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365 drams in 365 days...

Month: May 2017

Whisky #479: GlenDronach 1990 Single Cask 24 Year Old Single Malt

May 29, 2017 by Whisky a Day Leave a Comment
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GlenDronach 1990 Single Cask 24 Year Old Single Malt (Cask No.1020). Highlands, Scotland. ABV: 53.8%.

What kind of whisky do you have when you’re trying to have a self-imposed booze ban for the week? This kind of whisky.

Colour: Dark, rich treacle.

Nose: Caramelised pork hock. Buttery burnt sugar, musty bookshelves. I love that smell.

Palate: Oh it’s smooth…caramel sauce over vanilla ice cream. Warm pudding. It’s basically a dessert…sticky date pudding in a glass.

Finish: Blackberry jellies. More caramel oozing over the tastebuds as you sit back and let the sweet sugary notes fade as some soft woody notes emerge. Like sucking on the ice cream stick after you’ve devoured the ice-cream, you’re craving more and can’t believe it’s finished so quickly.

Comments: Matured in a Pedro Ximenez sherry puncheon, cask strength…this is phenomenal. I am trying to not have too much to drink this week as I’m competing in a powerlifting competition this Saturday for which I’ve been training the last 10 months. So if I was going to break the self-imposed pre-competition booze ban it had better be for a damn good whisky. This one fits the bill perfectly! Stunning.

Posted in: Whisky tastings Tagged: cask strength, Glendronach, Highlands, Scotland, Sherry cask matured, single cask

Whisky #478: Dry Fly Port Barrel Finish 3 Year Old Straight Wheat Whiskey

May 21, 2017 by Whisky a Day Leave a Comment
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Dry Fly Port Barrel Finish 3 Year Old Straight Wheat Whiskey. Spokane, Washington, United States. ABV: 45%. Tasted on Sydney Harbour, $115 (bottle).

Colour: Molten copper. Simply stunning colour.

Nose: Fresh, like walking through a forest and snapping a green tree branch. Toffee and dried raisin notes too.

Palate: Brown sugar on top of a hot bowl of porridge. A bit grassy too – like chewing on a fresh sprig of green grass.

Finish: Creme caramel with a drying biscuity finish. Short to medium length.

Comments: Sailing is one of my other passions, so after a stunning day racing on Sydney Harbour I thought it appropriate to celebrate our 2nd place result by cracking a whiskey that was produced from across the opposite side of the Pacific. Hailing from Washington state in the United States, Dry Fly are turning out some great straight wheat whiskies which I’ve only recently discovered. As is the Dry Fly ethos with sourcing ingredients, this expression is finished in locally sourced port barrels from Townshend Cellar Winery in Spokane, Washington. Surprising, a little bit different, but most definitely recommended. A dash of water makes it even more drinkable.

Cheers!

Posted in: Whisky tastings Tagged: Dry Fly, port cask matured, Spokane, United States, Washington, wheat whiskey

Whiskies #474-477: The Scotch Malt Whisky Society World Whisky Day Showdown

May 20, 2017 by Whisky a Day Leave a Comment
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Whiskies #474-477: The Scotch Malt Whisky Society World Whisky Day Showdown.

Happy World Whisky Day to you all! It’s certainly one of my favourite days on the whisky calendar…along with any Delivery Day when the whisky gods deliver their sweet nectar in the post. To celebrate this holiest of whisky days, I thought it best to crack out something fairly unique and a bit special. And what more aptly fits that description than a few bottlings from the Scotch Malt Whisky Society.

Single cask, cask strength independent bottlings…for those of you who haven’t sampled a SMWS whisky before, get on it! They really are brilliant. I’m not paid by them and don’t get any kickbacks to write nice things, I’m just a very happy paid-up member who thinks they’re doing some amazing stuff.

Anyway, I’m thirsty – let’s get into the booze!

Whisky #474: SMWS 54.34 Monkey’s Lunch. 9 year old Scotch Malt Whisky Society bottling from Aberlour distillery. Speyside, Scotland. ABV: 59.8%. Tasted at home, $165 (bottle).

Colour: Pale straw.

Nose: Fruit salad, soft lemon, passionfruit, strawberries and cream.

