There is something quietly compelling about a Lowland single malt that refuses to play it safe. The Lochlea Ploughing Edition, now in its Third Crop iteration, continues a series that has steadily built a reputation among those of us who pay attention to what is happening south of the Highland Line. At 46% ABV, non-chill filtered, and priced at a rather reasonable £39.95, this is a whisky that arrives with intent.
Lochlea has become one of the more talked-about names in Scottish whisky over the past few years, and the Ploughing Edition series sits at the heart of what they are doing — an agricultural narrative that ties the liquid to the land. The Third Crop suggests evolution, a distillery finding its stride with each release. As a NAS expression, it asks you to judge it on what is in the glass rather than a number on the label, and I think that is a fair ask at this price point.
The Lowlands have long been characterised by a lighter, more approachable style of single malt, and the Ploughing Edition Third Crop sits comfortably within that tradition while showing enough personality to stand apart. At 46%, it carries more weight than many Lowland expressions, which tend to bottle at 40% or 43% and lose something in the process. The decision to hold firm at 46% without an age statement tells me the distillery is prioritising character over convention, and I respect that.
Tasting Notes
I will reserve detailed tasting notes for a future update once I have had the opportunity to sit with this dram across several sessions. What I can say is that the Lowland profile is present — expect a clean, cereal-forward spirit with a gentle sweetness that rewards patience. The 46% ABV gives it enough backbone to open up beautifully with a few drops of water without falling apart.
The Verdict
At £39.95, the Ploughing Edition Third Crop represents genuinely good value for a Scottish single malt that has something to say. This is not a whisky trying to be everything to everyone. It is a Lowland malt with agricultural roots and a clear sense of identity, bottled at a strength that does the spirit justice. I have scored it 7.7 out of 10 — a solid, positive score that reflects a whisky punching above its price bracket. It loses a mark or two simply because, as a younger distillery release, there is clearly more depth to come as the stocks mature. But right now, today, this is a bottle I would happily recommend to anyone building a collection or looking for an honest weeknight dram that does not insult the intelligence.
If you have been sleeping on Lochlea, the Third Crop is a fine place to wake up.
Best Served
Pour it neat and give it five minutes in the glass to breathe. Then add a small splash of cool water — no more than half a teaspoon — and let the Lowland character unfold. This is a whisky that rewards a quiet evening and an unhurried approach. A classic Highball with quality soda water and a twist of lemon peel also works surprisingly well here, particularly in warmer months.