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Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey
Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey
Regular price
$20.39 USD
Regular price
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$20.39 USD
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About Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey
Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey was inspired by BBC's hit TV series Peaky Blinders. Set in the aftermath of the First World War, the show follows a crime family of Irish descent as their organization keeps expanding. The whiskey was crafted by Master Distiller Colum Egan to be a nod to Prohibition-style whiskey. Aged in ex-bourbon casks, the whiskey is bottled at 92 proof and features a complex and intense taste profile with notes of barley, oats, honey, dried fruit, baking spice, citrus, and nuts.Get your bottle of this Peaky Blinders whiskey today!
About Bushmills
In the words of Master Distiller Colum Egan, the world’s oldest licensed whiskey is not good because it’s old, but rather it’s the other way around. Granted the royal license to distill in 1608, Bushmills is located in the village of Bushmills on the north coast of Ireland. Embedded in the lives of the locals who work side by side in this legendary distillery, the water is sourced from the River Bush that flows through the village.More than 400 years later, Bushmills is still delighting its loyal fans with new offerings. The distillery weathered everything from a disastrous fire, the Prohibition and devastating grain taxes because of its uncompromising commitment to quality – even when other Irish whiskeys were forever changed due to a tax on barley, this legendary distillery continued distilling single malt whiskey in the traditional way, never substituting barley for corn or other inferior grains. Among its endless accolades, the distillery boasts the only Gold Medal for whiskey ever to be awarded at the Paris 1889 Expo.
About Irish Whiskey
Contrary to popular belief that Scots invented whisk(e)y, Irish whiskey was mentioned almost a century before its Scottish brother.
Its origin comes from the perfume distilling monks who decided to tweak the recipe a bit, creating Irish whiskey.
Irish whiskey doesn’t have a lot of rules and regulations to be considered “pure” and can be made with various grains and processes, as long as it is aged for at least three years in wooden casks and has a max ABV of 94.8%.
If you’d like to check out our impressive selection of “Uisce Beatha,” find your new favorite in the Best reviewed Irish whiskeys, and explore our treasury of rare & hard to find Irish whiskeys.
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