilliant blended malt Scotch whisky from That Boutique-y Whisky Company! As you can see on the label, all those whisky fans are admiring the glory of the teaspoon, in reference to this being a “teaspooned whisky”. It’s made almost completely with malt whisky from one distillery, along with just a tiny bit of malt whisky from another distillery. This way it may no longer have which distillery it came from on the label, nor can it be sold as a single malt. However, they do then to be rather brilliant value for money, hence those rather charmed whisky lovers!

Tasting Note by The Chaps at Master of Malt

  • Nose – Rich with honey and poached pear, alongside a good helping of mature oak. Slowly but surely dried fruit and fresh peels take control of the nose.
  • Palate – Honeycomb, milk chocolate, sultana, stem ginger and black pepper.
  • Finish – Continued peppery malt, tempered by the return of the honeycomb and some floral air.

Next up, we continued to the Blended Whisky 2nd expression, also a few years older. Given the earlier ones were a wee bit disappointing, we hoped for something a bit more up our palate “alley”.

Blended Whisky #2 22 Year Old - Batch 3 (That Boutique-y Whisky Company).jpg

Scottish Blended Whisky #2 22 Year Old (May 2022) Batch 3, 41.8% 1,650 Bottles

  • Nose – Yummy! Chocolate, mocha, rum raisins, caramel – more specifically salted caramel pretzels
  • Palate -The espresso follows through, heavier than the nose, dark red fruits
  • Finish -A touch of marmalade joins a gentle sweet spice finish

We remarked that this was like Hallowe’en candy, preparing for Christmas. Really quite delicious and one we fully appreciated!

Here’s what TBWC have to say:

This right here is our Blended Whisky #2, which is rather different to Blended Whisky #1. There’s no massive sphere here, but the disembodied glove has returned! This time, it looks to have discovered a massive, soft planetoid. It’s another one of those metaphors!

Tasting note:

  • Nose: Honey, oak, vanilla pod and chocolatey cereal.
  • Palate: Cherry, spiced rum, thick caramel and a hint of earthy pear.
  • Finish: Menthol, freshly baked bread with chocolate spread, orange oil.

In closing, we progressed to the 3rd TBWC Scottish Blended Whisky expression, from their 1st Batch.

blended-whisky-3-23-year-old-batch-1-that-boutique-y-whisky-company-whisky.jpg

Scottish Blended Whisky #3, 23 Year Old (2018) Batch 1, 48.2%

  • Nose – Mellons, complex and mature, nuanced, layered, creamy hot milk chocolate, salted caramel, walnuts, cherries, buttery, vanilla pods, rich fruits
  • Palate -Soft and silky, a great mouthfeel, joined by warm honey, soft fruits
  • Finish – Melting in your mouthmilk chocolate, long with a hint of smoke curling at the end

Gorgeous. Finally. The kind of dram that envelops you in a warm, comforting blanket by the fire and be lulled to sleep. It was both a class act, beautiful, and yet at the same time unpretentious and comfortable. The sample was simply too little as we would have loved to settle down to enjoy it for the rest of the evening.

Here are the original TBWC tasting notes:

The disembodied gloves from Blended Whisky #1 and #2 continue to explore the deep reaches of space on the label of Blended Whisky #3! On this label, they’ve found something rather curious indeed – a length of chrome which seems to go on forever… Metaphors? Metaphors!

Tasting note:

  • Nose: Rich and fragrant, with old oak furniture and red grapes on the vine. Intense orange oil later on.
  • Palate: Honey’d cereals, dark chocolate and crumbly biscuits. A little bit of vegetal oak in there.
  • Finish: Very long, with further indulgent notes of dark chocolate and cigar box.

What an interesting quintet! Whilst we were clearly partial to the 4th and 5th, less enthused about the 2nd and 3rd, it was well worth doing!

We closed our evening moving into a different direction – still a blend but this time a mix of malts from 6 Isles. As the temperature dipped, the fire burned, shifting into a peaty expression was just right!

You can find even more Whisky bits ‘n bobs on:

2025 Whisky Show in London

It has become an annual pilgrimage to London to join The Whisky Exchange’s Whisky Show. One I really don’t want to miss! Yes, it is a dizzying array of 1,000+ drams, an opportunity to discover new entrants, revisit distilleries you thought you knew, learn from industry experts, kibbitz with fellow whisky aficionados… for me, above all, it is an opportunity to spend quality time with a dear friend as we explore together a shared interest.

Over the coming months, I invite you to join our journey… hopefully giving you a sense of what we were lucky enough to experience over two days early October 2025.

