Blind Summit has the sort of energy that reminds you whisky can still be exciting without needing to become absurdly expensive, wrapped in velvet or explained through twelve paragraphs of Viking mythology. Based in Leith, Edinburgh, the project was founded by friends Jamie Dawson and James Zorab, two whisky obsessives with backgrounds in wine, spirits retail and whisky maturation who decided to start bottling the kind of casks they actually wanted to drink themselves. Small batches, unusual finishes, lots of texture and flavour, and none of the overly polished corporate whisky nonsense that’s started creeping into parts of the industry.
The whole operation stays very hands-on. They source individual casks from distilleries around Scotland, then either bottle them as they are or re-rack them into different casks for extra maturation and flavour development. Because the team comes from both whisky and wine backgrounds, the cask choices get pretty interesting. Bordeaux barriques, Australian PX casks, rum barrels, Saint-Émilion wine casks and even ex-cider casks all appear throughout the range. Somehow though, the whiskies still feel balanced rather than gimmicky. There’s experimentation going on, but it never feels like somebody just spun a “random cask finish generator” and hoped for the best.
A lot of the releases are tiny too, often only around 100 to 300 bottles, mostly in 50cl format. That smaller bottle size actually makes a huge amount of sense once you realise the whole project is built around exploration rather than collecting dusty trophy bottles. It encourages people to try weird interesting casks without immediately needing to remortgage something. Dangerous for curiosity, admittedly.
The whisky styles jump all over Scotland depending on the release. You’ll see peaty Islay malts, fruity Speysiders, waxy Highlands whiskies and small batch blends all bottled under the Blind Summit label. A Caol Ila matured in first-fill bourbon might lean salty, smoky and elegant, while a Mortlach finished in Australian Shiraz barrels suddenly turns deep, spicy and full of dark fruit. Then something like The Lochend Blend comes along and reminds you blended malt can actually be brilliant when someone cares enough about the casks going into it.
The labels deserve a mention too because they genuinely stand out without looking ridiculous. Every release features artwork created with local artists and designers from around Edinburgh and Leith, giving the bottles a creative independent feel that matches the whisky itself. It feels connected to the wider Leith scene, independent bars, record shops, creative studios, late-night whisky conversations and people who own slightly too many jackets. Much more that sort of atmosphere than traditional whisky luxury culture.
What really makes Blind Summit work though is that it still feels driven by enthusiasm rather than scale. The founders still taste, source, re-rack, bottle and deliver the whisky themselves, which keeps everything feeling personal and slightly chaotic in a good way. In a whisky world increasingly dominated by marketing teams inventing emotional backstories for casks, Blind Summit feels refreshingly straightforward: find interesting whisky, mature it well, bottle it honestly and make it look cool enough that people actually notice it on a shelf.