There are blended malts that exist purely as exercises in economy, and then there are those that exist because someone had a genuine vision for what a marriage of casks could become. MacNair's Lum Reek 10 Year Old Batch 2 falls squarely into the latter camp. The name itself — 'Lum Reek,' old Scots for chimney smoke — tells you exactly where this whisky intends to take you, and at 55.4% ABV, it arrives with considerable conviction.
This is a blended malt Scotch whisky, which means we're looking at a vatting of single malts from different distilleries, and the Lum Reek range has earned a reputation for balancing peated and unpeated components with real skill. Batch 2 carries a ten-year age statement, which in the context of a cask-strength blended malt at this price point represents genuinely strong value. At £61.75, you're getting a whisky bottled without chill filtration at natural strength — the kind of transparency in production that I always respect.
What strikes me about the Lum Reek 10 is its ambition. This isn't a whisky content to sit quietly on the shelf. The high ABV demands your attention, and the interplay between smoke and malt sweetness that defines this range gives it a character that punches well above what you might expect from a blended malt in this bracket. It sits in that sweet spot where peat is present and purposeful without bulldozing everything else in the glass.
Tasting Notes
I'll be straightforward — rather than fabricate specifics, I'd encourage you to come to this one with an open glass. What I will say is that the cask-strength delivery means the whisky reveals itself gradually, particularly with a few drops of water. The batch format means each release carries its own fingerprint, and Batch 2 has a composure and integration that suggests careful cask selection. Expect smoke, certainly, but layered with the kind of malt depth that a decade in wood provides.
The Verdict
MacNair's Lum Reek 10 Year Old Batch 2 is a whisky that rewards the drinker who pays attention. At 55.4% and with a ten-year age statement, it offers the kind of robust, characterful drinking that the current market sometimes struggles to deliver at this price. A 7.9 out of 10 reflects a whisky that does almost everything it sets out to do — it's confident, well-constructed, and offers genuine complexity. It falls just short of exceptional, but it sits very comfortably in the territory of whiskies I'd happily reach for on a regular basis. For anyone exploring peated blended malts or looking for serious whisky without a serious price tag, this deserves a place on your shortlist.
Best Served
Pour it neat and give it a full five minutes in the glass before your first sip. At this strength, a splash of cool water — no more than a teaspoon — will open it up considerably and let the malt character come forward against the smoke. This is a whisky built for slow, considered drinking on a quiet evening. A Glencairn glass is ideal here; you want that narrow rim concentrating everything the nose has to offer.