Whiskey
4693 products
4693 products
Wooden Cork carries one of the most comprehensive whiskey selections available online — every major category from American bourbon and Tennessee whiskey to single malt Scotch, Irish pot still, Japanese single malt, and straight rye. Ships nationwide with adult-signature delivery in 1–7 days.
American whiskey is the world’s most diverse whiskey category. Bourbon — made from at least 51% corn and aged in new charred oak — is the flagship American style, anchored by Buffalo Trace, Blanton’s, Weller, and Pappy Van Winkle. Rye whiskey delivers a spicier, drier alternative, led by WhistlePig and High West. Tennessee whiskey, filtered through sugar maple charcoal via the Lincoln County Process, is defined by Jack Daniel’s and Uncle Nearest. Scotch whisky is produced across five distinct regions — Speyside (Macallan, Glenfiddich, Balvenie), Islay (Laphroaig, Ardbeg, Lagavulin), Highlands, Lowlands, and Campbeltown. Irish whiskey is triple-distilled and distinctly approachable, led by Redbreast for single pot still and Jameson for blended. Japanese whisky has earned its place through craftsmanship and balance — Yamazaki and Hibiki are highly allocated and consistently award-winning. Canadian whisky is typically blended and lighter-bodied, led by Crown Royal. Browse rare and allocated spirits and gifts at Wooden Cork.
The spelling reflects country of origin. “Whiskey” (with an e) is used for American and Irish spirits. “Whisky” (without the e) is used for Scotch, Japanese, and Canadian. Both spellings refer to the same category of distilled grain spirit aged in oak.
For bourbon, Maker’s Mark or Buffalo Trace are smooth, approachable entry points. For Scotch, Glenfiddich 12 or Glenlivet 12 offer accessible single malt character. For Irish, Jameson or Redbreast 12 are excellent starting points. For Japanese, Suntory Toki is built for accessibility and cocktails.
Single malt is made at a single distillery from 100% malted barley, showcasing the individual character of that distillery. Blended whisky combines spirit from multiple distilleries — often including grain whisky — for a more consistent, approachable profile. Both styles can reach exceptional quality; the tradeoff is character vs consistency.