Laphroaig

Laphroaig 11 Year Old 2013 SMWS Single 2nd Fill American Oak PX Cask 29.300 Spirit Of Hallowe'en Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl

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SKU: LAP11SMWS29.300
Laphroaig 11 Year Old 2013 SMWS Single 2nd Fill American Oak PX Cask 29.300 Spirit Of Hallowe'en Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl Exclusive release for Halloween 2025 The Scotch...

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Laphroaig 11 Year Old 2013 SMWS Single 2nd Fill American Oak PX Cask 29.300 Spirit Of Hallowe'en Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl
£149.00 GBP

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Laphroaig 11 Year Old 2013 SMWS Single 2nd Fill American Oak PX Cask 29.300 Spirit Of Hallowe'en Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl

Exclusive release for Halloween 2025

The Scotch Malt Whisky Society was founded in Edinburgh in 1983 by Phillip 'Pip' Hills who, while travelling around Scotland in the 1970s, fell in love with whiskies drawn straight from the cask. After he expanded his syndicate the Society was purchased by Glenmorangie PLC in 2004. In 2015, the Society was sold back to private investors. In June 2021, the private owners floated the holding company The Artisanal Spirits Company plc on the Alternative Investment Market of the London Stock Exchange.

It has a unique code system where the first number refers to the distillery and the second refers to the cask from which the bottle comes. SMWS also offers the largest range of distilleries of any independent bottler. These curiously named drams really do have something for every whisky lover!

The SMWS are one of the Britain's most revered independent bottlers with a worldwide network of partner bars with one mission of getting as much whisky at natural cask strength without water to different nations including USA, Canada, Switzerland, UK, Austria, Germany and many others.

TASTING NOTES

The nose delivered a hearty warm-up of pastrami, mustard and lightly smoked paprika, with a hint of barbecued cod and wild thyme. There was a mentholic freshness, reminiscent of a sports massage, alongside smoked cheese and fennel sausage, the scents working up like a pre-game ritual. The palate unfolded with menthol and eucalyptus lozenges and rosemary honey oozing over chalk dust and ash. With water, eucalyptus muscle rub, waxed lemons and black-buttered chestnuts tussled in midfield before creamy, sweet clam broth, liquorice root and bonfire mussels soothed our post-match recovery session. After spending eight years in an ex-bourbon hogshead, this was transferred to a second fill American oak Pedro Ximénez hogshead for the reminder of its maturation.

About Laphroaig

Another of the Kildalton triumvirate, Laphroaig is a substantial distillery with seven stills and a capacity of over 3m litres per annum (that’s 1m more than Lagavulin and 2m more than Ardbeg).

Unusually for a distillery of this size Laphroaig has retained its own floor maltings which still account for 20% of its requirements. They have been retained specifically because it is believed that the Laphroaig kiln produces a more creosote-like phenolic character than the malt the distillery receives from the Port Ellen maltings. Certainly, a tarry iodine note is one of the signatures of the spirit.

The odd number of stills includes a spirit still which is double the size of its neighbours. As this produces a different character new make it is always blended in with those from the smaller ones.

A very long fore shot run means there are less estery notes in the new make, while a deeper cut means that heavier phenolics are captured compared to Ardbeg and Lagavulin. Its distinct sweet note therefore comes from the preferred cask type used – ex-Bourbon barrels. These, the distillery says, became the norm at Laphroaig post-Prohibition when Ian Hunter began travelling to the US. The effect of this type of oak is showcased in the Quarter Cask release where a vatting of younger Laphroaigs is finished in small casks. Some Sherry casks are in the inventory and are mostly used for longer-term maturation.

The reason so many existing Islay distilleries came into being before the ‘official’ 1824 start date is down to the influence of Islay’s laird, Walker Frederick Campbell. Islay was less brutally cleared than other islands and as an ‘improving’ landlord Campbell was keen to start new businesses on the island. Islay already had a reputation for moonshine, so legal distilling made sense. The fact that Campbell was also actively involved meant that it was harder to continue with illicit activities.

So, in 1815, brothers Alexander and Donald Johnston built a distillery at Laphroaig. Donald, who ran the distillery, tragically died in 1847 after falling into a vat of boiling pot ale. Laphroaig however remained in the control of D. Johnston & Co. until the 1960s.

Its rise to fame began at the start of the 20th century with the arrival of Donald's great-grandson, Ian Hunter. It was he who, in 1908, changed agent from Peter Mackie and prompted the building of Malt Mill. By the 1920s Laphroaig was being sold as a single malt and in 1924, the number of stills were increased to four. On his death in 1954 he left the distillery to his secretary Bessie Williamson who had been the de-facto manager during his extensive international sales trips.

American distiller, Schenley, bought into the distillery in the 1960s, buying it outright in 1967. By the time Bessie retired in 1972, the number of stills had been increased to seven. A period of passing through various hands and amalgamations ended when Jim Beam purchased it from Allied Distillers in 2005. In the intervening period Prince Charles had awarded his favourite single malt his own Royal Warrant. In the same year, 1994, the Friends of Laphroaig was launched, the first of the modern ‘member’s associations’ phenomenon – there are currently 638,000 members. In a creative piece of marketing – initiated by legendary manager Iain Henderson – Friends were given a square foot of Islay which they leased back to the distillery in exchange for a year’s ‘rent’ of a miniature of Laphroaig which could only be claimed by visiting the distillery.

Beam’s takeover by Suntory in 2014 has resulted in the Japanese-American giant now owning two of Islay’s eight distilleries.

57.5% ABV

70cl

Product specifications table
Specification name Specification Value
Country United Kingdom
Whiskey style Cask strength, Single malt
Whiskey variety Malt, Scotch

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