Diageo Special Releases 2022

The annual Diageo Special Releases range is always keenly anticipated around the world each year.  Typically unveiled in the UK around October, many international markets don’t release them locally until the following calendar year.  And so it is that, in April 2023, many markets are only just now launching the Diageo Special Releases 2022 range.

The Diageo Special Releases – first launched 21 years ago now in 2001 – is a fantastic opportunity to try some of your favourite distilleries in an expression quite unlike the regular version that you’re otherwise familiar with.  The Special Releases expression might appear with a different or unique age statement, or might have undergone a different maturation regimen to the regular release.  Also of note is that, unlike the regularly available expressions that are typically bottled at 40-43% and have been chillfiltered, the Special Releases are typically bottled at higher cask-strength and remain non-chillfiltered.  The annual Diageo Special Releases also often include a distillery or two in the range that actually aren’t regularly bottled or commercially available – and so it’s an opportunity to try a distillery that you might not otherwise encounter.

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The Scotch whisky industry goes from boom to…more boom?

The Scotch whisky industry is currently in the middle of an era.  Quite what that era will be defined or described as won’t become clear for another decade or so.  For it is usually with the experience and benefit of hindsight that we can apply such labels.  For example, the period that followed the industry’s catastrophic downturn and distillery closures of the mid 1980’s came to be synonymous with and defined 10 to 15 years later as the era of the so-called “whisky loch”, due to the huge amount of excess, aged stock sitting around unloved.  Similarly, the application of the term “whisky boom” to any era (e.g. the late 1800’s was a boom time for whisky sales and distillery construction) usually has relative context because it was followed by a corresponding “bust” a few years later.  (Such as the Pattison-triggered crash in 1898 that followed the boom).

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