Indian whisky has, over the past decade, shifted from curiosity to credible contender — and Paul John has been central to that conversation. This 2016 vintage, bottled by Single Cask Nation at a muscular 57.6% ABV after just four years in cask, is the kind of dram that forces you to reconsider assumptions about age statements and geography in equal measure.
Let me be direct: four years is young by any measure. In Scotland, that would barely qualify for legal sale. But Goa is not Scotland. The tropical climate along India's western coast accelerates maturation dramatically — the angel's share alone tells you how aggressively wood and spirit are interacting in that heat. A four-year-old single malt matured in those conditions can carry the depth and complexity you might associate with something twice its age from a cooler warehouse. That is not marketing spin; it is thermodynamics.
Single Cask Nation have built a reputation for selecting individual casks with genuine character, and their decision to bottle this at natural cask strength without chill filtration is the right one. At 57.6%, this is not a whisky that hides behind dilution. It arrives with full intent. You will want to spend time with it, adding water gradually — a few drops at a time — to see how it opens up and evolves in the glass. That kind of interaction is one of the genuine pleasures of cask-strength bottling.
As a single cask release, each bottle is drawn from one individual barrel, meaning what you hold is unrepeatable. Once these bottles are gone, they are gone. That scarcity is real, not manufactured, and it gives the whisky a sense of occasion that I find appealing.
Tasting Notes
I have not published formal tasting notes for this bottling at this time. What I will say is that Paul John's house style — shaped by their copper pot stills and the Goan climate — tends toward richness and fruit-forward intensity, often with a pronounced tropical character that sets it apart from its Scottish and Japanese counterparts. At this strength and from a single cask, expect concentration and personality in abundance.
The Verdict
At £96.75, this sits in competitive territory. You are paying for a cask-strength, single cask Indian single malt from a producer with a growing track record, selected by an independent bottler known for quality picks. Is it cheap? No. But it represents genuine value when you consider the strength, the singularity of the cask, and the quality of the source spirit. I would score this 7.6 out of 10 — a confident, well-made whisky that rewards curiosity and an open mind. It is not trying to be Scotch, and it is better for it.
Best Served
Pour it neat first and sit with it for a few minutes. Then add water — literally a few drops at a time from a pipette or teaspoon. At 57.6%, this whisky will transform with dilution, and finding your preferred balance is half the pleasure. A single large ice cube works on a warm evening, but I would urge you to try it without ice at least once to appreciate the full texture. This is a dram for slow, attentive drinking — no mixer required.
Community Reviews
Haruki Sato
Solid but not a steal
7/10
Good whisky, no question. Rich and malty with some nice spice on the finish. But at nearly a hundred quid for a 4-year-old, I keep thinking about what else I could grab at that price point. I'd buy a dram at a bar before committing to a bottle.
26 March 2026
Simon Hughes
Solid but not a steal
7/10
Good whisky, no question. Rich and malty with some nice spice on the finish. But at nearly a hundred quid for a 4-year-old, I keep thinking about what else I could grab at that price point. I'd buy a dram at a bar before committing to a bottle.
26 March 2026
Camila Ortiz
Solid but not a steal
7/10
Good whisky, no question. Rich and malty with some nice spice on the finish. But at nearly a hundred quid for a 4-year-old, I keep thinking about what else I could grab at that price point. I'd buy a dram at a bar before committing to a bottle.
26 March 2026
Marcus Blackwell
Indian whisky converts are real
9/10
I was skeptical of Indian single malts until a friend poured me this neat. Honey, dried apricot, a bit of oak char — it's layered and interesting. The cask strength is no joke at 57.6% but it never feels harsh. Single Cask Nation picked a winner here.
22 March 2026
Ravi Krishnan
Indian whisky converts are real
9/10
I was skeptical of Indian single malts until a friend poured me this neat. Honey, dried apricot, a bit of oak char — it's layered and interesting. The cask strength is no joke at 57.6% but it never feels harsh. Single Cask Nation picked a winner here.
22 March 2026
Clara Johansson
Indian whisky converts are real
9/10
I was skeptical of Indian single malts until a friend poured me this neat. Honey, dried apricot, a bit of oak char — it's layered and interesting. The cask strength is no joke at 57.6% but it never feels harsh. Single Cask Nation picked a winner here.
