Salt in the Air, Not in the Marketing
Some distilleries talk about the sea. Old Pulteney 12 feels like it’s lived next door to it for two centuries and stopped mentioning it years ago.
Often called “The Maritime Malt,” this Highland whisky from Wick doesn’t chase peat drama or heavy sherry weight. Instead, it leans into something subtler: gentle fruit wrapped in a distinctly saline edge. Not beach bonfire smoke. More harbour breeze and weathered wood.
It’s a style that doesn’t shout. It lingers lightly.
Who Is This For?
Drinkers who enjoy subtle coastal character without peat intensity. Those who prefer restrained sweetness, light brine, and an easy-drinking Highland profile.
Overall Character
Medium-light coastal Highland malt with orchard fruit, honeyed sweetness, and a distinct saline thread running through a clean structure.
Production Style
Old Pulteney uses traditional copper pot stills, including its uniquely shaped still without a traditional swan neck, contributing to a robust yet clean spirit character. The 12-year-old expression is matured primarily in American oak ex-bourbon casks and bottled at 40% ABV, focusing on clarity and maritime influence rather than oak dominance.
Nose
Fresh and distinctly coastal. Green apple and pear skin open first, followed by a light citrus lift. Then the maritime thread becomes clearer — salted biscuit, damp rope, and a faint mineral tang that feels almost chalky. Honey and vanilla soften the edges, but the saline note lingers just beneath the fruit. It’s not complex, but it is recognisably Pulteney.
Palate
Medium-light body. Texture is smooth but slender. Sweet malt and orchard fruit arrive first, then a gentle saline edge begins to assert itself — less brine splash, more salted cracker and dry coastal air. There’s a slightly mineral dryness mid-palate, almost like wet stone, that gives definition to the sweetness. Vanilla and light caramel provide balance, but the structure remains restrained rather than expansive. The alcohol is fully integrated, keeping the profile clean and composed.
Finish
Moderate length. Fading fruit sweetness gives way to lingering salt and a drying, slightly mineral oak edge. The maritime character outlasts the fruit, leaving a firm but understated close.
Strengths
Clear coastal identity without peat.
Balanced sweetness and salinity.
Approachable and easy to drink.
Limitations
Structure feels intentionally restrained. A higher strength might have amplified texture and prolonged the mineral-saline thread, but as bottled, it prioritises clarity over amplitude.
Complexity remains moderate rather than evolving dramatically.
Value & Use Case
A reliable everyday Highland dram with subtle maritime character. Well suited for relaxed sipping or as a stepping stone into coastal whisky styles without smoke. Not built for intensity, but steady in its lane.
Similar Whiskies
Clynelish 14 – Similar coastal influence. Advantage: Greater waxy texture and complexity. Disadvantage: Less immediate sweetness.
Glenmorangie 10 – Similar light fruit profile. Advantage: Brighter citrus lift. Disadvantage: Less saline character.
Royal Lochnagar 12 – Similar Highland restraint. Advantage: Slightly more elegance. Disadvantage: Less maritime edge.
Final Verdict
Old Pulteney 12 doesn’t dramatise its maritime roots. It carries them quietly — in salt-kissed malt, mineral edges, and steady balance. It won’t overwhelm you with the ocean, but it will remind you it’s there.
Not a storm. A harbour at low tide.
Score
Nose – 84 / 100
Palate – 81 / 100
Finish – 80 / 100
Balance – 83 / 100
Overall – 82 / 100










