Archive for January, 2012

Whiskies of the World January 2012 Newsletter – Scotch Whisky News

WOW January 2012 Newsletter

Dear Whisky Enthusiast

Christmas and New Year festivities are over but we hope you greeted the season in a cheerful mood enjoying your favorite pastimes with your dearest family and friends. The Wow Expo office also took a well-deserved holiday break and toasted many marvelous drams to health, happiness and the success of the upcoming WoW Expo. With just three short months (and a leap day!) to go until the event and with so many exciting whiskies joining us every week, the Expo is shaping up to be a real staple of the whisky tasting world. Save the date March 31st and come celebrate a spirited night with us aboard the beautiful and spacious SF Belle Yacht, filled with superb and unrivaled whiskies and spirits from around the world.

WoW 2012 Expo tickets

VIP tickets are already sold out, earlier than usual this year! If you still haven’t bought your tickets don’t wait any longer and order yours now! The yacht can only hold so many whisky fanatics and we don’t want you to miss the show. This week watch for the growing, but already impressive, spirits pour list on our website.

  
General Admission:  $120 
 
VIP:   $150
 
Dram Club:  $130
 
Dram Club Membership:  $60


 
We arranged a courtesy block of rooms in The Hilton Financial District Hotel, which is located just a few blocks away from the Hornblower’s Pier 3, and is close to major downtown tourist destinations. WoW participants will receive an exclusive rate of $139per night + tax, which is valid for the night of the Expo, and the two adjacent nights. We also negotiated $30 Overnight Self Parking for WoW attendees. (If you know SF, you know this is a 33% discount.)

Book online http://www.hilton.com/en/hi/groups/personalized/S/SFOFDHF-WHIS-20120328/index.jhtml?WT.mc_id=POG
Or call the hotel directly at 800-445-8667 and mention the code WHIS.
Please note that the supply of discounted rooms is limited.

Hilton San Francisco Financial District
750 Kearny St.
San Francisco, CA 94108
800-445-8667

Cheers,

Douglas Smith
Email: doug@whiskiesoftheworld.com
whiskiesoftheworld.com

Douglas Laing & Co ‘Provenance’ Bottlings For January 2012 – Scotch Whisky News

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This month we have selected eleven (11) PROVENANCE bottlings.

PROVENANCE Tasting Notes follow:

PRV0772 GLEN SPEY 9 YEARS
Opens fresh and clean on the nose running to a buttery vanilla’d quality – home baked style. The palate opens with a gristy sweet character and develops to a sweetly spiced fruit trait. All this concludes in a drier finish with an orange pith tang. (J)

PRV0763 ALLT A’BHAINNE SHERRY 11 YEARS
Massively sweet and honied on the nose plus barley gristiness and a jammy biscuit style. The palate is immediately fruit toffee sweet with a Scottish tablet extra sugariness – all leading to a finish now subtly spiced and gristy, which later replicates much of that fudge-y sweet/fruity palate. (F)

PRV0769 CRAGGANMORE 11 YEARS
Opens sweetly on the nose carrying a crushed sugar quality plus a soft malty style. The palate is sweet, softly spiced and develops to a fruity (pineapple) character. The finish remains unusually fresh, still lightly spiced, now with a late oak quality. (J)

PRV0757 FETTERCAIRN 11 YEARS
On the nose – detect sweet barley, honey, dried grass and a later squeezed citrus/barley sugar style. Palatewise the citrus and honey are apparent early – then praline, spices and cough drops feature – all followed by a sweet, fudgey and now mildly spiced finish. (F)

PRV0766 BENRINNES SHERRY 12 YEARS
The nose opens with a spicy, sweet butterscotch style that runs to flambee’d Christmas Pudding plus vanilla and golden syrup. The palate is oily and sweet, carrying a toffee quality with soft spices and honey. The finish remains surprisingly sweet, being still spicy with a light nutty style. (J)

