About a year ago, I had the pleasure of reviewing WhistlePig’s 21-year-old single malt, dubbed “The Béhôlden.” And I do mean pleasure. The whiskey remains one of my favorites I’ve ever tried, with a refined, nectar-like sweetness that goes down exceptionally easily.
At the time, The Béhôlden represented a new market for WhistlePig. The Vermont brand, established in 2007, had built its reputation on transforming rye into a premium product and is largely associated with its flagship Piggyback Rye, a 6-year-old liquid that retails for around $50. The Béhôlden was billed as the first “super-aged” North American single-malt whiskey (not technically part of the American single malt trend, as the liquid is Canadian), and it cost a whopping $899 a bottle.
But that didn’t deter enthusiasts, who purchased every bottle of the initial run within hours. Now, WhistlePig is back with an even older and more ambitious bottle with the ludicrously named The Badönkådonk. It’s a 25-year-old Canadian single malt (good luck finding an older one) and it costs an eye-watering $2,000 for a 750mL bottle. That’s a lot of money, and WP is clearly setting its sights on the luxury scotch market rather than other North American single malts.

WhistlePig The Badönkådonk 25-Year-Old Single Malt Whiskey
Specs
ABV | 45.5% |
Age | 25 years |
But has WhistlePig bitten off more than it can chew this time, or is The Badönkådonk actually worthy of occupying its very rarified air? There’s only one way to find out, and that’s taste the stuff.
To learn more about our testing methodology and how we evaluate products, head here.