Indri Single Malt Triple Cask Indian Whisky 1L

AED 135.00

Big flavour without the fuss: triple cask Indian single malt whisky that actually tastes like the word “interesting.” Three cask styles layer toasted oak, warm spice, dried fruit, and a honeyed malt core, so every sip keeps moving. A smart pick for anyone hunting standout Indian whisky with real depth—no peat smoke cosplay, just bold, drinkable character!

Size

1L

Categories: ,
Description

Big, layered, and a little unexpected, Indri Single Malt Triple Cask is the kind of Indian whisky that turns a casual pour into a “wait, what is this?” moment. It’s matured across three different cask types, so every sip keeps switching lanes, from dessert vibes to spice to oak.

  • Nose: Warm vanilla and caramel, toasted oak, sweet dried fruit (think raisins and dates), plus a gentle baking-spice lift.
  • Taste: Honeyed malt up front, then waves of toffee, orange peel, and dark fruit, with oak and spice (cinnamon, clove) building through the middle. Full, rounded texture that coats your palate.
  • Finish: Long and comforting, with lingering cocoa, oak, and a last flicker of sweet spice that keeps you going back for another sip.

Triple cask isn’t a gimmick here, it’s the whole point. One cask can give you a single story. Three casks gives you chapters. You get sweetness first, then fruit, then that drier oak and spice grip that makes it feel “grown up” without being a lecture.

Because it’s a single malt, you’re tasting character from malted barley, not a blend trying to keep the peace. If you like whiskies with some mood swings (in a good way), this one’s for you.

Where it shines: neat when you want to pick apart the layers, a few drops of water when you want more fruit and dessert notes, or over a single big cube when you want it to slow down and get silky.

It’s also a strong move for sharing. Indian whisky can surprise people who’ve only ever looked to Scotland or Japan, and this one does it with flavour, not hype.

Fun Fact: Indri is named after the Indriya, the “five senses”, which feels pretty spot on for a whisky built to hit you with more than one flavour lane at a time.