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Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur vs Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey: Which Irish Is Better?

Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur vs Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey: Which Irish Is Better?

The world of whiskey is full of bottles that promise more than they deliver. Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur vs Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey: Which Irish Is Better? belongs to the rarer category that simply lets the liquid speak.

Choosing between Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur and Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey can be tough, especially when they compete in the same space. In this head-to-head comparison, we taste them side by side and score every dimension so you don't have to guess.

Whether you're stocking your home bar or picking a gift, this breakdown will point you to the right bottle.

Specifications at a Glance

Black Irish Original Irish Cream LiqueurBushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey
DistilleryN/AN/A
TypeIrishIrish
AgeN/AN/A
ABV17% ABV), 750ml, MSRP $29 Looks almost identical t46% ABV, mash bill: 100% malted barley, SRP $29
Price$29.00$30.00
Rating7/107/10

Nose

Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur: Has aromas of malted milk balls, caramel apples, and cocoa.

Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey: There is a pronounced medley of tropical fruit on the nose alongside notes of overripe pear, yellow plum, sweet corn, and caramel sauce. This is very fruity and pungent. Aeration helps bring forth notes of dried berries and spice with a faintly juniper quality. Notes of ripe, yellow bananas dominate, almost verging on banana fruit candy.

Both whiskeys present distinct aromatic profiles. The differences on the nose already hint at the divergent tasting experiences to come.

Palate

Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur: Flavors of many desserts including; toasted marshmallows, milk chocolate, and cooked caramels. Finish: A cloying viscosity diminishes rapidly leaving nothing but lingering notes of milk chocolate.

Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey: In the mouth, the whiskey is sweetly fruity, with cloying notes of ripe bananas and whole grain bread. The texture is soft and smooth with a gentle pepperiness. I would not guess this was 46% ABV; it reads far lower. There are, as expected, heavy banana notes on the fruity finish as the whiskey gently evaporated in the back of the mouth. This is smooth and easy drinking.

On the palate, the character of each whiskey really comes to life. This is where personal preference plays the biggest role.

Finish

Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur: A cloying viscosity diminishes rapidly leaving nothing but lingering notes of milk chocolate.

Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey: Comments: Aged a minimum of three years in ex-bourbon barrels, 46% ABV, mash bill: 100% malted barley, SRP $29.99/ 750ml bottle

The finish can make or break a whiskey. A long, satisfying finish keeps you coming back for another sip.

Value for Money

Both whiskeys are competitively priced for what they deliver, with Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur at $29.00 and Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey at $30.00.

With both bottles in a comparable price range, the decision comes down to flavour preference rather than wallet size.

The Verdict

This is a genuinely close call. Both Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur and Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey have their strengths, and picking a clear winner depends entirely on what you value most in a whiskey.

We'd recommend trying both if you can. Each has qualities that make it worth a pour.

Read the Full Reviews

Final Reflections

Black Irish Original Irish Cream Liqueur vs Bushmills Prohibition Recipe Irish Whiskey: Which Irish Is Better? is the kind of bottle that rewards the curious — those willing to sit with a glass and let the story unfold at its own pace.

Walter Graves
Walter Graves
Features & Culture Writer

Walter writes long-form features that explore the stories behind whiskey — the people, places, and landscapes that give each bottle its character. A former travel journalist, he has visited over two h...

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