PRV0770 CRAIGELLACHIE SHERRY 12 YEARS
Warmly spiced from the Sherry cask as it opens on the nose – it moves quickly onto macerated and alcohol marinated dark fruits – plus late toffee. Palatewise – the toffee dominates sweetly and roundly, building to citrus then to dark molasses and camphor. The finish combines spice – malt, muscavado sugar – dark fruits and vanilla. (F)

PRV0760 BLAIR ATHOL SHERRY 12 YEARS
Sweet, smooth, full, fruity, gristy, lightly spiced and subtly oaked – all on the nose. Detect on the palate an initial soft nuttiness which develops to sweet barely and interesting later warming spices – with those same spices more obvious now on the finish plus chewy vanilla toffee (F).

PRV0765 GLENGOYNE 12 YEARS
Fresh, clean, spiced, grassy and gristy on the nose till it opens further to soft vanilla sweet toffee. Palatewise it is initially barley sweet and chewy – still toffee’d, creamy, now with more spice on board – all of which runs to a finish which neatly replicates the palate. (F)

PRV0762 INCHGOWER SHERRY 12 YEARS
Opens with an earthy, rich quality plus sweet spices and a dry sherried character. The palate opens sweetly then runs to a drier, mouth coating character with caramelised nuts and chewy liquorice. The finish is medium long, lightly spiced (dry) and tails to a warming cough drop quality. (J)

PRV0756 SPEYSIDE 12 YEARS
Spicy, citric, and lightly smoked, with Scottish tablet and barley tones on the nose. Palatewise – it is now more sweetly spiced and chewy with honeyed cough drops and malt – all to the fore. It runs to a finish that exudes even more malt – distinct nuttiness and soft sweet spices. (F)

PRV0748 ARRAN 13 YEARS
On the nose detect a truly autumnal fruitiness and a wine gum back tone. Palatewise seek out a sweet barley character with honey and attractive vanilla flavours – all running long on the now drier and spiced finish. (F)

We hope your year end trading season has been good for you …. we thank you for business we have conducted together in the past and look forward to more in the future.

All best wishes for a wealthy and HEALTHY 2012!

Fred Laing
Managing Director

Visit Douglas Laing & Co at www.douglaslaing.com

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Lismore NAS ‘Speyside’ (50%, William Lundie & Co, +/-2011) – Scotch Whisky Tasting Note

Lismore NAS ‘Speyside’ (50%, William Lundie & Co, +/-2011)

Not a single clue as to the distillery however it is a single malt and bottled at 50%. Some good malt notes on the nose and all very familiar but cannot lay a finger on the distillery, no matter, forge on. Green grassy notes intermingled with the aforementioned malt (which still remains very good), some light fruit notes join the fun. Taken altogether it smacks of some youth but not too young (8-10years?). The taste is much like the nose (good balance so far) however some spicy oak notes arrive and quite frankly taking all the flavours together it’s very pleasant. Good malt and oak spice with a little heather thrown in. The finish is slightly floral and then sweet quickly followed by the welcome oak spice and it’s all quite long and some really good malt pops up at the last moment.

Very drinkable.

$18!

Score 80 points

Second Saturday Scotch Tasting Connoisseurs of Scotch Whisky Gather in Remote Atlantic City to Sip and Discuss – Scotch Whisky News

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“One guy told me it smells like a red deer in rut,” chuckles Bob Townsend, his hands planted on the bar as his towering frame leans forward to gauge his customer’s reaction to the dram of single-malt Scotch whisky he’s just poured.

“Reminds me of a caterpillar soaked in ethyl alcohol,” answers John Mionczynski irreverently, as he sniffs the golden liquid in his glass.

Bob Townsend waits with anticipation as Daren Opeka samples one of the fine Scotches on offer. (Brad Christensen)
Bob Townsend waits with anticipation as Daren Opeka samples one of the fine Scotches on offer. (Brad Christensen)

“I wouldn’t know. I’ve never tried that,” Bob answers.

Mionczynski sips and nods. Satisfied, Bob leans back and scans the small bar to see who might be holding up the next wooden nickel, ready for another taste.

