English whisky

No Longer a Curiosity: The 7 English Whiskies You need to try

Best English Whisky 2025 Lewis Ashman The Three Drinkers DRINKLUSIVE Mentee 2025

English whisky has been building momentum, with a focus on innovation that still pays tribute to tradition. Ever since The English Sherry Cask Matured was voted ‘best single malt in the world’ in the 2024 World Whisky Awards, English distilleries have been challenging the perception that English single malt whisky was here to merely make up the numbers. This is an exciting time to explore English whisky with a groundswell of passion and experimentation up and down the country. What unites them is their commitment to flavour and a curious mind. There is a sense of freedom: to innovate, to play and to reflect the place it is made. The seven whiskies below have been hand selected and tell a story of English whisky’s emergence as the whisky of the 21st century.

Filey Bay Flagship 

Filey Bay Flagship The Three Drinkers Best English Whisky 2025 Lewis Ashman

If you’re a new whisky drinker and don’t know where to start, this is the whisky for you. This English single malt whisky from Yorkshire manages to be approachable whilst having enough complexity to interest experienced drinkers. Filey Bay has a real connection to place, which carries through every step of production and through the regenerative farming practices at the centre of their approach. Growing 100% of the barley in the carefully nurtured soil on their farm yields a flavoursome barley with hints of caramel. The Flagship bottle is the essence of their style, with notes of soft vanilla ice cream, fruity with peaches and gentle oak spice. It is wonderful in a highball.

Size: 70cl
ABV: 46%
Find here: £55.75

Fielden Rye Whisky

Fielden Rye Whisky The Three Drinkers Best English Whisky 2025 Lewis Ashman

There is a real sense of England captured in this expressive rye whisky. Also based in Yorkshire and employing regenerative farming practices, they are able to extract abundant flavour from heritage grains that are selected for flavour over yield. This considered approach to whisky making supports English farmers and enhances the biodiversity of the English countryside more widely. These efforts happily translate into a uniquely English rye whisky, which is matured in a combination of American oak casks and a selection of ex-wine casks. This is rich and inviting with notes of buttery croissant, berries, caramel and cinnamon. It works exceptionally well in an old-fashioned cocktail.

Size: 70cl
ABV: 46%
Find here: £55.75

Cotswolds Signature Single Malt

Cotswolds Signature Single Malt The Three Drinkers Best English Whisky 2025 Lewis Ashman

In terms of flavour profile, Cotswolds sits between the softer Filey Bay and the rich and full-bodied Fielden. Situated in the beautiful Cotswolds countryside, this single malt whisky uses locally grown barley. It’s an everyday indulgence and a must-try for anyone exploring English whisky. They use a variety of barrels to include ex-Bourbon casks and STR ex-wine casks; shaved, toasted and recharred to remove a few millimetres of wine-soaked wood, toast the fresh surface, then flame-char it: the refreshed oak offers notes of raspberry and caramel that complement the malt forward creamy porridge notes. This whisky is well suited to enjoy after a Sunday stroll in the countryside.

Size: 70cl
ABV: 46%
Find here: £47.90

White Peak Wire Works Whisky Bourbon Barrel

White Peak Wire Works Whisky Bourbon Barrel The Three Drinkers Best English Whisky 2025 Lewis Ashman

Located at the old Johnson & Nephew Wire Works on the banks of a river nestled in ancient woodland, White Peaks focus on flavour and place, using spent brewers yeast from a local brewery. This whisky follows the distillery’s fruit forward and lightly-peated style, with so-called ‘inactive’ Bourbon barrels imparting minimal flavour and allowing the true characteristics of the whisky to shine. This is a great starting point with Wire Works whisky and peated whisky generally. It offers notes of vanilla sponge, lemon rind, white chocolate, and wisps of gentle smoke. and pairs really well with chalky cheese and crackers.

Size: 70cl
ABV: 53.4%
Find here: £60.75

The Lakes Signature Single Malt

The Lakes Signature Single Malt The Three Drinkers Best English Whisky 2025 Lewis Ashman

The Lakes Signature is the distillery's first permanent style of sherry-led whisky. It is equally approachable to newer whisky drinkers, offering a ‘treat yourself’ moment of the sublime, while also perfect for those who enjoy sherry-forward whisky. The Lakes know that “to prosper we cannot play safe” which inspires their curiosity. Whisky Maker Sarah Burgess (formerly of The Macallan) builds layers of richness and complexity by making careful adjustments to the location and climate of the cask throughout maturation. This technique is known as élevage, and is traditionally used in cognac production. The whisky has rich notes of leather, medjool dates, figs, sandalwood and gentle oak and is well suited to quiet contemplation accompanied by your favourite album. 

