
Amrut Fusion Single Malt Whisky
According to Indian Mythology, when Gods and Rakshasas ā the demons ā churned the oceans using the mountain Meru as a churner, a golden pot sprang out containing the Elixir of Life. That was called the āAmrutā. The great founders of the distillery aptly named it Amrut Distilleries.
Nose :Ā Heavy, thickly oaked and complex: some curious barley-sugar notes here shrouded in soft smoke. Big, but seductively gentle, too;
Taste :Ā The delivery, though controlled at first, is massive! Then more like con-fusion as that smoke on the nose turns into warming, full blown peat, but it far from gets its own way as a vague sherry trifle note (curious, seeing how there are no sherry butts involved) - the custard presumably is oaky vanilla - hammers home that barley - fruitiness to make for a bit of a free-for-all; but for extra food measure the flavours develop into a really intense chocolate fudge middle which absolute resonates through the palate;
Finish :Ā A slight struggle here as the mouthfeel gets a bit puffy here with the dry peat and oak; enough molassed sweetness to see the malt through to a satisfying end, though. Above all the spices, rather than lying down and accepting their fate, rise up and usher this extraordinary whisky to its exit
Original: $56.71
-65%$56.71
$19.85Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
According to Indian Mythology, when Gods and Rakshasas ā the demons ā churned the oceans using the mountain Meru as a churner, a golden pot sprang out containing the Elixir of Life. That was called the āAmrutā. The great founders of the distillery aptly named it Amrut Distilleries.
Nose :Ā Heavy, thickly oaked and complex: some curious barley-sugar notes here shrouded in soft smoke. Big, but seductively gentle, too;
Taste :Ā The delivery, though controlled at first, is massive! Then more like con-fusion as that smoke on the nose turns into warming, full blown peat, but it far from gets its own way as a vague sherry trifle note (curious, seeing how there are no sherry butts involved) - the custard presumably is oaky vanilla - hammers home that barley - fruitiness to make for a bit of a free-for-all; but for extra food measure the flavours develop into a really intense chocolate fudge middle which absolute resonates through the palate;
Finish :Ā A slight struggle here as the mouthfeel gets a bit puffy here with the dry peat and oak; enough molassed sweetness to see the malt through to a satisfying end, though. Above all the spices, rather than lying down and accepting their fate, rise up and usher this extraordinary whisky to its exit