Words of compliment float up from each sipped glass: “Spectacular.” “Complex.” “Full throttle.”

And the names of the Scotches drift around the room: Bunnahabhain, Cragganmore, Dalwhinnie, Glenmorangie.

It’s the monthly Second Saturday Scotch Sipping at Six at the Two-Bit Cowboy Saloon in the Miner’s Delight Inn Bed and Breakfast, Atlantic City, Wyo. Nowhere else in Wyoming — or perhaps even in the U.S. — will you find such a collection of Scotches in such an unlikely venue. As he has on the second Saturday of every month since July 2008, Bob’s selected three expressions to feature from among the carefully curated collection of 77 neatly lined up before mirrors on the back bar. The tasting is a treat for both the experienced Scotch drinker who’s looking for rarities and someone to discuss them with, as well as for the first-time taster who wants to learn to appreciate the drink. But as much as it focuses on this highly regarded beverage, the evening is also about meeting strangers and interacting with the assortment of folks who come from all over Wyoming and the West to taste. “There isn’t a stereotypical tasting,” says Bob, who never knows whether one or twenty people will show up.

Barbara Townsend helps tasters make their next selection. (Brad Christensen

Barbara Townsend helps tasters make their next selection. (Brad Christensen

“Our dress code is clean blue jeans,” adds Barbara Townsend, Bob’s “Sweetie.” The congenial, laid-back atmosphere distinguishes this from more formal, classroom style tastings. She’s arranged palate cleansers — homemade sourdough baguettes and miniature chocolate chip cookies — on trays in the dining room, and she greets guests at the door, stokes the fire in the fireplace and pours tastes at the bar.

The local snowplow driver and his wife, who works for the historical society, share the rocking love seat near the fire. Three visitors from Thermopolis perch on barstools, jotting notes after each whiff or sip. One taster, recently home from a deployment to Afghanistan with the Colorado National Guard, has driven five hours to treat herself to this relaxing evening.

“It’s like the whole world slows down,” says Barbara.

The featured malts of the evening are a floral Glen Moray from Speyside, followed by lightly smoky Kilchoman winter 2010 release from Islay, and then the pungent Ian MacLeod Smokehead. The fourth taste requires rolling a die and choosing a Scotch from within the region of Scotland corresponding to the number rolled. Bob presents a laminated map showing the distilleries. Finally comes the real fun: connoisseur’s choice. Bob asks a few questions about preferences, purses his lips behind his white handlebar moustache, turns and plucks a bottle from the shelf.

The Path to Atlantic City

Barbara, petite with sparkling eyes and a tidy haircut, grew up in Kansas and served in electronic maintenance and as a first sergeant for the U.S. Air Force. Bob, raised in Riverton, Wyo., entered the Air Force as an air traffic controller. They met one another at Kunsan Air Base, South Korea, but several years passed before they started communicating back in the U.S. They were married in 1997, and after serving an impressive 52 cumulative years of service, both retired in 2000 and moved to Laramie to get their bachelors degrees from the University of Wyoming.

On a trip to Riverton to visit high school friends, Bob took Barbara to see historic Atlantic City. A for-sale-by-owner sign was tacked to the buck-and-rail fence in front of the Miner’s Delight. They’d never planned to run a bed and breakfast, but were enchanted by the town’s dirt streets and history, so agreed to give it a shot. Shortly after graduating in December of 2005, they bought the building, moved in and started making renovations to restore some of the historic quality to the rooms.

The Second Saturday Scotch Sipping at Six event takes place at Miner's Delight Inn in Atlantic City, Wyoming. (Brad Christensen/WyoFile)
The Second Saturday Scotch Sipping at Six event takes place at Miner’s Delight Inn in Atlantic City, Wyoming. (Brad Christensen/WyoFile)

The inn was built in 1904 by the Carpenter family, who’d come west in a covered wagon. A daughter, Ellen, hosted guests and served meals there until 1961. Bob remembers coming to Sunday brunch at the Carpenter Hotel as a kid with his grandmother. In 1963 a couple from New York purchased the building, renamed it the Miner’s Delight, and opened a gourmet restaurant that served meals for 35 years. Barbara and Bob, the fourth owners, elected to keep the name Miner’s Delight, but not the 60s décor. They’ve exposed original handmade bricks and log walls in the kitchen and maintained the old wood stove and rough plank dining room table while fixing up guest rooms with local art, antique furniture, and quilts made in Lander.