Day 1

Day 2

  • Breakfast drams – explore new Arran releases
  • Tamdhu flight
  • Checking out a pre-official launch new entrant: Aberargie
  • Ichiro’s Malts and Chichibu
  • Revisiting Deanston
  • Dream Drams Glen Grant birth year pair – 1961 25 year + 1969 49 year
  • Annandale unpeated expressions
  • Canada’s Macaloney’s
  • Decadent Dram‘s lovely lowland Blandnoch
  • Finland’s Teerenpelli
  • Norway’s Bivrost
  • Sweden’s High Coast
  • Show close, with Duncan Taylor’s Octave expressions

We also thoroughly enjoyed three Mainstage sessions:

  • Independent bottling with Dawn Davies and Adelphi, Thomkins, Heart Cut
  • Nordic‘s discussion about the influence of location with Billy Abbott and Thy, Bivrost, Feddies
  • Island‘s impact on the approach to whisky with Dave Bloom and Harris, Scapa, and Spirit of Hven

I won’t be rushed to push out impressions of 100+ drams. Instead, I will savour anew the glimpses into different whisky styles, the conversations and insights, sharing bit by bit. So sit back, relax, and hopefully enjoy the show!

Interested in catching more? Why not follow Whisky Lady on:

BMC Scottish Classics – Royal Brackla 16 year 40% + Glen Grant 15 year 50%

After exploring a trio from South Africa, our Bombay Malt & Cigar evening closed on a classic note. Whilst I thoroughly enjoy exploring whisky experiments and drams from many lands, there is simply nothing like a good classic Scottish single malt.

Knowing this, our whisky host added two well-known standards:

  • Royal Brackla 16 year and
  • A new batch strength Glen Grant 15 year expression

Both were Original Bottlings… Both true treats!

What did we think?

Royal Brackla 16 year “The Cawdor Estate” 40% 

  • Nose – Oh yes! Those lovely orchard fruits you can count on with a Royal Brackla! Crisp green apple, juicy with a drizzle of honey
  • Palate – Soft, well-rounded, fruity, enveloping one in a delicious warmth
  • Finish – Simply dripping with honey

Such a perfect classic, easy drinking dram.

Glen Grant 15 year Batch Strength 50% 

  • Nose – Happiness! A delightful, sweet, and fruity aroma with lemony high notes, morphed into a delicious lemon custard, dessert in a glass! The more it opened, the more joyful it became! Ice cream sandwich, cookies and cream, malty biscuits, lemon sorbet with vodka!
  • Palate – Same vein as the nose, nicely rounded, a good mouth feel, very approachable for 50%, just enough kick to make it interesting
  • Finish – Lovely
  • Water – Just adds a bit of spice

What can one say? Really rather nice!

If you don’t want to miss a post, why not follow Whisky Lady on:

Whisky Lady – July til September 2025

This has been a relatively slow quarter whisky-wise – both tastings and sharing notes. Largely in Germany, miraculously, my focus on learning German led to passing my B1 exams – woo hoo! Things began to pick up with travels – starting with a flight home to India late August, then Canada mid-September, and coming up – a trip to London for the 2025 Whisky Show!

Whisky-wise, the quarter began with a low-key wander through a few open bottles in Nürnberg. This was followed by an evening exploring Lambay Cognac Cask 43% and Gordon & Macphail’s Auchriosk 10 year 43% – yum! I also had a chance to pit India’s answer from the big boys – Diageo’s Godawan with Pernod Ricard’s Longitude 77.

Coming back to India for September had perfect timing! I could join BOTH a Whisky Ladies and BMC session after such a long time!

For the Whisky Ladies evening, it was a welcome back and farewell combined! I just missed our 10-year anniversary celebration in August; however, I was so happy to join a special evening in Powai. Unfortunately for us, our delightful host is now moving to Manila. As for the whiskies explored?

  • Slyrs Amontillado Cask 46%A delicious Rumtopf dram with plenty of boozy stewed fruits, spice kick for a quick nip!
  • Baltach Wismaria Single Malt 43% A decided “No” from my side, however, its briny, fungal, tannery style may find a few fans who enjoy a maritime style on steroids! 
  • Miyagikyo Grande 48%Miyagikyo dialed up — still elegant, still fruity and floral, but with a richer backbone and more presence.

With a bonus bourbon – Grass Widow Straight Bourbon Madeira 45.5%.

This was followed by an evening with the BMC gents focused on a trio from South Africa followed by a pair of Sweet (almost) 16!

Thanks to a trip to Canada, I managed to have a lovely weekend getaway in a cabin – naturally accompanied by a wee whisky tasting with a few specially selected samples from That Boutique-y Whisky Co’s 2018 Advent Calendar.

