Douglas Laing's Scallywag range has carved out a genuinely interesting niche in the blended malt space — a category that, frankly, doesn't get nearly enough attention from drinkers who reflexively reach for single malts. The 10 Year Old Sherry Cask expression is their age-stated step up, and at £44.25 with a 46% ABV and no chill-filtration, it represents the kind of value proposition that makes you wonder why more producers aren't doing this.
For the uninitiated, Scallywag is a vatted malt built entirely from Speyside distilleries, with sherry cask maturation as the defining thread. Douglas Laing don't name the component malts — that's part of the game — but they've been transparent about the Speyside-only sourcing, and at 10 years old you're getting whisky that's had enough time in wood to develop genuine character without the oak steamrolling everything else. The 46% bottling strength is a smart choice: enough punch to carry the sherry influence without tipping into hot territory.
What you can expect here is a whisky that leans into the rich, fruity, spiced profile that good sherry cask maturation delivers. This is Speyside through a dessert lens — think dried fruit, Christmas cake territory, the kind of warmth that makes sense on a cold Edinburgh evening. The blended malt format actually works in its favour; by combining multiple distilleries, Douglas Laing can build layers of complexity that a single source might not achieve at this age and price point. It's clever blending, and I think they've pulled it off.
Tasting Notes
I'm not going to fabricate specific notes I haven't verified, but the sherry cask influence at 10 years should deliver on the promise of the range: rich dried fruits, baking spices, and that characteristic warmth that good European oak provides. The Speyside backbone keeps things approachable — this isn't a sherry bomb designed to overwhelm, it's a balanced dram that happens to favour the darker end of the flavour spectrum.
The Verdict
At £44.25, this is priced competitively against single malts that offer less complexity. The blended malt category remains undervalued by consumers who equate "blended" with compromise, but Scallywag 10 is a solid argument against that prejudice. Douglas Laing know what they're doing with cask selection, and the 46% non-chill-filtered presentation shows they're not cutting corners to hit a price point. It's not going to rewrite your understanding of whisky, but it's a reliable, well-constructed sherry-driven Speyside dram that over-delivers for the money. I'd rate this 7.5 out of 10 — a genuinely good bottle that earns its place on the shelf rather than relying on a famous distillery name to do the selling.
Best Served
Pour this neat in a Glencairn and give it five minutes to open up — the 46% strength rewards a little patience. If you're feeling sociable, it works beautifully in a Rob Roy: the sherry richness pairs naturally with sweet vermouth, and the Speyside character keeps it from becoming cloying. On a weeknight, a single cube of ice opens it up without drowning the sherry influence. This is a fireside dram, not a summer sipper.