Palate: It’s a wave of creamy, lemony flavours…like biting into a lemon cheesecake.

Finish: Dried pineapple chunks that fade to a drying mouthfeel with white pepper and woody notes.

Comments: The finish is quite a contrast to the nose and palate, it’s a bit Jekyll and Hyde this one. Aberlour are one of my favourite distilleries so it’s great to try a whisky that’s quite different to their usual house style full of dried fruits and Christmas cake flavours. Cracking drop this one.

 

Whisky #475: SMWS 64.80 Fruit Punch Explosion. 9 year old Scotch Malt Whisky Society bottling from Mannochmore distillery. Speyside, Scotland. ABV: 58.2%. Tasted at home, $150 (bottle).

Colour: Sparkling honey.

Nose: Fruit covered pavlova. Now this is going to sound a bit odd – there’s some aromas like opening up a velvet lined wooden chess set. The kind where the board is hinged and folds in half so you can keep the pieces inside. My dad had one from when he was a young fella, I still remember the smell of it as I opened it to set up the pieces and have a few games with the old man when I was younger. The old bugger always beat me!

Palate: Fresh raw honey straight from the hive, served on a wooden stick…sweet and oaky.

Finish: Almost a few candied bacon flavours in the fade, like you’ve poured maple syrup over pancakes with crispy bacon on the side.

Comments: I love a whisky that triggers memories from long ago, whether they be from the aromas or the flavours. Stunning.

 

Whisky #476: SMWS 63.33 Rich,Treacly, and Sumptuous. 9 year old Scotch Malt Whisky Society bottling from Glentauchers distillery. Speyside, Scotland. ABV: . Tasted at home, $185 (bottle).

Colour: Bright toffee.

Nose: Golden syrup, treacle and freshly baked blueberry muffins. A slight nose prickle.

Palate: Buttery and lots more golden syrup. If I had to do a blind tasting and pick the distillery I would have said Glendronach. The SMWS title really has summed it up perfectly – it is incredibly rich, treacly and sumptuous.

Finish: Front of the palate gets all the fun – plenty of salted caramel. A long tingly finish, like crushing some brown sugar crystals against the roof of your mouth with your tongue.

Comments: As I sip this one I’m listening to Nina Simone singing “I Put a Spell On You”. Kind of like tasting cask strength whiskies when you’re doing healthy pours – by the time you get to the third whisky it’s starting to put a spell on you. But without a doubt, this is the standout whisky of the night. Amazing stuff.

 

Whisky #477: SMWS 42.25 A Beach Barnacle Banquet. 9 year old Scotch Malt Whisky Society bottling from Tobermory distillery. Isle of Mull, Scotland. ABV: 60.4%. Tasted at home, $165 (bottle).

Colour: Pale apple juice.

Nose: Salty; hessian sacks soaked in sea water.

Palate: Surprisingly smooth and sweet. Reminds me of grilled salmon nigiri, the one with some kind of glaze on it that they’ve smashed with a blow torch to give those amazing caramelised salmon flavours.

Finish: A long salty tang at the front of the palate, especially when you press your tongue up into the roof of your mouth.

Comments: A perfect conclusion to the Speyside sweetness we’ve had before. Great balance between salty, sweet and savoury.

 

There’s just something about the SMWS whiskies that makes me think of all kinds of foods and flavours. They’re always so vivid and take your mind and your tastebuds on a wild gastronomic journey. I’m not known for doing things by half measures (some of my friends would say I do things by double measure), but with whisky this good it’s probably not my penchant for smashed avocado and coffee that’s preventing me getting into this insane Sydney property market. Bugger it, I might just pour another dram of each of these…happy World Whisky Day!

 

Posted in: Feature Articles, Whisky tastings Tagged: Aberlour, cask strength, Glentauchers, Isle of Mull, Mannochmore, Scotland, SMWS, Speyside, Tobermory

Whisky #473: Bowmore Tempest Small Batch Release VI Cask Strength 10 Year Old Single Malt

May 19, 2017 by Whisky a Day Leave a Comment
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Bowmore Tempest Small Batch Release VI Cask Strength 10 Year Old Single Malt. Islay, Scotland. ABV: 54.9%. Tasted at home, $95 (bottle).

Colour: Polished brass.