Bob, who’s “always” been a Scotch drinker and started enjoying single-malt Scotches in the 80s, got the idea to host a tasting after a Scottish geologist stayed with them for eight days in 2007. Each evening, the geologist came to the saloon for a couple of “wee drams.” At the end of his stay, he gave Bob a list of recommended Scotches. Bob ordered each one. The first tasting was such a success — 24 people bought tickets and everyone “had a blast” — that he and Barbara decided to make it a regular event.

Whiskies with Stories
Heads turn as nine young men in shaggy haircuts and plaid, button-up shirts stroll through the door. Barbara collects $20 and hands out five wooden nickels to each of them. Employees of the National Outdoor Leadership School, they’re here from Lander to celebrate a buddy’s 32nd birthday. Another couple is celebrating their 19th wedding anniversary.

In one corner of the saloon stands an unassuming piano. Most likely built in the 1880s, this instrument was rescued from women’s suffragist Esther Hobart Morris’s cabin in nearby South Pass City in the 1960s. Barbara, Bob and Mionczynski transported the instrument — now on loan to the Miner’s Delight from the Atlantic City Historical Society — to Atlantic City from Laramie, where it was without a home.

John Mionczynski plays the 19th century piano. (Brad Christensen/WyoFile)

John Mionczynski plays the 19th century piano. (Brad Christensen/WyoFile)

Mionczynski’s fingers skitter over the keys and the notes of a lively ragtime tune mingle with the conversation. Gloria and Clemeth Skiles, who will drive nearly two hours home to Rock Springs later tonight, sit in easy chairs near the piano and make requests. Mionczynski has been known to play until keys fly off the piano, and Barbara keeps track of them so they can be glued back on.

Talk at the bar ranges from how much money the best calf-roping horses are winning at the National Finals Rodeo to tales of NOLS students canoeing whitewater rivers in the Arctic. In a break between songs, Barbara jangles the triangle that hangs behind the bar and holds up a basket. Inside are slips of paper with the first name of each guest. One of the men from Lander reaches in, selects a strip, unfolds it, and reads aloud, “Scott… That’s me!” He’s won a Laphroaig keychain, one of tonight’s many door prizes.

“People like whiskies with a story,” Bob says. Nearly half at the Two-Bit are limited editions or hard to come by. Take the Mackinlay’s Rare Old Highland Malt Whisky, the only blended Scotch at the bar, a limited edition replica of the drink chipped out of the ice below Ernest Shackleton’s Antarctic hut in 2010. Or the Sherry Cask 1996 from the Arran distillery. Only 165 bottles were made, and Bob got 12 of them. Acquiring such rare Scotches requires negotiating with importers who control the number of bottles that come to the U.S. and to which states they go.

Bob started with just a few Scotches on the back bar and told Barbara he’d never have more than 30. When he got to 30, he said he’d never have more than 40. “I’ve reconfigured the shelves to accommodate the bottles,” he says. “I will not reconfigure again. We won’t grow beyond 77, but we rotate. Once we sell out of a limited edition, there is no way to replace it, so we always keep it fresh. There’s always something new on the bar.”

A view from the front window looking into the Miner's Delight Two-Bit Cowboy Saloon. (Brad Christensen/WyoFile)

A view from the front window looking into the Miner's Delight Two-Bit Cowboy Saloon. (Brad Christensen/WyoFile)

He and Barbara anticipate serving locally made Wyoming Whiskey at the Two-Bit at some future date; the distiller has told them, “It’ll be good and ready when it’s good and ready.” In the meantime, they are planning a trip to the Victoria Whisky Festival in British Columbia this January, by special invitation of the festival president who appreciated the uniqueness of their monthly tasting when he heard about it online. There, they’ll meet distillers and attend classes and tastings.

