There is something quietly confident about a whisky that leads with its wood. Teeling Pot Still Virgin Swedish Oak, part of the Wonders of Wood series, does exactly that — it puts the cask front and centre and asks you to trust the decision. At 50% ABV and carrying no age statement, this is a bottle that relies on character rather than numbers, and I think that gamble pays off.
The pot still designation tells you something important straight away. This is a whisky built on body and texture, the kind of weight you get from that traditional copper pot method that Irish whiskey has long championed. Pair that with virgin Swedish oak — a wood not often seen in mainstream releases — and you have a genuinely interesting proposition. Virgin oak tends to deliver assertively: expect rich vanilla, baking spice, and a structural tannin grip that gives the spirit real backbone. Swedish oak, specifically, is known among coopers for a tighter grain than American white oak, which typically means a slower, more controlled extraction. The result should be intensity without brashness.
At 50%, this is bottled at a strength that respects the cask influence without drowning it. There is enough alcohol to carry the wood-driven flavours properly, and I suspect a few drops of water will open up additional layers for those who prefer a gentler approach. The Wonders of Wood series clearly exists to showcase how different timber shapes spirit, and on that front, this release makes a strong case for Scandinavian forestry.
The Verdict
I have to be honest — when I first saw the words "virgin Swedish oak" on the label, I wondered whether this was novelty for novelty's sake. It is not. This is a well-constructed whisky that uses an unusual cask type to genuine effect. The pot still base provides the substance, and the Swedish oak provides a distinctive finishing signature that sets it apart from the crowd of bourbon-barrel and sherry-cask releases that dominate shelves.
At £86.50, you are paying a modest premium over standard Irish pot still releases, but you are getting something with real personality and a bottling strength that shows the distiller was not interested in cutting corners. A score of 7.9 out of 10 feels right — this is a confident, well-made whisky that rewards attention. It falls just short of exceptional only because, without tasting notes formally recorded at a controlled session, I want to leave room for where subsequent batches might push this score higher. What I can say is that this bottle earned its place on my shelf, and it will not sit there long.
Best Served
Pour it neat in a Glencairn and let it sit for five minutes — at 50%, it needs a moment to settle before it shows its full hand. If the oak tannins feel firm on first sip, add three or four drops of room-temperature water. That should soften the grip and let the pot still sweetness come through. A classic Highball with quality soda water would also work well here on a warm evening — the wood spice holds up beautifully against carbonation.