Saturday, 24 August 2013

Bruichladdich The Organic Review (the right whisky at the right time)

Bruichladdich The Organic - 46% abv

Okay, I'll come right out and say it... you may have noticed that I have reviewed a number of Bruichladdich products lately.  The truth is that I am a big fan of Bruichladdich.  Its a Bruichladdich whisky that brought me into the world of scotch whisky (I'll always remember my amazement with the 12 Year Old 2nd Edition the first time it hit my lips and how voluptuous the texture was!) and they have a philosophy I truly appreciate.  They also have a lot of different expressions which is great for a curious explorer like myself.  Anyway, on to the whisky we're talking about today - The Organic.

One of the things I truly believe in is having the correct whisky for one's mood or for the weather or whatever.  This is why I have so many open bottles in my cabinet - I never know what whisky I am going to need so I like to have a pile of options of different things to pick from.  I don't have a "go-to" whisky but I have a number of different ones and I usually buy based on the profile of whisky that I am low on.  The Organic paints this picture nicely.

The Organic is a great dram to have on a Sunday afternoon, before dinner.  I find it actually tastes totally different to me if I have it late in the evening rather than before dinner.  No joke. Taken in the afternoon, it is the kind of dram that absolutely rejuvenates me - it brightens my day, my mood, and even wakes me up.  
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Colour: Straw.

Nose: Creamy and floral... I almost get a touch of lilac.  Herbaceous with a mint note. Lovely and interesting. There is an icing sugar-covered pastry. 

Palate: Perfect for a Sunday afternoon!  Sweet and floral and creamy.  Beautiful. Does the creaminess come from the barley? It must. This restores us! Bright and light and a little salty. There is a nice, syrupy vanilla note in there that leads into a lemon-citrus layer. This is lighter tasting but has that viscosity that is so satisfying. 

Finish: shorter and herbaceous. 

This is a great dram for the summer and definitely great for before dinner or even for a picnic. After having had the Islay Barley drams, I kind of wish they bottled this at 50%. That being said, looking at Bruichladdich's new line of whiskies just released, it appears as though all of the core range will be bottled at 50% including the new Scottish Barley Organic.  Let the good times roll!    

Saturday, 17 August 2013

Kilchoman Sherry Cask Release Review

Kilchoman Sherry Cask Release - 46% abv

Kilchoman is a new distillery on Islay (established 2005) and is the first new one in a very long time. My introduction to Kilchoman was in October 2012 at a three-night whisky tasting class - that night was "Islay Night."  I tasted Kilchoman first or second out of a flight of eight whiskies and was very impressed with it, especially after I was told that the one we were tasting was only 3 or 3.5 years old.  After that, I was constantly interested in them and the name kept popping up but I didn't buy a bottle until last month.  

I was heading out to the mountains and wanted to buy something that would be peated as I new it would go with the crisp mountain air at night.  This got me thinking Islay and I quickly got to the point... this is a good time to try a Kilchoman product.  I must say, I am most interested by their 100% Islay expression but was convinced to go with the Sherry Cask Release on this occasion.  Will have to get the 100% Islay next.

Like all Kilchoman products, this release is bottled at a higher alcohol (46% in this case) and is non-chill filtered and has no colouring added.
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Colour: Deep gold almost amber.

Nose: Immediately apparent are cooked soft fruits and dark smoke on the nose. A nice, sweet nose. Some spices and pepper along with salt.

Palate: sweet, thick, and smokey. Salt and pepper along with soft fruit. I can't help but think of a fruit crumble mixed and woven with smoke and peat.  I say "smoke and peat" because both are there for sure.  Its tasty, especially for the cooler weather and definitely works very well as a night cap along with crisp, mountain air!  You get the smoke and the spicy, earthier peat following sweet cooked soft fruits.  When I say "cooked soft fruits" I am thinking of a pot with peaches, plums, and apples (I know apples aren't soft but they soften with heat!) on the stove, bubbling away in their own sweet juices.  This is a chewy dram... very thick.

