Distillery
Redbreast

| Shop | Type | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|
Gall & Gall | |||
Gall & Gall | 700mlOut of stock | €95.69 | |
Master of Malt | |||
Master of Malt | £89.6 (€108.42) | ||
| £89.6 (€108.42) | |||
The Whisky Exchange | |||
The Whisky Exchange | £96.25 (€116.46) | ||
Drankdozijn | |||
Drankdozijn | €74.95 | ||
11 reviews
What do you think?
Distillery
4.4Average rating
13Whiskies on Distilld
Ireland
Redbreast 15 years Pot Still comes from Ireland. Redbreast shapes it as a pot still whisky. Redbreast 15 years Pot Still gives searchers a clear view before they buy. It brings almond, apricot, and brown sugar into focus. The style feels tied to the 15 year old expression expands redbreast’s mix of spice, fruit, and cask weight. Redbreast matters because the distillery story sits inside the flavour. Redbreast 15 years Pot Still gives Irish pot still whisky real depth. That context keeps the copy from becoming a plain tasting card. The influence of bourbon and sherry cask maturation gives the whisky extra shape. It carries a 15 year old identity without feeling static. You can follow that shape without specialist language. The flavour is led by almond, then moves toward apricot and brown sugar. A second sip brings spice and sweet into the frame. The texture feels deliberate, not heavy. Neat service keeps the profile clear. The finish has enough grip to make the next sip feel earned. This is useful copy for drinkers comparing whisky online. It answers the practical questions quickly. The whisky tells you where it comes from. It also shows why the cask choice matters. Those details help buyers separate this bottle from similar labels. It gives context for a considered purchase. It also leaves space for personal taste. Nothing depends on a copied stock phrase. Each detail points back to the bottle itself. That keeps the page more useful. For buyers comparing options, Redbreast 15 years Pot Still offers a useful mix of story and flavour. Redbreast gives it name recognition, but the whisky still has its own purpose. It suits drinkers who want character without empty theatre. The result is a bottle with a real point of view.