22 March 2026
Petra Novak
Nice sipper, won't blow your mind
7/10
Enjoyed this over a couple of evenings. Vanilla and coconut on the nose, some baking spice and a medium finish. It's well made and easy to like, but at this age it doesn't quite have the depth I look for in a special occasion bottle.
4 January 2026
Omar Diallo
Nice sipper, won't blow your mind
7/10
Enjoyed this over a couple of evenings. Vanilla and coconut on the nose, some baking spice and a medium finish. It's well made and easy to like, but at this age it doesn't quite have the depth I look for in a special occasion bottle.
4 January 2026
Ingrid Holm
Nice sipper, won't blow your mind
7/10
Enjoyed this over a couple of evenings. Vanilla and coconut on the nose, some baking spice and a medium finish. It's well made and easy to like, but at this age it doesn't quite have the depth I look for in a special occasion bottle.
4 January 2026
Olivia Park
Interesting pick from Single Cask Nation
7/10
Always curious what SCN selects and this Paul John doesn't disappoint. Ripe banana and butterscotch on the nose, warm spices on the palate with a medium-long finish. It's youthful but confident. Would pair nicely with a rich dessert if you're into that sort of thing.
3 December 2025
Daniel Torres
Interesting pick from Single Cask Nation
7/10
Always curious what SCN selects and this Paul John doesn't disappoint. Ripe banana and butterscotch on the nose, warm spices on the palate with a medium-long finish. It's youthful but confident. Would pair nicely with a rich dessert if you're into that sort of thing.
3 December 2025
Aria Kim
Interesting pick from Single Cask Nation
7/10
Always curious what SCN selects and this Paul John doesn't disappoint. Ripe banana and butterscotch on the nose, warm spices on the palate with a medium-long finish. It's youthful but confident. Would pair nicely with a rich dessert if you're into that sort of thing.
3 December 2025
Aiko Tanaka
Tropical cask strength done right
8/10
Poured this for my tasting group and it was the surprise hit of the night. At 57.6% ABV it's big but approachable — loads of pineapple, toffee, and a touch of leather. We all agreed the Goa climate does something magical to maturation. Four years feels like eight.
29 November 2025
Ryan Mitchell
Tropical cask strength done right
8/10
Poured this for my tasting group and it was the surprise hit of the night. At 57.6% ABV it's big but approachable — loads of pineapple, toffee, and a touch of leather. We all agreed the Goa climate does something magical to maturation. Four years feels like eight.
29 November 2025
Natasha Volkov
Tropical cask strength done right
8/10
Poured this for my tasting group and it was the surprise hit of the night. At 57.6% ABV it's big but approachable — loads of pineapple, toffee, and a touch of leather. We all agreed the Goa climate does something magical to maturation. Four years feels like eight.
29 November 2025
Daniel Oyama
A bit young for the price
6/10
It's fine. Decent nose with some fruit and caramel, and the palate has enough going on to keep you interested. But I can't shake the feeling that £97 for a 4-year-old is asking a lot, even with the single cask appeal. I'd want another couple of years in the barrel at this cost.
16 November 2025
Mia Sundberg
A bit young for the price
6/10
It's fine. Decent nose with some fruit and caramel, and the palate has enough going on to keep you interested. But I can't shake the feeling that £97 for a 4-year-old is asking a lot, even with the single cask appeal. I'd want another couple of years in the barrel at this cost.
16 November 2025
Herbert Muller
A bit young for the price
6/10
It's fine. Decent nose with some fruit and caramel, and the palate has enough going on to keep you interested. But I can't shake the feeling that £97 for a 4-year-old is asking a lot, even with the single cask appeal. I'd want another couple of years in the barrel at this cost.
16 November 2025
Emily Thomas
Punches well above its age
8/10
Only 4 years old but you'd never guess it. The tropical fruit and toffee on the nose are classic Paul John, and at 57.6% it carries the heat beautifully without being a bruiser. Added a few drops of water and got waves of mango and dark chocolate. Genuinely impressed.
30 October 2025
Sara Lindstrom
Punches well above its age
8/10
Only 4 years old but you'd never guess it. The tropical fruit and toffee on the nose are classic Paul John, and at 57.6% it carries the heat beautifully without being a bruiser. Added a few drops of water and got waves of mango and dark chocolate. Genuinely impressed.
30 October 2025
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