Nose: Pineapple chunks and lemon sponge cake. Unobtrusive, quite soft. I’m almost searching for some smoke because I know it’s a Bowmore, but it’s really not there.

Palate: Sweet caramelised smokey notes hit you immediately; think barbecued pineapple slices on top of some smokey bacon. The heat builds and flavours seem to come in waves. Then again, maybe that’s just my head throbbing from another battering at work all week.

Finish: Some astringent salty notes with a long, tangy finish as the flavours fade.

Comments: This is a real “Friday night after a shithouse week at work” kind of whisky, a no-nonsense kind of dram. And one with something for most palates – it’s got some smoke and heat, some sweetness and tropical fruit flavours. Most importantly though, it’s strong enough that one dram will take the edge off your shitty week nicely as you kick up your feet at home. Though two or three drams will do the job just that wee bit better…

I was pleasantly surprised by this one. I skeptically thought it may be a small batch release dreamt up by the Bowmore marketing department as an excuse to add another expression to the shelf. But it carves out its own niche among the Bowmore range. 

Posted in: Whisky tastings Tagged: Bowmore, cask strength, Islay, Scotland

Whisky #472: Tyrconnell Sherry Cask 10 Year Old Single Malt Irish Whiskey

May 10, 2017 by Whisky a Day Leave a Comment
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Tyrconnell Sherry Cask 10 Year Old Single Malt Irish Whiskey. Riverstown, Dundalk, Ireland. ABV: 46%. Tasted at The Wild Rover, $21. Or in this case, $42 for a double!

Colour: Deep candlelit amber.

Nose: Buttery caramel notes. Blackberry jam.

Palate: Salted caramel and raspberry flavours swirl on your tongue. Caramelised rendered fat from a wagyu steak. Thin on the palate, but it takes the mind to more hearty places.

Finish: Dry and oaky, sweet red berries yet almost a bit salty and tannic.

Comments: It’s like a packet of fruit pastilles, but mainly the juicy red raspberry and blackberry ones. None of those dodgy lemon or orange ones, don’t waste my time with those fillers! You get a salty sweet hit, a few mixed berry notes and you’re left wanting to bite into some more.

In an ideal world, I would prefer to try this at cask strength – it’s very tasty, but I reckon it could have been so much more if it was bottled higher than 46%ABV. Though a 46%ABV whisky really seems to be a good balance in terms of appealing to as broad a segment of the market as possible. Excise considerations will always play a part in a distillery’s decision on what ABV a whisky will be bottled at. But putting that aside, for flavour reasons alone I believe it’s a very good whisky, but would have been amazing at a higher ABV.

Posted in: Whisky tastings Tagged: Dundalk, Ireland, Riverstown, Sherry cask matured, Tyrconnell

Whisky #471: Berrys’ 2005 Single Malt From Bunnahabhain Distillery

May 5, 2017 by Whisky a Day Leave a Comment
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Berrys’ 2005 Single Malt From Bunnahabhain Distillery (Drawn from Cask Ref. 9000058). Islay, Scotland. ABV: 56.9%. Tasted at Mjølner, $23.

Mjølner is a new Viking whisky bar here in Sydney.

Viking. Whisky. Bar. Absolute genius.

An awesome array of whiskies behind the bar and a great basement fitout, can’t wait to come back and pillage and plunder some more liquid gold.

Colour: Bright lustrous gold.

Nose: Soft smoke, honey on slightly burnt toast, creamy pink marshmallows.

Palate: Oaky, smoky and…oki dokey. A light burst of salted caramel down the middle of your tongue, then a gentle warmth that slowly builds in your mouth.

Finish: A long gentle smoky fade; dusty blueberry without the sweetness.

Comments: Bunnahabhain’s official distillery releases are typically unpeated, so a peated independent bottling from Berrys’ was worth a try.

It’s a nice whisky, but quite straightforward and gentle in all aspects – nose, palate and finish. Nothing too outlandish or bold; a little beige. I found myself searching for ways to describe it, looking for depth when it wasn’t there. The smokiness is the dominant flavour, but it’s not overpowering like some (typically younger) Islay whiskies.

Posted in: Whisky tastings Tagged: Berry's, Bunnahabhain, independent bottling, Islay, Scotland

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