  • Blend of Scottish and Japanese malt and grain whiskies 21 Year Old, Batch 1, 43%
  • Scottish Blended Malt #4 6 Year Old Batch 1, 53.6%
  • Scottish Blended Malt #1 18 Year Old, Batch 3, 47.3%
  • Scottish Blended Whisky #2 22 Year Old Batch 3, 41.8%
  • Scottish Blended Whisky #3, 23 Year Old Batch 1, 48.2%

Curious to know more? Check out a few more summaries:

If you don’t want to miss a post, why not follow Whisky Lady on:

BMC Trip to South Africa – Boplaas, Drayman’s, Three Ships  

A few years ago, we had a fabulous family wedding in South Africa. It was a magical and memorable moment. More recently in Germany, friends and I joined an evening organised by Hawelti featuring 8 whiskies from Africa!

So when I learned our focus for our Bombay Malt & Cigar evening for September 2025 was South Africa – the concept fell on fertile ground.

Just click on the links below for full tasting notes!

You would think this should be enough, right? Nope! Our whisky host knew these drams could be dicey, so to cover all bases, added another two favourites – call it a theme of Sweet (almost!) 16!

Curious to know more? Why not follow Whisky Lady on:

BMC Trip to South Africa – Three Ships 10 year 46.3%

Our host had high hopes for this 10 year old single malt whisky from Three Ships. He had been informed that Three Ships from the James Sedgwick Distillery is “the” single malt from South Africa. What did we find?

Three Ships 10 year 46.3%

  • Nose – Fresh, then becomes like sanitizer, chemical, moved into fresh wood, cardboard, cinnamon powder, cardamom, hay
  • Palate – Decidedly funky, quite odd, wax seal, blend of cinnamon and other sweet spices, and wood
  • Finish – Spice yet non-descript

We set it aside, in hopes that after more time in the glass, it would evolve in a more positive direction. Nope! Instead, it took on aromas of rubber bands, iodine, and plaster. Pity.

What did they have to say about this special release?

  • Nose – Complex with delicate sweet notes from the sherry cask which lifts the nose with prunes, dates, figs and fruit cake and combines effortlessly with the elegant smokiness of the malt
  • Palate – The flavours unravel slowly to reveal smoke, pepper, roasted malt and fruit
  • Finish – Lingers impressively long and the sweet notes mingle comfortably with the peaty finish

Oh my! Were we experiencing the same whisky? We certainly did not find many elements described.

That shared, I had a more positive impression of the 12 year expression – sampled earlier in the year at an evening devoted to a range of whiskies from Africa.

Curious what we thought of the others? Read on…

Curious to know more? Why not follow Whisky Lady on:

BMC Trip to South Africa – Drayman’s 5 year Single Malt 43%

We began our evening exploring whiskies from South Africa with a grain from Boplaas before shifting into a “proper” single malt from Pretoria. Starting as a beer microbrewery, Draymans Brewery & Spirits expanded into wine, liqueurs, and whisky.

 

Drayman’s 5 year Single Malt French Oak Reserve 43%

  • Nose – What fun! Lots of candy sweet, caramel custard, pear drops, a bit of acetone, think “Juicy Fruit” gum, a mix of peach, pear, and a generic “mixed fruit”, cream, gooseberries, cakes, cereal
  • Palate – The opposite of the aromas – a range of spices from black pepper to cayenne powder, sour salty plum, churan with its sweet and sour mix of fruits, herbs and minerals, chaat masala, nuts and coca
  • Finish – Paprika, sugar beet sweet, relatively short

There was a youthful exuberance to this dram. The nose was a honeyed delight, and the palate a surprising contrast, with the finish a mix of both! No surprise – this was the front-runner of the South African trio tasted that fine evening in Mumbai.

Curious what we thought of the others? Read on…

Curious to know more? Why not follow Whisky Lady on:

BMC Trip to South Africa – Boplaas 6 year Grain 43%

Grains are tricky! They are less expensive to produce than single malts and form the backbone of blends. However, often grains – especially younger ones – struggle to stand on their own.

Boplaas is a family-owned wine and spirit producer, located in Calitzdorp in the Klein Karoo region of South Africa. The Net family began their operations in 1989 with brandy, before moving into wines and now grain whisky. Their grain of choice is yellow maize, matured in ex-bourbon casks before finishing in their own tawny port casks.

Believe it or not, this was not my first introduction to Boplaas grain from South Africa! Earlier in the year, Hawelti introduced me to their 5 year old expression. I was curious to see what one more year could do and the reaction of our Bombay Malt & Cigar gents during our September 2025 tasting of South African drams!

