Royal Salute 21 Year Old Eternal Reserve
Our best price:
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Whisky Price comparison
Our best price:
£
Our best price:
£
Our best price:
£
Our best price:
£25
Our best price:
£550
Our best price:
£250
Our best price:
£
Our best price:
£350
Our best price:
£
Our best price:
£1500
Our best price:
£225
Our best price:
£225
Whisky Bottle | Rating | Reviews | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Chivas Regal Mizunara | 4.8 | 26 | £45.22 |
Grant’s Distillery Edition Blended Whisky | 5 | 1 | £ |
Chivas Regal Extra | 4 | 94 | £30 |
Royal Salute 25 Year Old Royal Wedding Crown Prince of Japan Blended Whisky | 0 | 0 | £2500 |
Bell’s Christmas 2002 8 Year Old | 0 | 0 | £ |
St Patrick’s Cask Strength Blended Whiskey | 0 | 0 | £58.95 |
Scottish Leader Blended Whisky | 4 | 33 | £17.56 |
Cutty Sark Storm | 0 | 0 | £22 |
McCallum’s Perfection /1980s Half Bottle | 0 | 0 | £ |
Bank Note 5 Year Old | 4 | 8 | £21 |
Jameson The Distiller’s Safe Blended Irish Whiskey | 4 | 2 | £109.99 |
Ballantine’s 12 Year Old /1980s | 4 | 1 | £120 |
Blends tends to be a divisive area for many whisky drinkers, on the one hand around 90% of all whisky distilled is destined for blending, on the other blended whiskies are generally designed to be round, mellow and virtually indistinguishable between bottles. For this reasons they’re often unfairly known as the McDonald’s of whisky.
Blend whiskies came into existence primarily from merchants who would blend (mix) together the whiskies they received from distilleries. By mixing they were able to create a more consistent quality and taste. The most successful of these are recognisable to most drinkers today: Johnny Walker, Dewar’s, and Buchanan’s etc. in recent years a new class of blenders such as Compass Box