Size: 70cl
ABV: 47%
Find here: £78.50

Circumstance Organic Single Grain Barley Whisky

Circumstance Organic Single Grain Barley Whisky The Three Drinkers Best English Whisky 2025 Lewis Ashman

Circumstance Distillery challenges assumptions about how great whisky is made, and delivers exceptionally flavoursome results. This is authentic, experimental, and exciting whisky. Prioritising flavour, they don’t produce single malts. Instead, they layer flavour using multiple grains, various yeast strains, very long fermentations, and a range of cask types that add a warming texture to the whisky. Committed to sustainability, they’re certified organic and carbon neutral. The result is a velvety whisky that tastes like freshly baked rhubarb crumble, with toasted hazelnuts and lemon zest adding balance. It pairs beautifully with chilled hibiscus kombucha.

Size: 70cl
ABV: 47.7 %
Find here: £45.25

Woven Experience N.22 Pastures New

Woven Experience N.22 Pastures New The Three Drinkers Best English Whisky 2025 Lewis Ashman

English whisky has its first English blended whisky thanks to the team at Woven. It represents yet another milestone, bringing together diverse approaches and styles that collectively contribute to a rich and thriving whisky scene. In doing so this bottle signifies that English whisky is here to stay. Blended whiskies are at times unfairly seen as lesser than single malts, but blending is a craft and offers the opportunity for greater complexity compared to single malts. Woven are a refreshingly modern whisky brand who are making whisky inclusive and fun. The blend comprises six whiskies, including Wire Works, Fielden, and Cotswolds. It offers notes of plums, spiced rye bread, wildflowers, and nutmeg. and pairs perfectly with a nice crisp, dry cider.

Size: 70cl
ABV: 49.1%
Find here: £54.95

Together, these whiskies represent a vibrant and thoughtful English whisky scene, deeply tied to place. Be curious. Pick up a bottle and start exploring! If you’d like to read more whisky content click here.

Lewis Ashman DRINKLUSIVE Mentee The Three Drinkers 2025

The Best Whiskies in the World

best whisky thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden-white

Words by Colin Hampden-White

As time moves forward, World Whisky Day has greater meaning. Long gone are the days of whisk(e)y being dominated by Scotch and Irish drams. We have whiskies being made in the most unlikely of countries, and being made very well. Along with Scotch and Irish drams, Japanese whisky has held a respected position in the whisky world for over a decade. It is surprising it has taken so long for the whisky world to wake up to Japanese whiskies with it having been produced in Japan for nearly a century with the Yamazaki distillery being built in 1924.

Best Whisky New Zealand Cardrona Australia Sullivans Cove thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

Beyond Japan, there is great whisky being made in Taiwan, Australia and New Zealand. With Lark distillery being build in 1992, and Sullivans Cove in 1994, Australian whisky began to be recognised for its quality with Sullivans Cove being awarded the world’s best single malt in 2014. To whisky lovers, these distilleries are well known, but there are also new lesser-known distilleries with fantastic whisky. Cardrona distillery in New Zealand launched their first Single Malt last year with Just Hatched and followed that up with another brilliant release Growing Wings.

Best Whisky cotswolds copper rivet slyrs lagatun pfanner thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

Distilling in central Europe is also going from strength to strength. Well known distilleries such as Slyrs in Germany, Lagatun in Switzerland are continuing to keep their quality and consistency. Newer distilleries in central Europe are creating some incredible whisky, Broger and Pfanner in Austria being two favourites of mine. Moving a little further east to the Caspian Sea, I have even found good single malt whisky being made in Azerbaijan on a visit a few years ago. Closer to home for me, the distilleries in England and Wales are going great guns. Aber Falls is about to release their first whiskies this year, Copper Rivet released their first whisky, Masthouse and the Cotwolds distilleries created their sherry cask matured expression which was my favourite English whisky of the last year.

