
The Best Whiskies to Unwind With After A Tiring Week
End the week right with these smooth whiskies
By Friday evening, the idea of a smooth whiskey stops being an indulgent idea and starts to feel more like an earned treat. Deadlines, traffic, meetings that could have been emails; it all stacks up. What you pour at the end of it matters. This is not the moment for a harsh burn or a showy bottle you bought for display. You want something that settles the nerves and eases you into your own time.
Smoothness becomes the deciding factor. A whisky that carries flavour without exhausting your palate lets you slow down sip by sip. So whether you lean toward peat smoke, orchard fruit, honeyed grain or sherry-soaked richness, the right dram can make relaxing feel so much better and worth it.
That being said, consider this your after-hours edit: bottles that reward patience, taste composed, and help you unwind after a tiring workweek.
Ardbeg 10-Year-Old
After a draining day, this Islay single malt settles you into the evening with layered smoke that never overwhelms. Peat rolls in with flashes of lemon zest, cracked pepper and toffee warmth. A coastal thread of brine adds lift, while notes of banana and currants soften the edges. As it opens up, espresso foam and toasted marshmallow linger on the finish. It holds attention without exhausting the palate, making it a rewarding slow sip.
Glenmorangie The Original 10-Year-Old
When you want something easy yet expressive, this Highland classic delivers. Distilled in tall stills and matured in ex bourbon casks, it leans into citrus blossom, peach and vanilla cream. The texture stays light, with gentle oak shaping the sweetness rather than dominating it. Each sip feels polished and composed, ideal for easing from work mode into rest. Pour it neat or with a splash of water to let the fruit unfold gradually.
Amrut Peated Single Malt Cask Strength
Bottled at high strength, this one demands attention, yet rewards patience. Made with peated barley and aged in India’s climate, it opens with smoked grain and salted butter on the nose. The palate moves from ripe fruit and vanilla into assertive malt and oak spice. A few drops of water tame the heat and reveal depth beneath the power. For evenings when you want intensity that matches the week you survived, this dram delivers.
Aberlour 16-Year-Old
Double maturation in bourbon and sherry casks gives this Speyside malt a rounded, dessert like profile suited to slow unwinding. Expect dark fruit, cinnamon and milk chocolate layered over Aberlour’s signature blackcurrant note. The texture feels plush, coating the palate without turning heavy. Oak influence shows up as gentle spice rather than sharpness. It is the sort of bottle you return to after long stretches at work, when you want familiarity with depth.
Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey
For a softer landing at the end of the week, this Tennessee whiskey laced with honey offers approachability without losing character. Caramel and toasted oak form the base, while the honeyed sweetness rounds out any rough edges. It works well neat, slightly chilled, or lengthened into an Old Fashioned or Whiskey Sour. When mental bandwidth is low and you want comfort in a glass, this pours easily and asks little in return.
Jameson Triple Triple Chestnut Edition
Triple distilled and matured in three types of cask including chestnut, this Irish whiskey leans into smooth texture with subtle depth. Orchard fruit, light spice and toasted wood glide across the palate. The chestnut influence adds a faint nutty warmth that lingers. It suits evenings when you want something versatile that can sit over ice or anchor a simple cocktail. The finish stays clean, letting you wind down without palate fatigue.
Teacher’s 50
Built on a high proportion of malt within the blend, this Scotch carries more body than many everyday pours. Honeyed grain meets soft smoke, with hints of dried fruit threading through. The balance between malt richness and lighter grain whisky keeps it steady on the palate. After a demanding week, it offers dependable flavour without demanding analysis. Serve it neat or with a cube of ice to soften the edges further.
The Glenlivet 21-Year-Old
Extended maturation across sherry, cognac and port casks shapes this Speyside whisky into a layered evening companion. Dried fruit sweetness from Oloroso meets nutmeg and gentle spice from cognac wood, while port influence adds dark chocolate and sultana richness. The texture feels silky, carrying the flavours in long waves rather than sharp bursts. This is the bottle for nights when you want to slow everything down and savour each measured sip.
Auchentoshan 12-Year-Old
Triple distilled in the Lowlands, this whisky offers a lighter frame that suits gradual unwinding. Honeyed cereal and citrus peel lead on the nose, followed by toasted almond and soft oak. The palate stays clean, with a gentle sweetness that never turns cloying. Its restraint makes it ideal for those evenings when you want flavour without intensity. It also adapts well to a highball if you prefer something longer.
Ballantine’s 17-Year-Old
Long ageing gives this blend depth while preserving elegance. Subtle smoke weaves through malt sweetness, supported by notes of baked apple and vanilla. The texture feels rounded, carrying a mild spice on the finish. It works well as a reflective nightcap after a stretched schedule. There is complexity here, yet it never feels heavy, making it an easy companion for decompressing without overwhelming your senses.