Diageo Rare Series

Diageo Rare Series: Scotland’s Scattered Treasures

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The Diageo Rare Series is a collection of ultra-aged single malts from Diageo’s Luxury Group, released through 1749-founded merchant Justerini & Brooks. The inaugural chapter is five whiskies from five distilleries: Blair Athol 1991 (34yo, 50.8%), Caol Ila 1983 (42yo, 56.4%), Clynelish 1983 (42yo, 49.5%), Talisker 1992 (33yo, 60.1%), and the headline Glenury Royal 1970 (55yo, 62.4%), the oldest single malt Diageo has ever bottled. Prices run from £800 to £5,700, with fewer than 1,400 bottles worldwide, sold only via Diageo Private Client registration.


There is a particular kind of silence in a very old warehouse the kind that smells of damp oak and evaporating angels’ share, where time moves at the pace of a slow tide.

Diageo’s new Rare Series, released through the venerable wine and spirits merchant Justerini & Brooks, is bottled from that silence. Five expressions, drawn from five iconic Scottish distilleries, each one a survivor of decades some stretching back more than half a century. This is not a marketing exercise dressed in tartan. This is an act of excavation.

Diageo Rare Series five-bottle collection, Justerini & Brooks 2026
Diageo Rare Series

The Backstory

Justerini & Brooks has been trading since 1749 the year before the Battle of Plassey, to give you a sense of the timeline. When a house this old reaches into its cellars and says look what we found, it is worth paying attention.

Rare Series draws from some of the most remarkable whiskies within Diageo’s care, mapping the full geography of Scottish whisky from the Highland heartlands and the rugged northern coast to the windswept shores of Islay and the Isle of Skye. The five inaugural expressions are not blended for commercial coherence. Each is a standalone monument to a single distillery’s character.

What makes this release genuinely unusual is the cask work. Several expressions have been finished in unconventional wood combinations Pedro Ximénez–seasoned American oak, Amoroso hogsheads aged for over 20 years — suggesting that Diageo’s master distillers have been quietly experimenting in the dark for decades, and only now are sharing what they found.


The Five Expressions

🏔️ Blair Athol, 1991

347 bottles · US$900 ex tax / £800 incl tax

The only Perthshire entry in the series, and it arrives as something of a revelation. This is the first Blair Athol ever matured in ex-Sherry European oak casks and finished in sweet Pedro Ximénez–seasoned new American oak hogsheads. At 347 bottles, it is the most generously allocated of the five and at US$900, the most accessible entry point into a collection where the prices climb steeply and justifiably. 

The Nose: Sticky Medjool dates and Seville orange peel, with a background hum of beeswax and worn leather. The PX influence arrives slowly — not as sweetness so much as warmth, like stepping from a cold corridor into a room with a fire already lit.

The Palate: Rich and unhurried. Dried black cherry, praline, a whisper of clove. The new American oak brings structure without aggression — a quiet scaffolding beneath the fruit.

The Finish: Long, raisined, with a final note of dark chocolate that refuses to leave.

Blair Athol 1991 Rare Series bottle, 34-year-old Diageo single malt
BLAIR ATHOL, 1991, RARE SERIES

Unconventional pairing: Aged Manchego with a smear of quince paste. The salt and funk of the cheese cuts the sweetness beautifully.


🌊 Caol Ila, 1983

318 bottles · US$3,000 ex tax / £2,700 incl tax

Over 40 years in cask. Let that number sit for a moment.

The oldest-ever Caol Ila release from Justerini & Brooks, matured in American oak and married in European oak puncheons, delivering a rounded, powerful yet lyrical flavour that balances intensity with elegance. With 318 bottles in existence and a price that reflects four decades of warehouse patience, this is the series’ most immediate test of how seriously you take your Islay whisky. 

The Nose: Cold sea spray over a bed of smouldering heather the classic Caol Ila signature but softened by four decades into something almost stately. Lemon balm, white pepper, and beneath it all, the ghost of bonfire smoke at dusk.

The Palate: This is where age earns its keep. The peat is no longer a shout it’s a memory. Brine-cured citrus, waxed lemon rind, and a silky coastal brine that coats the tongue like the air off the Sound of Islay itself.

The Finish: Extraordinarily long. The smoke returns in the final seconds, dry and elegant, like incense in a stone chapel.

With a drop of water: Even a teaspoon opens a vein of tropical fruit — ripe papaya and guava that the neat pour barely hints at. Worth the experiment.

