Laphroaig

Laphroaig 14 Year Old 2011 Duncan Taylor Octave Single Sherry Octave Cask #5642799 7 Deadly Sins (Wrath) Austria Exclusive Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl

Regular price £225.00 GBP
Sold out
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
SKU: LAP14DT1991SC2025
Laphroaig 14 Year Old 2011 Duncan Taylor Octave Single Sherry Octave Cask #5642799 7 Deadly Sins (Wrath) Austria Exclusive Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl 1 of 93 bottles...

Out of stock

Laphroaig 14 Year Old 2011 Duncan Taylor Octave Single Sherry Octave Cask #5642799 7 Deadly Sins (Wrath) Austria Exclusive Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl
£225.00 GBP

Payment and security

  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Bancontact
  • Diners Club
  • Discover
  • Google Pay
  • Klarna
  • Maestro
  • Mastercard
  • PayPal
  • Shop Pay
  • Union Pay
  • Visa

Laphroaig 14 Year Old 2011 Duncan Taylor Octave Single Sherry Octave Cask #5642799 7 Deadly Sins (Wrath) Austria Exclusive Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (2025) 70cl

1 of 93 bottles produced from a single cask finished in a sherry octave.

This 2011 Laphroaig from the provocative Seven Deadly Sins series embodies wrath in its purest form: unbridled, powerful, and uncompromisingly peaty. A dramatic Islay single malt that unites the destructive power of nature and the passion of fire.

TASTING NOTES

Aroma (Nose):
Intense peat smoke, iodine, sea salt, and medicinal notes meet dark spices, leather, and a pinch of black pepper. Smoky and spicy with a salty sea breeze—a wild storm in the glass.

Palate:
Explosive and powerful, with intense notes of wet peat, ash, licorice, dark chocolate, and a robust spice. The anger unfolds with every sip—intense, warming, and full of energy.

Finish:
Long-lasting, smoky and fiery, with a blend of salty sea air, spices and a touch of sweetness that softens the storm without taming it.

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.

54% ABV

70cl

Recently viewed

Your Browsing History

Didn't find the product you were looking for?