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Amahagan Edition No 1 / Blended Malt Whisky World Blended Whisky

Amahagan Edition No 1 / Blended Malt Whisky World Blended Whisky

7.9 /10
EDITOR
Type: Blended Malt
ABV: 47%
Price: £76.75

Amahagan Edition No 1 is one of those bottles that forces you to pay attention to what's happening in the world malt category. A blended malt whisky assembled from components sourced internationally — hence the 'World Blended' designation — it represents a growing trend among Japanese producers to look beyond their own borders for cask and spirit supply, blending domestic and imported malts into something deliberately cosmopolitan. At 47% ABV and without an age statement, this is a whisky that asks you to judge it on execution rather than pedigree.

I'll be honest: when I first encountered the Amahagan range, my instinct was scepticism. 'World blend' can be a euphemism for 'we couldn't source enough domestic stock,' and the NAS designation doesn't help that perception. But the category has matured considerably, and Edition No 1 sits as the foundational expression — the calling card, if you like — designed to showcase the house style before the more experimental cask finishes take over in later editions.

What strikes me about this whisky is its confidence at 47%. That's a deliberate choice, sitting above the standard 40-43% that dominates the blended malt space but below the cask-strength territory that signals a different kind of drinker. It suggests the blenders wanted texture and presence without aggression — a whisky that works neat but has enough backbone to hold its own with a splash of water or over ice.

Tasting Notes

I won't fabricate specific notes where the data doesn't support them, but I can tell you what this style typically delivers. Blended malts at this strength, particularly those drawing on both Japanese and international components, tend to sit in a space between the delicacy of Japanese single malts and the broader, sometimes more muscular character of Scotch or other traditions. Expect a whisky that balances approachability with enough complexity to reward a second pour. The 47% ABV should give it a pleasant weight on the palate without any burn.

The Verdict

At £76.75, Amahagan Edition No 1 occupies an interesting price bracket. It's more expensive than most entry-level blended malts from Scotland, but considerably cheaper than the increasingly stratospheric prices attached to named Japanese single malts. For anyone curious about the 'world blend' movement — or anyone who's been priced out of Yamazaki and Nikka but still wants something with Japanese blending philosophy behind it — this is a genuinely worthwhile bottle. The 47% ABV shows commitment to flavour over volume economics, which I always respect.

I'm giving this a 7.9 out of 10. It's a well-constructed, thoughtfully presented whisky that does exactly what it sets out to do. It won't rewrite your understanding of malt whisky, but it doesn't need to. It's a clean, confident blend that earns its shelf space on quality rather than hype — and in a market increasingly dominated by hype, that counts for something.

Best Served

Try this one in a Japanese-style highball first — tall glass, plenty of ice, good soda water, and a twist of lemon peel. The 47% ABV means it won't wash out the way weaker blends do when diluted, and you'll get a genuinely refreshing long drink that still tastes like whisky. Once you've had your fill of that, come back to it neat in a Glencairn. It rewards both approaches.

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Joe Whitfield
Joe Whitfield
Editor-in-Chief

Joe has spent over fifteen years immersed in the whiskey industry, beginning his career at a Speyside distillery before moving into drinks journalism. As Editor-in-Chief at Whiskeyful.com, he oversees...

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