Caol Ila 1983 Rare Series bottle, 42-year-old Islay single malt
CAOL ILA, 1983, RARE SERIES

Unconventional pairing: Cold-smoked salmon with crème fraîche and a few capers. The smoke mirrors; the cream softens.


🕯️ Clynelish, 1983

160 bottles · US$4,000 ex tax / £3,600 incl tax

Clynelish is one of Scotland’s most quietly adored distilleries beloved by those who know, overlooked by everyone else. This 1983 expression is a case study in why it deserves its cult. It is also the scarcest of the five accessible expressions: 160 bottles worldwide is not a release, it is a rumour made liquid. The US$4,000 price tag is not an indulgence it is arithmetic.

An historic small batch that showcases the Highland distillery’s supreme elegance and signature waxy character, with fragrant top notes of lavender and rose. 

The Nose: The famous Clynelish wax arrives first that distinctive candied, almost cosmetic quality that no other Highland distillery replicates. Then comes the floral wave: dried lavender, damask rose, warm beeswax. It is like walking into an old apothecary shop in the Highlands, jars of dried flowers lining sun-bleached shelves.

The Palate: Silken. A rare mouthfeel that suggests age without heaviness. Stewed apple, hazelnut cream, a faint tang of sea air. The wax coats every surface and refuses to be rushed.

The Finish: Gentle and lingering, fading through notes of dried chamomile and a barely-there white pepper warmth.

Clynelish 1983 Rare Series bottle, 42-year-old Highland single malt
CLYNELISH, 1983, RARE SERIES

Unconventional pairing: Soft goat’s cheese on sourdough toast with a drizzle of lavender honey. The florals sing in unison.


🌋 Talisker, 1992

331 bottles · US$1,300 ex tax / £1,200 incl tax

Talisker from the Isle of Skye is always wild. This one has been disciplined by patience into something extraordinary.

A whisky of profound richness defined by an exceptionally long finish, this is the only expression drawn from an experimental batch finished for over 20 years in Amoroso-seasoned American oak hogsheads. Amoroso is a sweetened Oloroso Sherry: rich, nutty, and potent. Twenty years of finishing is not a technique; it is a commitment. At 331 bottles and US$1,300, it sits alongside the Blair Athol as the series’ most reachable proposition though “reachable” is doing some heavy lifting here.

The Nose: Volcanic coastline meeting a Sherry bodega. Black pepper and sea salt up front — unmistakably Talisker — then the Amoroso eases in: dried fig, walnut oil, dark toffee. The tension between maritime savagery and Sherry luxury is the whole story of this whisky in a sniff.

The Palate: Bold, textured, and layered like a geological cross-section. Smoked dried fruit, chilli-dark chocolate, a brine that cuts through the sweetness like a cold wind off the Cuillin hills. The Amoroso has tamed Talisker without domesticating it.

The Finish: Phenomenal. The pepper comes roaring back in the final act the famous Talisker finish, amplified and extended. It stays with you for minutes, warm and crackling like embers.

Talisker 1992 Rare Series bottle, 33-year-old Isle of Skye single malt
TALISKER, 1992, RARE SERIES

Unconventional pairing: Blue cheese — something bold like Roquefort or Stichelton. The sharp salt and funk are the only flavours robust enough to keep pace.


👑 Glenury Royal, 1970

232 bottles · US$6,350 ex tax / £5,700 incl tax

Here is where the series becomes genuinely historic.

A rare survivor from the long-lost ghost distillery, this is the oldest Single Malt ever released by Diageo distilled in 1970, matured in American oak hogsheads, and married in European oak puncheons. Glenury Royal closed its doors in 1985 and was demolished in 2004. What exists in those 232 bottles is all that will ever exist. At US$6,350, you are not paying for whisky — you are paying for irreplaceability. The arithmetic of extinction makes this one of the most justifiable prices in the entire series.

The Nose: Antique furniture and old books but not mustily so. Pressed dried flowers. A spoonful of marmalade. Somewhere deep, the grain itself: malt, cereal, the honest smell of a working distillery that is now only memory.

The Palate: Impossibly complex for something so composed. Crystallised ginger, toasted oak, stewed pear, and a salty mineral edge that speaks of time and loss in equal measure. To drink it is to commune with a Scotland that no longer physically exists.

The Finish: Exceptionally long. The oak arrives last, dignified rather than drying, fading slowly into a warm, slightly resinous softness.

Glenury Royal 1970 Rare Series bottle, 55-year-old Diageo ghost distillery single malt
GLENURY ROYAL, 1970, RARE SERIES

Unconventional pairing: Skip the food entirely. A square of 85% dark chocolate, eaten before the pour, is all the accompaniment this ghost needs.


