Japanese & Other Foreign Whisky

277 products

277 products

Japanese whisky has earned its place among the world’s finest spirits, consistently winning top international awards and captivating enthusiasts with exceptional craftsmanship, precision blending, and distinctive house styles. Inspired by Scottish tradition but refined with Japanese attention to detail, the category spans everything from everyday blends to some of the rarest and most collectible bottles in the world.

Japan’s whisky story began in 1923 when Shinjirō Torii founded Suntory and built the Yamazaki Distillery near Kyoto — Japan’s first malt whisky distillery. Nikka followed in 1934 when Masataka Taketsuru, who had apprenticed in Scotland, built the Yoichi Distillery in Hokkaido. Today, Suntory and Nikka remain the two dominant producers, but a new generation of craft distilleries — Chichibu, Akkeshi, Mars Shinshu, and others — are expanding the category’s range and ambition.

Browse all Japanese and foreign whisky at Wooden Cork.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Japanese whisky so expensive?

Japanese whisky prices have increased dramatically due to the collision of two forces: surging global demand since Yamazaki Sherry Cask was named World Whisky of the Year in 2014, and a structural supply shortage. Age-stated Japanese whisky requires forward-planning a decade or more in advance. The industry did not anticipate the explosion in international demand and simply doesn’t have the aged stock to meet it. Yamazaki 12, Hakushu 12, and Hibiki 17 were all temporarily discontinued as a result and continue to sell out rapidly when available.

What is the difference between Japanese whisky and Scotch?

Japanese whisky was modeled on Scotch tradition but evolved its own distinctive style — typically drier, more delicate, and more focused on subtle wood character. Japanese distilleries often use both Scottish-style pot stills and Japanese Coffey stills in the same facility, enabling a wider range of distillation styles than most Scottish distilleries. Japanese producers also use Mizunara oak — a native Japanese wood with sandalwood and incense character — alongside American and European oak, producing flavor profiles that have no Scotch equivalent.

What Japanese whisky should a beginner try first?

Suntory Toki, Hibiki Japanese Harmony, and Nikka From The Barrel are the three most recommended entry points. All three are consistently available, well-priced relative to age-statement expressions, and genuinely representative of what Japanese whisky does best — balance, subtlety, and precision blending. For a single malt entry point, Yamazaki Distiller’s Reserve and Hakushu Distiller’s Reserve are excellent next steps.

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