Whisky Connosr
Menu
Shop

Discussions

Johnnie Walker Double Black

0 5

@rdx
rdx started a discussion

Anybody tried the Double Black ? It is priced higher than the Black Label , albiet with no age statement . Also the Gold Reserve has been launched , again without any age statement to replace the Gold Label . Interesting move by Diageo to introduce whiskies without age statements at a premium.

13 years ago

5 replies

Had a dram at an airport in the middle east a few months ago.

A lot of peaty single malts have bene added which come through nicely overall mate, but nothing overly spectacular.

Definitely worth a try though. A thumbs up.

13 years ago 1Who liked this?

@rwbenjey
rwbenjey replied

@rdx: Hey there! I just posted a review of it the other day : )

"A member of the family picked up a bottle of this for my birthday. I've been anxious to try it as it's not available in the states (or widely released either). I believe Diageo will be releasing it globally next year. Anywho, I figured I would write a review on this stuff before it hits the main market.

Nose: Pleasant and sweet with hints of peat and honey. Nothing spectacular, but as warm and inviting as many Highland or Speyside bottlings.

Body: Beautifully golden, smooth, and mellow.

Palate: Honeyed barley, but surprisingly dry scotch.

Finish: Rather short. Mostly vegetal; not usually a problem, but none of the other flavors are present which is kind of sad.

Closing Thoughts:

Johnnie Walker describes this as "A rich, intense, smoky blend containing whisky matured in deep charred old oak casks." In my opinion, this is a very polite whisky that seems to play a little too much on the safe side. It's not very rich, nor intense. I think Diageo wants to gain some ground in the peated whisky market, but this will NOT work (Highland Park 12 has more peat than this). Certainly not awful by any means, but I don't think it's going to garner any more sales than the already popular Black Label. I would not be willing to pay over $35 for this.

The packaging is very, very nice. Probably the best looking bottle I've seen since Ardbeg, and the box is even nicer. Good job Mr. Walker. However, about this plastic cap unit with the glass ball: This damn thing pisses me off, pisses me right off. Don't you dare widely release this bottle with this kind of cap. Don't you dare! Go back to the standard cork cap.

Bottle Rated: 7.5/10"

13 years ago 2Who liked this?

@JeffC
JeffC replied

I agree it is not widely available in the United States. I believe it is mainly sold in Duty Free shops. A few days ago while trying to waste some time at the San Francisco airport due to a weather delay, I saw several bottles of it in the Duty Free shop. Unfortunately, I was not traveling internationally or else I may have picked up a bottle. Price was $43/liter compared with $37 for regular black label.

13 years ago 0

@joshk
joshk replied

My father-in-law picked up a bottle at a Duty Free in Europe to bring back for Christmas dinner. The men of the family all tried it and everyone agreed it was an improvement over the regular black by some varing degrees. I'm not sure what the price difference was so I can't say for sure if it's worth it.

Nose was almost the same as regular black. Taste was distictly peatier but still not like what any Islay regular would call peaty. Finish was very crisp and drying. This made it seem smoother then the Black overall.

13 years ago 0

@silverfish
silverfish replied

According to Luxist, it should be released globally in March 2011:

luxist.com/2010/09/29/johnnie-walker-double-black-going-global/

13 years ago 0