best whisky thethreedrinkers.com Balcones St.George the three drinkers Colin Hampden-white

A country well known for its whiskey is the USA, although usually made with different grains and corn, but they are now making some fantastic single malt whiskey. St George in California make a complex and fruity single malt, whilst Balcones in Texas make a big bold powerful single malt which has great complexity with their cold winters and incredibly hot summers making maturation a rapid affair with plenty of interaction between wood and spirit.

best whisky thethreedrinkers.com Arbikie Daftmill The glasgow Distilling co Ardnamurchan the three drinkers Colin Hampden-white

With all these world whiskies it would be easy to think that Scotch and Irish are getting left behind, but this is far from the truth. There is a plethora of new distilleries which are now producing whisky. The Glasgow distillery, Ardnamurchan, Daftmill and Arbiki being a few of my favourites. And there are new whiskies on the way with distilleries being built now like Gordon & MacPhail in the Cairngorms and more planned for the future. The green light has also been given for Sukhinder Singh’s distillery on Islay.

best whisky thethreedrinkers.com The Glenturret Fettercairn Bladnoch the three drinkers Colin Hampden-white

From the world of old, three notable closed distilleries are coming back to greet us. Port Ellen is being rebuilt, as is Rosebank, and Brora is opening imminently. Over the last few years, a few existing brands that have been overlooked have had a revamp and are creating some very exciting whisky. My favourite is Fettercairn from Whyte and Mackay, with the 16 year old (made with chocolate malt) being particularly good. Glenturret, having been bought by Lalique has had a serious makeover and the new expressions are seriously good, with a 15 year old at 55% ABV really standing out. Lastly, I enjoyed the new expressions from Bladnoch. A distillery which we have seen little from over the years now has a very smart new bottle and quite a few new expressions. I very much liked the Vinaya which is excellent value and for the 2020 release of Talia, a 26 year old which they matured in American oak red wine casks for all 26 years, and the results were excellent.

With so much choice in the world of whisk(e)y it is hard to know where to start. Might I suggest wherever you might be in the world to start close by, there is bound to be a distillery not too far away, creating whisky, and on this day of all days, let’s celebrate together and keep the food miles down, and support the expansion of whisky throughout the world with a glass of something local.

If you want a more in depth look into Scotch whisky make sure you check out The Three Drinkers do Scotch Whisky and if you’re thinking of investing in your favourite bottles then have a read of Colin’s Whisky Investment Index.

Around the World in 6 Whiskies

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Words by Katie Groves

Katie Groves, the new bar manager at whisky lover’s heaven ‘Milroy's’ in London Soho, is lamenting the lack of travel but consoling herself with a whisky tasting tour from around the world. Here are her suggestions for creating your very own world whisky flight. All aboard!

Think back to very early 2020, when some of us may have had a tiny sulk about something like a cancelled holiday. There was an inkling that something bigger was about to happen, but we were still in a dream-like stage of mourning cheap wine on sunny terraces, gorging on tagine under the stars or sinking cold pints in a random European bar. Surely this would all blow over soon?

Mere weeks later, and the whole world was changing fast. In collective lockdown madness, we were mostly doing 3 things: baking bad banana bread, freaking out over Zoom and panic-buying British apocalypse essentials: pasta, toilet roll and alcohol, apparently.  Our home alcohol shelves, bars, or cabinets had never looked so desperately empty, but you couldn’t order off Majestic, Tesco’s queue was too big and that old bottle of Bell’s had never looked quite so appealing.

Drinks Nostalgia

Best World Whiskies Katie Groves thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Several months, drinks and meltdowns later and we’ve nearly made it through 2020. Holidays (or lack of) may have lower priority now, but we are all still dreaming of our favourite escapes. Keeping calm and carrying on can take up a fair bit of effort, and I don’t know about you, but I’m still reminiscing about slurping on gelato, guzzling cold beer like there’s no tomorrow and lapping up the sunshine like a lazy cat.

What can we do instead? The pleasures of meeting people from another culture and tasting their food and drink can never quite be replicated from home, but here’s the next best thing. (It’s known as the water of life, so that’s got to be something good!) So, kick your feet up and enjoy a flight around the world with these delicious and diverse whiskies. We all know that our sense of smell and taste, just like music, can be one of our most powerful tools for nostalgia and imagination, so pour that dram, get some records on and enjoy some downtime like it’s 2019…

All aboard! Around the world in 6 whiskies

Nikka Days - Japan

Best Japanese World Whiskies Nikka Days thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Like the food, whisky and just about everything else, Japan is famed for its beautiful label designs. This striking sunny box says lazy days at the beach and this easy-going whisky delivers just that. This is Nikka’s most recent release for the happy price-point, casual whisky drinker market and consists of grain and malt whiskies from their two contrasting distilleries: Miyagikyo and Yoichi.

Miyagikyo’s Coffey still grain whisky is creamy and vanilla-sweet; their malt is floral and honeyed, while Yoichi distillery produces a single malt that is coastal and lightly peated.

Blending these creates glowing notes of apricots, yellow plums and peach, subtle buttery malt and just a whisker of peat to tie all those lighter flavours together. A well balanced, shelf-staple blend that will convince all your friends to like whisky (try a highball)

Find Nikka Days at Master of Malt here for £38.83

Starward Solera- Australia

Best World Australian Whiskies Starward Solera thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

This whisky from Victoria-based Starward distillery lives up to its dreamy packaging. This is a colourful and complex single malt with an autumnal spectrum of spiced, fruity and earthy notes. Just breathing in those intense deep aromas hits you with a happy stick! This was aged in ex Apera wine casks (Australia’s answer to sherry), and bottled at a mellow 43%. A perfect whisky for wine and sherry fans who want to feel like they’ve jumped on a plane to languish in Australia’s wine-indulgent climate. Onward, ho!

Find Starward Solera at Master of Malt here for £47.25

Paul John Classic - Goa

Best World Goan Whisky Paul John thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

With its vibrant array of cultures, sublime beaches and intense humidity punctuated with monsoons, Goa is a place like no other. This whisky will take you there: think ginger and cardamom, cacao powder and lime zest, sea salt caramel and a wave of heat from its no-messin’ high strength (55.2%!) Made from Indian 6-row barley and aged in ex-bourbon casks, this sure is a unique dram, putting India firmly on the map for great single malts. 

Find it at Master of Malt here for £55.96

Mackmyra Grönt Te - Sweden

Best World Swedish Whiskies Mackmyra Gront te thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

This elegant single malt is the years-in-the-making brainchild of master blender Angela D’Orazio, who teamed up with Japanese tea specialists Yoko Ono Sthlm to create this expression. The whisky was aged in casks seasoned with a blend of three teas that had been infused into a neutral liqueur, creating fragrant herbs, spices and delicate green notes. A beautiful result, which enmeshes Swedish and Japanese culture – and doubles up on those antioxidants from this sustainability-conscious distillery.

Find it at Master of Malt here for £52.95


Kavalan Concertmaster Port Finish - Taiwan

Best World Taiwanese Whiskies Kavalan thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Since opening in 2005, Taiwan’s first single malt distillery has gone from strength to strength, picking up multiple top awards along the way. Aged under Taiwan’s intense seasonal climate, this whisky had an initial snooze in ex-bourbon casks before final aging in port pipes. The angels’ share here is a greedy 10 – 12%, which means fast maturation and bottling young. But its complexity belies its age. Enjoy the notes of strawberry, black pepper, spiced chocolate and dried mango. A unique and juicy whisky so mellow that you could pretty much pour it on your breakfast cereal.

Find it at Milroy’s here for £64.94


Banana bread Manhattan - England

Best World English Whisky Banana Bread Manhattan whisky Cocktail thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Since we mentioned Banana Bread, we couldn’t resist telling you about a bottled cocktail version; the Banana Bread Manhattan! Made by Liquid Intellect, it combines rye whiskey and vermouth, infusing them with natural banana bread flavours (what is this strange magic?). Pour it over ice cream or just stick it on ice. It’ll take you straight back to Grandma’s kitchen. Where else would you rather be?

Find the Banana Bread Manhattan at Master of Malt here for £25.50

If you liked this, try The Best of Whyte and Mackay, Which Rye Whisky should I try? or find our more about this shipwreck whisky auction. Also, don’t forget to visit Milroy’s in person for a huge selection of drams from all around the world or check out their website for details of virtual and live whisky tastings!

Katie Groves thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers