Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Kilchoman Loch Gorm (2017)


This is the last of the whiskies from the Arrowine/Impex tasting from early November. And quite possibly my favorite. Entirely aged in former sherry casks (!), this is bottled naturally (no filtering, no coloring), at 46% ABV. 

Sunday, November 19, 2017

Kilchoman Machir Bay (2017 Bottling)


This is the sixth and penultimate whisky from the Arrowine/Impex tasting in early November. And ah, we have reached my wheelhouse - peated Islay whisky. Kilchoman is my particular favorite - the quality just drips from it, in every aspect. It looks right, smells right, tastes right - everything about Kilchoman remains astonishing. 

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Tamdhu Batch Strength 002 (NAS)


This is the fifth offering in the Arrowine/Impex tasting from November 4th, at RIS in Washington DC. The first No Age Statement whisky of the group, this was one I was legitimately excited about - I have had Tamdhu's batch 001, and liked it very much (sadly, no notes were taken, so no post about it). This is un-chill-filtered and uncolored, bottled at a brisk 58.5% cask strength. 

Monday, November 13, 2017

Tomintoul 10 Year (Exclusive Malts)


This was the fourth whisky in the Arrowine/Impex tasting from early November. After three straight high-quality drams - Invergordon, Glen Moray, and Benmenach - I knew I was in for something good with this 10 Year expression from Tomintoul, a whisky whose official bottling I've had and reviewed here. It was ... alright, at best. But this bottling from Exclusive Malts? Well... let's see. No chill-filtering, no coloring, bottled at 56.2% ABV. 

Friday, November 10, 2017

Balmenach 13 Year (Exclusive Malts)


This was the third of the whiskies I tasted at the Arrowine/Impex tasting in early November. After a very old Invergordon and a rather young, juicy Glen Moray, this Balmenach was a real mystery. Impex manager Jared Card informed us that Balmenach is another distillery where 99% of the liquid goes into blends like Dewars or Cutty Sark or Famous Grouse (in this case, MacArthur's and Hanky Bannister), but the unused 1% gets bottled as single malt by companies like Exclusive Malts.

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Glen Moray 9 Year (Exclusive Malts)



This was the second discovery at the Arrowine/Impex tasting in Washington DC on Saturday. Honestly, I wasn't expecting a lot out of a 9 Year Speyside, but this bottle really pleasantly surprised me. 

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Invergordon 43 Year (Exclusive Malts)


Today I attended the yearly whisky tasting at Arrowine liquors in Washington DC - last year was entirely Kilchoman, a distillery very close to my heart. This year I had seven generous samples, all of which I documented thoroughly and will appear here. The first was was a 43-year single grain from Invergordon. 

Saturday, October 28, 2017

Talisker 10 Year (Second Take)


Boy, do I love Talisker. This is easily one of my top three Scotches, ever. I last reviewed this over three years ago, and it was LONG overdue for a return look. 

Sunday, October 15, 2017

Bowmore 15 Year 'The Darkest'


When I think of "sherried Islay Scotch," this is definitely not the first, second, or third bottle that comes to my mind. I've long wanted to try this 15-year-old Bowmore offering - the standard 12-year expression aged an additional three years in Oloroso sherry casks, bottled at 43% ABV. The price is a little prohibitive - hovering between $75 and 90 depending on what shop you are frequenting - but I happened upon a good sale and splurged. 

This seems to be surprisingly divisive.

Saturday, September 23, 2017

Ardbeg An Oa Release Party, Washington DC, at Jack Rose Saloon



A member of the Ardbeg Committee, I received an email from the local Ardbeg representative inviting me to Jack Rose Saloon tonight (9/23/17) to celebrate the release of the newest Ardbeg expression, An Oa (which I recently picked up and reviewed). 

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Tomintoul 10 Year

Thanks to inscrutable liquor store metrics, Tomintoul 10 Year is on sale at virtually every shop in Washington D.C. this month, generally around $30. That puts it squarely in the "eh, what the hell" range of purchases. 

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Springbank 10 Year



Ah, now here is a whisky I've been dying to review. I first had Springbank - probably the best-known of the current Campbeltown distilleries - about four years ago. I actually started with their heavily-peated Longrow CV expression, which I thought was very good, comparable to Ardbeg Corryvreckan, which is high praise indeed. I've still never found the unpeated and triple-distilled Hazelburn in the wild. But the core expression - Springbank's own 10 Year - is a really eccentric, complex, subtle, and interesting whisky.

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Speyburn 10 Year


This was a remainder bin selection at a liquor store that was moving a lot of inventory for very cheap - in the $25 bin was Johnnie Walker Rye, Johnnie Walker Double Black, and Speyburn 10 Year. All in what I would term the "easy drinking" category.

Friday, September 8, 2017

Ardbeg An Oa (NAS)


It's finally here! The new fourth permanent installation in the Ardbeg lineup, An Oa ("Ahn Oh") is among us at last. An Oa is named for the Mull of Oa, a southern peninsula on Islay. I have been calling, emailing, and polling every liquor store in the Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia area trying to get my hands on this. At last, randomly, I did a lunchtime google search and found it advertised in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, at Potomac Wine and Spirits. The salesman was completely nonchalant, but noted that they had been flying off the shelves far faster than they had estimated. 

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Deanston 12 Year


Deanston is a distillery I knew almost nothing about until I found this bottle on sale ($35). It's a Highland whisky, made by a small crew of ten men, and owned by the same company that owns Bunnahabhain and Tobermory and Black Bottle blended. I happen to love Bunnhabhain, so this is of particular interest. 

Lost Distillery Company: Gerston (Archivist Collection)



I found another great offering from the Lost Distillery Company: the Archivist Collection bottle of their recreation of the distillery of Gerston. Gerston, when it was open, would have been the northernmost Highland distillery - located in Halkirk, it would have been farther even than Old Pulteney or Clynelish. 

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Ardbeg 10 Year (Third Take)




As I prepare for the arrival of the new Ardbeg - called An Oa ("An Oh") - I am revisiting the other three core expressions from the distillery, Ten Year, Uigeadail, and Corryvreckan. I realized that I had sampled my beloved Ten Year fairly recently, but at a pretty poor bar that served the dregs of a bottle in a giant widemouth tumbler, like I was some kind of riverboat gambler guzzling rye before cheating some rubes at poker in a dark and smokey saloon.

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Great King Street: Artist's Blend


This brand, Great King Street, is part of the Compass Box empire. The idea behind it is, I think, to bring great affordable blends back to the global hordes who love Scotch whisky - to fight the evil bottles of J&B and Dewar's and Cutty Sark that ruin and besmirch the good name of Scotch in liquor cabinets everywhere - all at a reasonable price. 

Friday, August 25, 2017

Longmorn 16 Year


This is one from the archives - I actually drafted this review back in 2014, when a friend gave me the final few drams of his bottle of Longmorn 16 - it was the first bottle he purchased for more than $100. My notes languished in my email until I decided to clean out my inbox this weekend. 

Longmorn is a Speyside distillery, located near Benriach (founded by the same man, John Duff) and Linkwood and Glen Elgin, and under the current Pernod Ricard ownership it has attempted to position itself as an ultra-premium product.

Thursday, August 24, 2017

Glen Scotia Victoriana (NAS)


I was lucky enough to sample this elegant Campbeltown whisky at my favorite liquor store, Arrowine in Washington DC.  Every Thursday they do a liquor tasting, and on the menu today was this intriguing Glen Scotia. 

Campbeltown is the smallest region of Scotch whisky, with only three distilleries at present: Springbank, Glengyle, and Glen Scotia. The region is located on the long southwestern peninsula called the Mull of Kintyre, and is located close to the isles of Islay and Jura; Campbeltown itself is a small town near the end of the peninsula.  

Friday, August 18, 2017

Ardbeg Corryvreckan (Second Take)


Oh, Ardbeg. How I love thee. Corryvreckan is actually my second favorite, after Uigeadail, but is a tremendous whisky in its own right. I acquired a bottle during a nice sale, and thought I would revisit this powerful Islay brew. 

Corryvreckan was originally a "Committee Release," Ardbeg's fan club offering, and it replaced a beloved dram, Airigh Nam Beist, in 2009. Corryvreckan was supposed to be a limited release, but has continued unabated to this day. 

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Lost Distillery Company: Lossit (Classic Selection)

The Lost Distillery Company (link here) is a company in the vein of Compass Box - premium quality blends of single malt scotch. However, they have a very specific ambition: as their name implies, they attempt to recreate long lost single malts by doing very extensive research and then blending whiskies together to approximate what the original might have been like. 

In the case of Lossit, an Islay distillery that stopped production in 1862 (!), I can't imagine there are any bottles left, so they must have really had their job cut out for them. Their website says they take ten different factors into account - things like ingredients, equipment, production method, location, etc. - when attempting to recreate something like Lossit, so theoretically this bottle uses single malts that draw from the same waters, the same type of barley from the same locations, use the same type of still, etc. 

Sunday, August 13, 2017

ScotchTalk Vol. 5: The NAS Debate

NAS ("No Age Statement") refers to whiskies that decline to provide an age statement (10 years, 12 years, et al) for reasons that remain under intense debate. As a reminder, Scottish law requires that if a whisky distiller provides the age of a whisky, it must provide the age of the youngest whisky in the bottle. As many have noted, a bottle might contain 99% 50-year whisky and 1% 3-year whisky, and yet it must be marketed as a 3-year whisky. Which is misleading in its own way, and a little ridiculous. 

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Caol Ila 12 Year (Second Take)


Here is another one that deserves a second look. When I first discovered Islay whisky, I did the usual triumvirate - Ardbeg, Laphroaig, Lagavulin - and then branched out in the expected manner - Bowmore, Bruichladdich, Kilchoman, Caol Ila, Bunnahabhain. 

Of the second set, Caol Ila (Cool EE-lah) was a big winner, and something of a surprise, since I'd only ever heard about it in terms of its mammoth output capacity. 6,500,000 liters!

Sunday, July 30, 2017

SPECIAL: Brennivin 80th Anniversary Edition


This isn't technically a whisky. But it IS finished in Islay whisky casks for four months, and is interesting enough in its own right to be covered here. And, as far as I can determine, this is among the only reviews of the 80th Anniversary edition of Brennivin on the net!

Some backstory: lately I've been tearing through the novels of Icelandic mystery author Arnoldur Indridason, who is right up there in the pantheon of modern Nordic authors for me. Starting with the first novel published here, Jar City, I've been knocking his books down like dominoes, one after the next.

In his books, many characters drink the national spirit of Iceland, Brennivin - the name means "burning wine," which is a fantastic name for any spirit. Iceland had prohibition just like the United States did, in fact starting even earlier in 1915; but there was a partial repeal in 1935 for spirits only - and Brennivin was the first spirit out of the gate to get back in the game. 

Friday, July 28, 2017

Bowmore 12 Year


Before now, I've had only the most basic Bowmore offering, the Bowmore Legend that I reviewed some time ago, and found a little thin and one-note, but still liked anyway. Since then I've always been curious about the aged expressions, especially since I've met multiple whisky drinkers who espouse strong, positive opinions of them.

Monday, July 24, 2017

Glenmorangie Quinta Ruban (12 Year)


This was a total shot in the dark. I was at the liquor store with a million sales going on, and I had to either choose to revisit an old friend (Oban, Ardbeg, Aberlour, Glendronach) or try something totally new. 

The blog demanded fresh blood!! I have had about half of the current offerings from Glenmorangie, but not the port finished Quinta Ruben (the word means Ruby Farm, in a combination of Gaelic and Portuguese).

Saturday, July 22, 2017

Ardbeg 10 (Second Take)

Next up in my series of second takes on previous reviews of mine is the core expression of my favorite distillery, Islay's Ardbeg. I actually intended my next review to be Talisker 10, but the bar I went to only had an ancient bottle of Talisker with two fingers left of liquid... Seemed like a bad bet.

Laphroaig Select Cask (NAS)


This new offering from Laphroaig has been very hotly debated, both on the internet and in person. When buying this bottle, the clerk even told me that the managers regret ordering it - apparently people pick it up, Google reviews on their phones, and promptly put it back down. It inspires violent opinion. 

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Lagavulin 16 (Second Take)


While re-reading some of my old reviews, the one that struck me the most as needing revising was Lagavulin's 16-year core expression. My initial review finds a lot of sweetness, even a lemon citrus element... well, I've had a LOT of Lagavulin in the intervening years, and since then I don't remember much of a lemon scent, or really much sweetness at all. So I thought I would give this one a new look, much as I recently took a second glance at Talisker Storm. 

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Talisker Storm (Second Take)

I recently found another good price on a bottle of Talisker Storm ($40) at a liquor store that's going out of business, and wanted to give the bottle another go after almost three years since I barely remembered what it was like.

Talisker Storm has been generating a lot of negative opinions across the net - virtually everyone agrees it is a fraction of the quality of the standard Ten Year, but often costs the same, or even more. Not a smart marketing plan.

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Black Bottle (Blend, post-2013)


Black Bottle was known for decades as "the peaty blend," made up of bits of all the Islay distilleries. However, as of 2013 or so, after various changes in ownership, they changed the blend around, with the result that there is now a pronounced Highland/Speyside emphasis, with a greatly reduced peat character, all of which is provided by Bunnahabhain. This is a review of the new formulation of Black Bottle, since I can't find a dusty forgotten bottle of the old stuff for the life of me. 

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Kilchoman PX Finish Single Cask 2016 (Cask #680)

Here is another big winner from last October's Kilchoman tasting. I bought this the moment I tasted it. Hugely rewarding dram, this is a single cask release (as the bottle declares proudly in blood red font) finished in Pedro Ximenez sherry casks. Pedro Ximenez is a very very sweet grape, and results in a extremely sweet sherry. A better explanation than I could provide is found in this review of the same cask release

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Balcones Texas Single Malt (NAS)

Balcones was sold to me as "Scotch, just made in Waco, Texas." This isn't really that bad of a description... it has all the complexity of a young cask-strength single malt Speyside or Highland, but a certain twang of its own.

This has won more awards than I can shake a stick at. The website advertises Jim Murray as saying this needs "chewing," which is a fantastically accurate word for this. It's a thick, layered whisky with a lot going on, even at nuclear cask strength (which often wipes out any subtlety from a young whisky).

Sunday, June 18, 2017

Kilchoman Machir Bay (2016 East Coast Tour Edition)

I acquired a bottle of this rare and lovely whisky after attending Kilchoman's 2016 East Coast Tour - the second-to-last stop was at my favorite DC liquor store, Arrowine. I picked up three different bottles on the tour (the other two will be reviewed in due course), and this bottle was the first I polished off. One of only about 200 bottles made.

Basically, this is their regular Machir Bay presentation, but bottled at cask strength (58.4% abv). No Age Statement, which isn't unusual. Non chill-filtered, no coloring. Distilled in pot still from 100% malted barley, grown on-site, and aged in ex-bourbon (Buffalo Trace) and ex-oloroso sherry barrels. 

Nose: Lovely. Thick smoke mixes with hints of malt, rock candy and/or taffy, and fresh ground pepper. Very very full nose. 

Mouthfeel: Big mouth on this one. Very full, viscous. The cask strength alcohol content probably responsible for some of this, of course. 

PalateVery mellow, in a surprisingly woodland way - herbal and vegetal, rather than oceanic and briny. Freshcut grass, harvested straw, some indistinct dried herbs, alongside sweet malt, vanilla from the oak, some very subdued red fruit, and of course the smoke - which is, intriguingly, not so big in the mouth as it was on the nose. 

The peat is actually rather tame on the tongue - this one won't leave a campfire on your palate for hours afterward. The sherry influence is in the background, a supporting player, while the bourbon influence is much more forward, but they are fairly balanced in the mix. The high alcohol content never overpowers, although it's a muscular dram, to be sure. 

Finish: Very long. This is where the peat smoke really appears - it gains strength (or, maybe, fails to weaken?) as all the other flavors recede. The final result is smoke wrapped around peppered, honeyed bacon. 

Verdict: A wonderful offering from Kilchoman. Like everything I've had from them, the quality is top notch, the flavor is second to none, and there is a lot of depth paired with a very easy drinkability. I don't know how many bottles of this are still floating around out there - mine was consumed fairly rapidly - but buy it if you can find it. I'll be on the next tour, without any doubt. 

Saturday, June 10, 2017

Old Pulteney 12 Year

No one seems to agree about Old Pulteney! It's well-known now that Jim Murray praised this distillery to the skies, and he rated the 21 year expression as best world whiskey in 2012, but every review I read seems different from the last. Some say cinnamon forward, some say salt for days, some say banana, some say none of the above.

Old Pulteney hails from Wick, Scotland - making it a Highland, from the northernmost mainland distillery, as far as I can tell.