Boplaas 6 year Grain 43%

  • Nose – No mistaking this is a grain! It was sweet, a bit funky, had some pencil shavings, some cloves, a hint of fruits
  • Palate – Light, easy-going and innocuous, clean and super sweet, a touch sharp, mild oak
  • Finish – Also very sweet

Let’s be honest, we weren’t expecting anything complex. However, I’ve had far worse young grains! Whilst not something I would run out to buy more of, it was worth sampling.

What do the folks at Boplaas have to say?

Our history of distilling fine pot still brandy dates back to 1880, with the first order of casks was sent to Cape Town harbour by ox-wagon for delivery to London. After the repeal of distilling licenses in the early 1920’s, Boplaas’ copper pot still lay dormant for almost 70 years until it was fired up again in 1989. Five years later, in 1994, Boplaas released the very first estate brandy: the Boplaas 5 Year Old Pot Still Estate Brandy. Due to dry warm summers, cold winters and general low humidity, the environment is ideal for the maturation of brandy and whisky, resulting in a far more concentrated spirit.

  • Nose: This is a whisky for savouring. The multi-layered nose shows a fruitcake nose tinged with winter spices, most notably cloves and cardamom, and highlights of cocoa bean, desiccated figs, rich apricots and raisins.
  • Tasting Notes: Tawny character blooms on the palate – it’s bold, rounded and viscous, with a pleasant balance of yellow-fruit sweetness and oak spice that lingers.

Not sure we found all the elements they describe, however, it was overall quite a pleasant start to our evening exploring whiskies from South Africa.

Curious to know more? Why not follow Whisky Lady on:

Whisky Ladies – Slyrs, Baltech, Miyagikyo  

It was a wonderful welcome back to India, joining a Whisky Ladies of Mumbai evening in a high-rise in Powai! The evening theme was “These are a few of my favourite things!” featuring a delicious array of tempting appetizers, fabulous mains, and thoroughly indulgent dessert!

Of course, the whiskies were the main attraction! Our host shared how she joined the Whisky Ladies courtesy of a member originally from Germany. In her honour, she selected two whiskies from Germany – A Slyrs Amontillado Cask from Bavaria and a virtually unknown spirits distillery from the Ostsee (aka Baltic Sea) – Baltach Wismaria Whisky. She then shared how much she loves Japan, so found in duty-free a special Nikka edition featuring their Miyagikyo single malt.

And whilst not part of the core 3, she rounded our evening out with a bonus bourbon from Detroit – Grass Widow Madeira.

Curious to know more about our explorations? Just click on the links below for full tasting notes!

Our evening was bittersweet as our host is about to embark on her next adventure – to Manila, Philippines! And I reflected back on how fortunate I’ve been wihisky-wise to have been in Europe – where there is tremendous experimentation taking place and an explosion of distilleries either focused on whisky or adding it to the mix of other spirits.

Curious to know more? Why not follow Whisky Lady on:

Detroit’s Grass Widow Straight Bourbon Madeira 45.5% 

A bonus is just that – something you didn’t plan for or expect. And when that bonus is a completely unknown yet quite decent bourbon? Bring it on!

None of us were familiar with “Grass Widow” – including our host – who received it as a gift from Corktown, Detroit! Turns out this bourbon comes from Two James Spirits, and is described as:

An homage to a pre-prohibition Detroit brand, Grass Widow Bourbon contains a high-rye mash bill and is then finished in Madeira casks to give it a long finish.

Truly a Wine-drinker’s bourbon.

As it was a ‘bonus’, we didn’t do a structured tasting, however, overall we found it to be a good, fun, bourbon!

On the nose, there was a freshness, clearly grain yet with a sweet grassy element – perhaps we were influenced by the name! On the palate, we found it just a great example of an enjoyable bourbon, with a nice herbaceous element that we enjoyed! As for the finish? Whilst not long and lingering, it was a warm comforting close with a hint of fresh tobacco leaves.

Two James Spirit’s official tasting notes:

  • Nose: Red Apple, Dried Orange, Praline
  • Palate: Apple, Walnut, Salted Brown Butter, Caramel, Peppermint
  • Finish: Leather, Pipe Tobacco, Orange Peel

Would we agree? Overall yes! Whilst we didn’t specifically note the citrus, we were more focused on just enjoying how what was in the glass supported convivial conversation. I could also see it making a great base for a quality whisky cocktail.

We tasted it after a delightfulful Whisky Ladies of Mumbai evening featuring two whiskies from Germany and a third from Japan!

Curious to know more? Why not follow Whisky Lady on: