Amrut Indian Whisky
Compare 50 prices from A$68.37
Amrut Distillery in Bangalore is one of the great success stories of modern world whisky, and one of the clearest demonstrations that outstanding single malt can be made well beyond the traditional whisky-producing nations. Established in 1948, Amrut started as a broader spirits business serving the domestic Indian market before gradually shifting into malt whisky production in the 1980s. That early whisky was initially used more quietly, but Amrut's decision to release single malt under its own name would eventually help put Indian whisky firmly on the global map.
Amrut's approach drew on established whisky-making practice, including techniques associated with Scotch production, but its whisky quickly developed a character of its own. The climate in Bangalore has a profound effect on maturation, speeding up the interaction between spirit and oak and concentrating flavour at a much faster rate than in cooler whisky regions. This tropical ageing is also accompanied by a very high rate of evaporation, often described as one of the defining features of Indian whisky maturation.
For that reason, Amrut whiskies are not usually found at great age in the way that Scotch often is, but maturity in whisky is not simply a matter of years on the label. Amrut has shown time and again that relatively young whiskies can achieve remarkable depth, intensity and balance in Indian conditions, while older releases such as Greedy Angels 8, 10 and 12 Year Old bottlings show that longer-aged expressions do exist, even if they remain uncommon.
Over the past two decades Amrut has earned genuine international recognition through awards, critical praise and a growing global following. Releases such as Amrut Fusion played a major role in that rise, and the distillery is now widely regarded as one of the pioneers that changed perceptions of what world whisky could be.