KRB80
Amrut Peated Indian Single Malt Cask Strength
Single Malt — India
Reviewed
May 19, 2019 (edited July 12, 2020)
At 62.8% ABV, this one packs an incredible punch. Without water, a tiny sip provides a rich explosion of woody, dried fruit, and earthy peat flavors but it just way too hot so plenty of water is definitely needed...for me at least.
With a generous helping of water, the aroma opens up a bit and shows more nuance while still retaining it's density. More dried fruit, apricot, green apples, orange peel, leather, oak, wood smoke, and a touch of bacon.
The taste follows the nose with more dried fruit, salted burnt caramel, allspice, bitter tannins which continue and dominate the finish which isn't particularly pleasant. With plenty of water, it is still rough around the edges and while it has some serious flavor, it isn't rounded out like more mature distillates are. Still, this is a great accomplishment for such a young whisky to extract this much flavor and depth. The Indian climate definitely plays a huge factor. For those who deserve big, bold whiskies, this deserves a taste if you come across it.
75.0
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per
Bottle
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@KRB80 @PBMichiganWolverine thanks for the info. I'll keep an eye out for the IS
@1901 @PBMichiganWolverine yeah, it must have something to do with the extreme climate. It Def extracts tons of flavor very quickly but the burn remains no matter how much water you add. With that said, this has been my experience with the regular CS and this Peated version. The other Amrut I have tried so far is the Intermediate Sherry and, like PB said, it’s phenomenal. The IS is Def in my top 3 highly sherried malts of all time.
@1901 @KRB80 Amruts are really potent. I think they bottle at CS, and that Bangalore heat really does a number with the wood interaction. With that said, I absolutely loved their Greedy Angels and Intermediate Sherry
Nice review. I haven't had this but I also found Amrut Fusion hard to tame. Maybe a common feature of their output, do you reckon?