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Amaethon French Whisky French Single Malt Whisky

Amaethon French Whisky French Single Malt Whisky

7.5 /10
EDITOR
Type: Single Malt
ABV: 45%
Price: £54.75

French whisky has, in the space of a decade, moved from curiosity to credible contender. Amaethon French Single Malt Whisky is one of the more interesting bottles to land on my desk this year — a NAS single malt bottled at 45% ABV that asks you to judge it on what's in the glass rather than what's on the label. At £54.75, it sits in a competitive bracket where it needs to justify every penny against established Scottish and Irish expressions. The question is whether it does.

The name Amaethon draws from Celtic mythology — the god of agriculture, a fitting nod for a spirit born from French-grown grain. France has quietly become one of Europe's most exciting whisky-producing nations, with distillers drawing on centuries of expertise in wine and cognac production to approach malt spirit from a genuinely different angle. The terroir argument that French producers make is not mere marketing; the grain, the water, the climate, and often the cask selection carry a distinctly Gallic character that sets these whiskies apart from their British and Japanese counterparts.

This is a single malt bottled without an age statement, which in the French whisky context is worth noting. Many of these distilleries are relatively young operations, and a NAS release allows the blender to work with vatted casks of varying ages to hit a flavour profile rather than a number. At 45% ABV, Amaethon has been bottled at a strength that suggests confidence — above the legal minimum of 40%, with enough body to carry weight on the palate without requiring a cask-strength commitment from the drinker. It's a deliberate choice, and one I appreciate.

Tasting Notes

I won't fabricate specifics where my notes don't warrant it, but I can speak to the general character. French single malts in this style tend to offer a profile that sits somewhere between the fruit-forward softness you might associate with Speyside and the cereal richness of a Lowland malt, often with an underlying sweetness that nods to the country's expertise in wine and spirit cask maturation. Expect something approachable, with enough complexity to reward a slow pour.

The Verdict

Amaethon is a bottle I'd recommend to anyone who considers themselves a student of world whisky. It is not trying to be Scotch, and it shouldn't be judged as such. What it offers is a well-constructed, confidently bottled single malt from a country that has earned its place at the table. At £54.75, it's priced fairly for what it is — a serious French single malt that competes honestly in a crowded market. I'm giving it a 7.5 out of 10. It's a genuinely enjoyable dram and a worthwhile addition to any collection that looks beyond Scotland's borders. My only reservation is the lack of transparency around the distillery of origin, which I always prefer to see on a label. That aside, the liquid speaks well enough for itself.

Best Served

Pour this neat in a Glencairn and give it five minutes to open up. If you find it closes in on you at 45%, a few drops of still water will coax out the softer notes. This would also work beautifully in a French twist on the Highball — top with a quality sparkling water, a thin slice of pear, and let the malt do the talking. On a warm evening, that's a hard combination to argue with.

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Duncan Cairns
Duncan Cairns
Senior Whisky Reviewer

Duncan has spent two decades judging Scotch whisky at competitions from the International Wine & Spirit Competition to the World Whiskies Awards, developing a palate that prizes balance and terroir ab...

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