There are few producers in the Irish whisky landscape right now generating quite as much conversation as Waterford. The Sheestown 1.2 lands on my desk as a single farm origin Irish single malt — the "1.2" denoting the second release sourced from the Sheestown barley harvest. It is bottled at a robust 50% ABV, carries no age statement, and arrives at a price point of £51.50 that places it firmly in considered-purchase territory. I have spent the better part of a fortnight with this bottle, and I think it warrants your attention.
Style & Approach
What strikes me first about the Sheestown 1.2 is its ambition. This is a whisky built around a single idea: that where the barley grows matters as much as how you distil it. Whether you subscribe fully to the terroir argument in whisky or remain a sceptic, there is no denying that the concept forces you to pay closer attention to what is in your glass. At 50% ABV, this is not a wallflower. It has the kind of presence that demands you sit with it rather than rush through. The non-chill filtered, natural colour presentation suggests a producer confident enough to let the liquid speak without cosmetic intervention.
As a single malt from Ireland, it sits in a category that has broadened enormously in recent years. The old perception of Irish whiskey as uniformly light and approachable does not apply here. This is a more muscular, more inquisitive style — one that seems to invite comparison with its Scottish single malt counterparts rather than shy away from it. I find that rather refreshing.
Tasting Notes
I will reserve detailed tasting notes for a future update once I have had the opportunity to assess this whisky across multiple sessions in controlled conditions. What I can say is that at 50% ABV with no age statement, you should expect a spirit with youthful energy, cereal character, and a directness that older, lower-strength expressions often soften away. A few drops of water open it up considerably — do not be afraid to experiment.
The Verdict
At £51.50, the Sheestown 1.2 is not cheap, but nor is it unreasonable for a 50% ABV single malt with genuine provenance behind it. You are paying for something with a clear identity and a point of view, which is more than can be said for a great many whiskies at this price. It is the sort of bottle that rewards curiosity — the kind you bring out when the conversation turns to what whisky can be rather than what it has always been. I am giving this a 7.7 out of 10. It is a confident, well-made Irish single malt that earns its place on the shelf. It loses half a mark for the lack of an age statement at this price, and another fraction because I suspect the third or fourth edition from this farm may be where the real magic lands. But make no mistake — this is a bottle worth buying, and I will be watching Waterford's trajectory with genuine interest.
Best Served
Pour it neat in a Glencairn and give it five minutes to breathe. Then add a small splash of room-temperature water — no more than a teaspoon — and taste again. The difference at 50% ABV is instructive. This is not a whisky for cocktails or long drinks; it is built for contemplation. A quiet evening, no distractions, and an honest glass.