Continue reading this on our app for a better experience

Open in App
Floating Button
Home Options Behind the Bottle

New Indian single malt whiskies are holding their own against scotch

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 7 min read
New Indian single malt whiskies are holding their own against scotch
Bungalow’s lineup of Indian single malts (Pictures: Bungalow, Rampur Distillery, Pernod Ricard, Indri)
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

At celebrity chef Vikas Khanna’s Indian restaurant, Bungalow, in New York’s East Village, a dozen Indian single malt whiskies are highlighted under their own section of the spirits list.

Just a few years ago, that would not have been possible, says partner Sameer Bhatt. Although India is the world’s largest whiskey market, its whiskies are typically blends, often made with a rumlike molasses distillate. Until recently, Indian single malts were virtually unknown, if they were even available outside the subcontinent.

Now, with American whiskey consumption rising hand-in-hand with India’s growing affluence, distilleries are turning out high-quality single malts in quantities available to export.

They are not only gaining traction, but also snapping up awards. Amrut Triparva was named to the 2024 Best in Class roster at Whiskies of the World; last year, Indri Diwali Collector’s Edition 2023 took home the top prize there. This year, Indri Founder’s Reserve 11-year-old wine cask was named one of the Top 15 Whiskies at the International Whisky Competition.

“My Indri is selling more than my Macallan,” Bhatt says.

See also: Dimple opens along bar-crowded Purvis Street with a mixed-bag menu

Sanjeev Banga, president of international business at Radico Khaitan, says: “I tell people what happened in the wine industry is now happening in single malt.” Radico is the parent company of Rampur Distillery, based in Northern India’s Uttar Pradesh. 

Just as New World wines drew the spotlight from the European old guard, so have Indian whiskies enticed drinkers away from scotch. “Malt consumers are always looking for something new and innovative.”

A taste of India

See also: MOGA’s latest offerings give off Japanese vibes without the clichés

At its most basic, single malt whiskey is made at a single distillery using only malted barley in the mash — a distinct expression of that distillery’s output. (Blending different barrels from different years is okay, and often done to produce a consistent product.)

Amrut Distilleries, which was founded in Bangalore in 1948, is generally credited with pioneering India’s single malt industry, with the 2004 release of Amrut Single Malt, a scotch-style spirit made from germinated barley and flavoured with smoky peat. That was followed by Goa’s Paul John distillery, which released its first single malt in 2012, and Rampur, which debuted its own version in 2016.

Newer entrants include Indri, produced by Piccadily Distilleries about 100 miles north of New Delhi in the small city of Indri, which gives the whiskey its name; Longitude 77, a distillery closer to Mumbai owned by Pernod Ricard (and named for the longitudinal line passing through India); and Godawan, a Diageo brand in Alwar, Rajasthan, that took the best single malt in the world trophy at the 2024 London Spirits Competition.

Distinctions start with the malt: Most distillers use India’s six-row barley, which has higher protein and fat content compared to the two-row barley preferred elsewhere. The smaller granules create a robust flavour some distillers describe as “sharp”. Especially when fermented with local yeast, it can produce distinctly Indian flavours. 

Tasting across multiple brands, I frequently detected cardamom, ginger and orange; fennel seed, sandalwood and incense-like spice notes sometimes also came through. (Of course, peat isn’t native to India, and those using peated barley such as Amrut and Paul John import the ingredient from Scotland.)

For more lifestyle, arts and fashion trends, click here for Options Section

India’s hot, humid climate is another key differentiator. Once barrelled, the distillate ages more quickly than in cooler Scotland or Japan. In some regions, wide swings in temperature and humidity — mostly from hot and damp to hotter and damper — means the barrels expand and contract frequently, meaning the oak makes more contact with the whiskey, allowing it to extract vanilla and spice.

The liquid also evaporates more quickly, a phenomenon known as the “angel’s share”, creating a more concentrated spirit. Producers say one year’s worth of ageing in India is akin to three or four in a cooler climate. “A 10-year-old [Indian single malt] is equivalent to a 40-year-old scotch,” says Rampur’s Banga.

That rapid maturation also means it is rare to find long-aged single malts — and some producers eschew age statements altogether. Most of India’s producers follow the rules set by the Scotch Whisky Association, which requires whisky to be aged a minimum of three years. However, some smaller distilleries are bristling against that, lobbying to age single malts a minimum of one year.

Increased appreciation

The US is the single largest export market for Amrut, says Raj Sabharwal, founding partner of Glass Revolution Imports, estimating the country accounts for one-third of global sales. “The American appetite for it has grown and continues to grow.”

In part, that is due to the diaspora of often well-heeled Indians in the US — including those running acclaimed restaurants like Bungalow, Semma or Junoon, which gladly boost the visibility of Indian spirits or mix them into cocktails.

“Fifteen years ago, we did not target the Indian community,” Sabharwal recalls. “They would not have been familiar with it, and there was a sense that anything made in India wasn’t very good,” a throwback to the blended whiskey days. He remembers a sales call to Junoon around that time, when the beverage director deflected that their customers preferred scotch. “Now they buy everything that we release.”

Rampur’s Banga agrees. “The Indian diaspora is our biggest brand ambassador,” he says.

But it’s not only the Indian community pouring these drams.

“Indian single malt is still considered new,” explains Ben Wald, head of beverage programming at whiskey-focused Manhattan bar Flatiron Room. That novelty is part of the appeal for American whiskey lovers: “There has been, and always will be, a desire to be the first on the boat. Indian single malt is still capitalising on this desire.”

Future growth

Looking ahead, one thing is abundantly clear: more Indian single malts are on the way.

Currently, 24 distilleries in India make single malt whiskey, estimates Sabharwal, with six more under construction. That includes one from Pernod Ricard, which broke ground earlier this month and is anticipated to have a production capacity of up to 13 million litres of alcohol a year, making it the largest malt distillery in the country — and Asia.

“We are still a nascent category,” Banga says, welcoming the potential competition. “[More] brands in the market [means] more people exposed to single malt; they will start liking it and then hopefully loving it. Like what happened to Japanese whisky, I’m sure the same will [occur] to Indian single malt as well.”

With the US election looming, tariffs are a wild card for growth. “If the Scotch whisky tariffs come back into play, some consumers may look for another choice where the price/age ratio is more agreeable for their budget,” predicts Flatiron’s Wald. “The key will be who can convert Scotch whisky drinkers over to their single malts. Suppliers talk a lot about ‘liquid to lips’ being the best marketing strategy, and for global malts still in their infancy, getting consumers to try Indian single malt is key.”

A further sign that Indian whiskey has captured attention in the US: Kentucky bourbon maker Bardstown is using emptied Indian whiskey barrels to add nuanced flavour to American whiskeys. Its Bardstown Bourbon Amrut (US$160, $211) finishes a blend of straight ryes and bourbon in former Amrut casks, adding nuanced smoke and spice.

“It’s the first American whiskey finished in Indian whiskey barrels,” says master blender Dan Callaway. “It’s Bangalore to Bardstown.”

 

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2025 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.