Tomintoul Peaty Tang 750ML
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Description
Description
Tomintoul Peaty Tang 750ML is a peated Speyside single malt Scotch whisky bottled at 40% ABV (80 proof) in a 750ml bottle. What makes this expression genuinely unusual is its rarity within the Speyside region — Tomintoul distills with peated malted barley only twice a year during dedicated two-week production windows, yielding a smoky single malt from a region overwhelmingly associated with soft, unpeated styles.
Quick Facts: ABV: 40% | Origin: Speyside Glenlivet, Scotland | NAS (Vatting of Peated & Unpeated Malt) | Distillery: Tomintoul
Production & Heritage
Tomintoul Distillery was established in 1964 in the Speyside Glenlivet region and is currently owned by Angus Dundee Distillers. Often marketed as "the gentle dram" for its typically light, approachable character, Peaty Tang represents a deliberate departure from that house style. The whisky is a vatting of younger peated malt — distilled from peated malted barley during those limited two-week runs — married with older unpeated whisky aged around eight years. This blending of peated spirit (roughly four to five years old) with more mature unpeated stock creates a layered interplay between smoke and classic Speyside sweetness that neither component delivers alone.
Tasting Notes
Aroma: Full and pungent from the first nosing. Heather roots and wood smoke lead, followed by an unexpected coal-tar sharpness and undertones of lemon peel that hint at the complexity beneath the peat.
Taste: The entry is a burst of cereal malt and bright lemon that immediately gives way to a powerful mid-palate thump of peat smoke. Toasted oak and black pepper emerge as the smoke settles, delivering a richness that belies the 40% ABV. The interplay between the unpeated malt's sweetness and the peated component's muscle keeps the palate engaged.
Finish: Long and hot, driven by cracked pepper and lingering wood smoke. A distinctive leafy green note — almost herbal — appears late and gradually fades, leaving a dry, ashy close.
How to Drink Peaty Tang
Neat with a few drops of water is the most rewarding serve; the water opens up the lemon and herbal notes that sit beneath the peat smoke. On the rocks, the smoke softens and the malt sweetness takes a more prominent role, making it a solid warm-weather option for peat fans. In cocktails, Peaty Tang's smoke-and-citrus backbone works well in a Penicillin, where the ginger-honey syrup tempers the peat into something silky; a Rob Roy, where sweet vermouth rounds the smoky edges into a rich, savory drink; and a Smoky Highball, where soda water and a lemon twist amplify the whisky's natural citrus-and-coal character.
Best For
- Speyside fans curious about how peat changes a familiar region's character
- Building a tasting flight contrasting peated and unpeated Speyside malts
- Gifting an Islay whisky lover something unexpected from the opposite coast
- Exploring affordable peated single malts without committing to cask-strength intensity
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Peaty Tang taste like? Peaty Tang delivers a pronounced burst of peat smoke layered with toasted oak, black pepper, cereal malt, and a bright lemon note. The finish is long and peppery with a distinctive leafy green character.
How does Peaty Tang compare to Laphroaig Select? Both sit in a similar price tier and are positioned as accessible introductions to peated single malt, but they come from fundamentally different regions. Laphroaig Select brings maritime iodine and medicinal peat typical of Islay, while Peaty Tang offers an earthier, heather-and-wood-smoke profile rooted in Speyside malt character.
Is Peaty Tang good for beginners exploring peated whisky? Yes — at 40% ABV with a vatting that includes mature unpeated malt, it delivers genuine peat impact without the high proof or intense medicinal character that can overwhelm newcomers to the style.
Where is Peaty Tang made? Peaty Tang is distilled at the Tomintoul Distillery, located in the Speyside Glenlivet sub-region of the Scottish Highlands. The distillery sits near the village of Tomintoul, one of the highest villages in the Scottish Highlands.
What foods pair well with Peaty Tang? Smoked salmon or trout mirrors the whisky's smoke without competing. Sharp aged cheddar stands up to the peat and draws out the malt sweetness. Dark chocolate (70% cacao or higher) complements the toasted oak and pepper notes. Grilled lamb chops seasoned with rosemary echo the herbal, leafy finish. Smoked almonds make a simple but effective bar snack pairing.
What sizes does Peaty Tang come in? Peaty Tang is widely available in the standard 750ml bottle size.
Is Peaty Tang worth the price? Peaty Tang positions as an entry-level peated single malt, and within that tier it punches above its weight thanks to the unusual vatting process and limited production schedule. For drinkers seeking peat complexity without a premium price tag, it represents strong value in its category.
Why Peaty Tang?
The strongest case for this whisky is simple scarcity of concept: peated Speyside single malts barely exist, and Tomintoul produces this one during only two dedicated weeks per year. That limited production window means the peated spirit is a genuine specialty within the distillery's output, not a marketing exercise. The vatting of younger peated malt with older unpeated stock creates a flavor profile that neither Islay nor conventional Speyside expressions replicate — earthy heather smoke tempered by eight-year-old malt sweetness. For anyone building a collection that maps the full range of Scotch whisky styles, Peaty Tang fills a gap that very few bottles can.
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