Finish: pretty long finish.  This whisky is young but seems to have spent all or most of its aging life in sherry casks and that helps to extend things well into the gullet.  There is a definite ashiness too.

Comments:  This is good stuff and a good intro to Kilchoman.  This smells, feels, and tastes like a drink made by people who really care about whisky.  This is artisanal whisky and I am really excited by the whole "farm-to-bottle" movement that Kilchoman is adopting as well.  I'll be trying to test some more Kilchoman products soon. 

Sunday, 11 August 2013

Bruichladdich The Laddie Twenty Two

Bruichladdich 22 Year Old - The Laddie Twenty Two - 46% abv

This is the longest matured expression I have tried from Bruichladdich other than a 33 year-old Legacy bottling I tried at an exclusive scotch tasting I attended in November 2012 (thank you local scotch guy and his store for setting that up!). This particular expression is part of the classic, unpeated range of Bruichladdich products.


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Bruichladdich The Laddie 22

Colour:  Full gold.

Nose: Its beautiful!  Sweet and very floral with herbal notes and some mint.  Vanilla comes through and maybe even some marzipan and honey.

Palate: definitely tastes like well-matured Bruichladdich. Reminds a bit of the 33 year-old Legacy Series bottling I tasted last year. This is soft and sweet on entry and moves through a layer of what could be creme brulee and then to a honied lemon note. Some salt in there and a very complex run of herbal and floral notes. There even seems to be some apple and pear notes as this spends some time in the glass. This has been breathing Islay air for 22 years and it shows! At one point, as I was most of the way through my dram, I could have sworn I tasted pineapple or something tropical. Interesting since I remember clearly smelling pineapple on the nose of that Legacy Series I tasted.

Finish: The finish is quite long for something I believe was aged in American oak. The finish is also very consistent with the nose and the palate. One key thing I have noticed in drinking very old bottlings is that they do tend to have very strong links between nose, palate, and finish and have very consistent traits. It is one of the rewards of drinking scotch that was aged a long time.

Comments: This is a very nice dram. My ideal time to drink this would be after a big meal in the spring or summer time or as the last dram of the night on a warm or mild day. It tastes like something special and should wow anyone who tries it. A lovely unpeated dram and, in my opinion, what a lot of Speysiders should strive to be. That's the long way to put it... in short, a classy drink.

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Tullibardine Port Finish

Tullibardine Port Finish - 46% abv - non chill-filtered

Tullibardine is a Highland region distillery (not Speyside) that seems to very much favour aging whisky in ex-bourbon casks and leaving them that way or subsequently finishing them in some other wine cask.  I have experience with a couple Tullibardine products and have found that they seem to make easy-drinking, enjoyable products at a decent price.  This Port Finish product falls into that category.  

The Tullibardine Port Finish is aged in ex-bourbon casks for an indeterminate time (no age statement on the bottle) and then spends the last 12 months of its maturation in port pipes.  This product is also non chill-filltered and I must say that I like the fact that Tullibardine does not chill-filter its whiskies.
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Colour:  light to mid gold.

Nose: the nose on this is actually soft and beautiful and really reminds of sweet wine or port.   I haven't had this for a while (usually drink this in the winter time) but I forgot how nice the nose is on this and it really makes me want to drink!  It smells well made.

Palate: sweet and lovely!  Definitely solid port influence in there.  Not really tawny port, but the darker more full/chocolatey port.  I get a bit of a Welches grape juice note in this... its not a bad thing either.  Grape-y and delicious.  Honestly, if you know someone who likes port and doesn't typically drink whisky, this may be the thing to serve them.  There is a touch of vanilla in the tail end of this one.  

Finish: mid-to-long finish... the time in port pipes seems to have brought the length in here.  Warming.

Comments: I honestly can't think of anyone who wouldn't enjoy this one.  Its a nice, simple drink that tastes well-made.  Its very easy to drink and may be a great dram to bring a beginner or non-whisky drinker into our exciting world.  I like this and think I might have to go out and try to pick up a bottle of this to replace the one I'm almost through.  I would go for this any time a port might be sought or on a cooler summer night or warmer winter night... after dinner for sure.