We’ll drink to that.

A £13.49 ($17.95) bottle of supermarket scotch was named the “Best Scotch Whisky” at the World Whiskies Awards, the Independent reported on Wednesday.

The Queen Margot Blend Scotch Whisky from the budget German supermarket chain Lidl was the top pick by 40 international experts at the annual event, which honors “the very best in all internationally recognized styles of drinks.” Their refined palates preferred Lidl’s eight-year-old blended Scotch whisky over more expensive pours like the 12-year-old Johnnie Walker Black Label, which costs more than twice as much at upwards of $35 for a 750-milliliter bottle at some online stores.

Lidl describes its Queen Margot blend, imbued with dried apricot and plum, as “smooth with a rich sweetness and depth of flavour, leaving a warm, lingering finish.” The Queen Margot spent eight years mellowing in oak casks, and, as a result, “the taste holds more barrel character, where a little concentration from time in cask gives wood spice length of finish.”

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This isn’t Lidl’s first alcoholic upset. Gin Magazine also named its store-brand Hortus London Dry Gin as the best supermarket gin of the year last week (under the confusing award category “Own Brand Gin Supermarket of the Year”), and last year the £15.99 ($21.28) bottle won a Good Housekeeping Institute blind taste test over brands Bombay Sapphire, Gordon’s, Sipsmith and Beefeater.

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It’s further proof that good booze doesn’t have to be expensive. (And, considering that the average American spends about $1 out of every $100 on alcohol, adding up to $454 a year, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics, sippers may well wish to save where they can.) In 2017, a $6 bottle of St. Andrews Cabernet Sauvignon 2016 sold exclusively at Coles supermarkets in Melbourne received a unanimous gold rating during a blind taste test at the Melbourne International Wine Competition. It beat 1,100 submissions from more than 10 countries around the world.

And last May, an $8 bottle of Exquisite Collection Côtes de Provence Rosé, available at Aldi, like Lidl a discount supermarket chain based in Germany, earned a silver medal at the International Wine Challenge (known as the Oscars of winemaking), which pits superexpensive wines against affordable ones.