Deborah Phillips in association with Eden Mill Distillery are delighted to announce:
EDEN MILL ART OF
ST. ANDREWS 2025
TASTING PROFILE
The nose gives malty toasted biscuit sweetness and the aroma of freshly baked bread
On the palate there's layers of creamy, nutty Sherry - think almond frangipane
To finish, some cherry sweetness and a whisper of spice
To mark this exciting partnership with Deborah Phillips, Eden Mill has offered a FREE Distillery Gift Card - Classic Whisky Tour for two - on the First 100 orders.
“Discover the origins of Eden Mill whisky on our classic whisky tour. Begin in the immersive Whisky Room, explore our working distillery then enjoy a guided tasting.”
Eden Mill Art of St Andrews 2025
This year's Art of St Andrews release nods to the genesis of Eden Mill. Back then, as a new brewery, Eden Mill launched their first ever beer - The Clock - made with Brown Crystal malt.
It was always their intention to utilise this flavour profile in their whisky distillation process. So, in 2018, Brown Crystal malt spirit was put into first-fill Bourbon barrels. Then, earlier this year, they re-racked into Amontillado sherry casks to give the whisky a perfect, nutty finish.
Filled with nostalgia, these casks came to maturity in the same year the new disitllery opens its doors. To help capture the spirit of this release, Eden Mill partnered with local artist Deborah Phillips. Her work evokes the long road Eden Mill Distillery travelled - from beer to single malts, from paper mill to our new distillery.
Deborah’s vivid depiction of the completed distillery silhouettes it against a hopeful sunrise. Framed by botanicals and flowers, she has pressed real leaves into the canvas - anchoring the dreamlike composition in the land itself, vivid splashes of gold evoke morning light you can almost feel; a sea breeze you can almost taste.
“Like the whisky, it’s a work shaped by time, memory and craft - a nod to where we’ve been, and where we’re going, a perfect release for this monumental year, and a new beginning for Eden Mill.”