We have a new WhatsApp number! Click here to chat.

Glenlivet 13 Year Old Single Malt Whisky 70cl
AED 175.00
Speyside single malt with the kind of easy confidence that makes you reach for a second pour. That 13-year age brings orchard fruit and vanilla warmth, with a gentle oak backbone that keeps things interesting. It’s a proper Scotch whisky for people who want flavour you can pick out, not a guessing game, and it plays beautifully in a classic Whisky Sour when you want your cocktail to taste like whisky.
| Size | 70cl / 700ml |
|---|
This Speyside single malt is all about layered, friendly flavour with a little extra depth. Thirteen years in wood gives it more personality than your standard “grab anything” Scotch, without turning it into a heavy, smoky commitment. It’s the kind of whisky that makes you pay attention, then makes it easy.
- Nose: Fresh orchard fruit, vanilla, honeyed malt, and a light, polished-oak note.
- Taste: Ripe pear and apple up front, then creamy vanilla and toffee, with a steady oak spice that keeps the sweetness in check.
- Finish: Medium-long, warming, with lingering vanilla, soft spice, and a tidy, dry oak fade.
Why the age statement matters: 13 years is a sweet spot for a Speyside whisky. You get that classic Glenlivet fruit-and-vanilla profile, but the extra time in barrel brings more structure, more spice, and a deeper, rounder mid-palate. In plain English, it tastes more put-together.
This is a great bottle for home bars because it’s versatile without feeling generic. Pour it when you want a calm, confident Scotch whisky, or use it when you want cocktails that still taste like single malt. A Whisky Sour comes out bright and structured, and an Old Fashioned leans into that vanilla and oak spice without getting cloying.
If you’re building a single malt line-up, this sits in the “everybody’s happy” lane. Whisky newcomers get clear flavours they can name (fruit, vanilla, toffee). Whisky nerds get enough oak and spice to keep it from feeling one-note.
Speyside is famous for whiskies that lean fruity and elegant, and this one delivers that vibe with a little extra grip. It’s not a peat monster, it’s not a sherry bomb, it’s just a well-judged balance that keeps you coming back for another sip.
Fun Fact: The Glenlivet name became so popular in the 1800s that other distillers tried adding “Glenlivet” to their labels, it took legal fights to protect “The Glenlivet” as its own identity.