The Verdict

The Rare Series is not a collection designed to be owned it is designed to be experienced. Each bottle represents a specific distillery at a specific moment in time, preserved against all probability by decades of careful caskwork and the custodianship of one of Britain’s oldest merchants.

The combined allocation across all five expressions amounts to fewer than 1,400 bottles worldwide. To frame that another way: there are more people at a mid-sized whisky festival than there are bottles of Glenury Royal 1970. Scarcity here is not a marketing mechanism it is simply the mathematics of time.

For collectors, the Glenury Royal alone justifies attention: nothing from this distillery will ever be made again.
For drinkers, the Caol Ila 1983 and Talisker 1992 are the most immediately thrilling. For the curious newcomer with a generous spirit and a patient bank account, the Blair Athol 1991 is the warmest possible welcome.

These are not daily drivers. They are the bottles you open when you want to remember that whisky, at its best, is not just a drink it is a conversation with history.

Register your interest at justerinis.com/rare-series.

The five expressions at a glance: age, ABV, casks and price

Five distilleries, two centuries of combined ageing, and prices that climb from £800 to £5,700. Here is how the Diageo Rare Series lineup compares before we taste each one.

BottlesBlair Athol 1991Caol Ila 1983Clynelish 1983Talisker 1992Glenury Royal 1970
RegionHighland (Pitlochry)IslayCoastal HighlandIsle of SkyeHighland (ghost)
Age34 yo42 yo42 yo33 yo55 yo
ABV50.8%56.4%49.5%60.1%62.4%
CaskEx-sherry Euro oak, PX-seasoned American oak finishAmerican oak, married Euro oak puncheonsAmerican oak hogsheads (bourbon)Refill oak, 20yr+ Amoroso finishAmerican oak hogsheads, married Euro oak puncheons
Bottles347318160331232
Price£800 / $900£2,700 / $3,000£3,600 / $4,000£1,200 / $1,300£5,700 / $6,350
For whomThe accessible entryThe Islay obsessiveThe Clynelish cultSkye + sherry loversThe collector

What is the Diageo Rare Series?

The Rare Series is an evolving collection from Diageo’s Luxury Group, drawn from a maturing stock of more than 10 million casks across over 30 distilleries. Rather than blending for consistency, each release is a single-distillery expression chosen by master blender Dr Craig Wilson and bottled only when judged ready. The series launched on 30 April 2026 and is sold exclusively through Diageo Private Client teams and Justerini & Brooks, not general retail.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Diageo Rare Series? The Rare Series is a collection of ultra-aged single malts from Diageo’s Luxury Group, released through Justerini & Brooks. The first chapter features five whiskies: Blair Athol 1991, Clynelish 1983, Caol Ila 1983, Talisker 1992, and a 55-year-old Glenury Royal 1970, the oldest single malt Diageo has ever bottled.

What is the oldest whisky in the Diageo Rare Series? The Glenury Royal 1970 is the oldest, a 55-year-old single malt and the oldest Diageo has ever released. It comes from a ghost distillery in Stonehaven that closed in 1985 and was later demolished. Matured in American oak hogsheads and married in European oak puncheons, it is bottled at 62.4% ABV.

How much does the Diageo Rare Series cost? Prices run from £800 (US$900) for the Blair Athol 1991 to £5,700 (US$6,350) for the Glenury Royal 1970. The Talisker 1992 is £1,200, the Caol Ila 1983 £2,700, and the Clynelish 1983 £3,600. UK prices include tax; US prices are quoted before tax.

Where can I buy the Diageo Rare Series? The Rare Series is sold only through Diageo’s Private Client network and Justerini & Brooks via a global registration system, not general retail. You can register interest at justerinis.com/rare-series. Allocations are tiny, with fewer than 1,400 bottles across all five expressions worldwide.

Are the Diageo Rare Series whiskies cask strength? ABVs vary. The Glenury Royal 1970 is cask strength at 62.4% and the Talisker 1992 sits at 60.1%. The Caol Ila 1983 is 56.4%, the Blair Athol 1991 50.8%, and the Clynelish 1983 49.5%. All five are natural, high-strength bottlings without heavy reduction.

Which Diageo Rare Series whisky should I buy? For collectors, the Glenury Royal 1970 is the headline, nothing from that distillery will ever be made again. For drinkers, the Caol Ila 1983 and Talisker 1992 are the most immediately thrilling. The Blair Athol 1991, at £800, is the warmest and most affordable entry into the collection.

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