“This is the best thing that’s happened to Atlantic City,” gushes a local, one of the twenty-odd year-round residents in the remote town. The word whisky comes from the Gaelic usequebaugh, which means “water of life,” and maybe the Scotch tastings are just what is needed to bring new life to this quiet spot on the map.

Banner photo by Brad Christensen/WyoFile.  Article written by Emilene Ostlind and the article and photos are published courtesy of the http://wyofile.com/ 

Highlander Inn 2011 Single Cask Bottling ~ Bunnahabhain – Scotch Whisky News

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Highlander Inn 2011 Single Cask Bottling ~ Bunnahabhain
Released on Thursday 10th November 2011.

The eleventh in our series of “Annual Single Cask Bottlings” is from Bunnahabhain distillery on Islay.

After nosing and tasting several cask samples from many distilleries, we eventually selected this cask, owned by Wemyss Vintage Malts.

Cask Number 1798 was distilled at Bunnahabhain distillery on Friday 2nd March 1979.

It was bottled on Tuesday 20th September 2011 at it’s natural cask strength of 51.4% alc/vol. From a sherry butt, the angels agreed to let us have 511 bottles (700ml).

Maggie Riegler of the Greenhall Gallery, here in Craigellachie, was once again (for the 11th consecutive year) commissioned to paint a picture specifically for the front label which depicts a different view of the Highlander Inn to that of pervious years.

Our true friend, the original Michael Jackson ~ “Beer Hunter, Whisky Chaser” ~ always wrote the tasting notes for each bottling of ours until his untimely demise in 2007. From 2008 onwards, we decided to invite a different person each year to write the tasting notes for us. The criteria is that they must have a great reputation, and truly respected throughout the whole “whisky world”.

In 2008 we were delighted that Hideo Yamaoka, Japan’s foremost Malt Scotch Whisky “otaku” and the translator of Michael’s books into Japanese wrote the notes for our bottling of Highland Park.

John Hansell, the creator, Publisher, and Editor of “Malt Advocate”, the USA’s leading magazine for the whisky enthusiast agreed to write his comments for our 2009 bottling of Bowmore.

Serge Valentin, one of the most prolific whisky aficionados on the internet, and a member of the “Malt Maniacs” agreed to write his comments for our 2010 bottling of GlenDronach.

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This year we’re absolutely delighted that  Charles Maclean kindly agreed to write the tasting comments on the back label.

A writer whose special subject is Scotch whisky, Charles has been researching and writing books & articles about whisky since 1981.

He has published ten books to date, including the standard work on whisky brands, Scotch Whisky and the leading book on its subject, Malt Whisky, both of which were short-listed for Glenfiddich Awards.

Whisky: A Liquid History, published by Cassell in 2003 was named Wine and Spirit Book of the Year (2005) by the James Beard Foundation of New York. MacLean’s Whisky Miscellany followed in 2004, expanded in 2006 as Whisky Tales; in 2008 he was Managing Editor of Dorling Kindersley’s Eyewitness Companion to Whisky, and in 2009 their World Whiskies. Whiskypedia was published in June 2009.

He shares his enthusiasm and knowledge by giving talks & tastings around the world and by presenting training programmes and Masterclasses for whisky companies, clubs and individuals.

Visit his website, WhiskyMax.co.uk

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As always, included with each bottle is a unique Certificate of Ownership with the same number as the bottle, that can be framed and hung on your study / office / drawing room wall.

Again, each label has been painstakingly applied to each bottle individually and then hamd numbered by Duncan Elphick ~ so it really is a personal bottling with none of this automatic labeling & numbering!

It is available to purchase at the Highlander Inn by the bottle (700ml) for £125.00 and by the nip in our whisky bar (25ml) at an introductory price of £8.80.

It will soon also be available in the following countries; Japan (from 20 November 2011), The Netherlands (from 20 November 2011, Taiwan (January 2012), Sweden (January 2012) and Italy (January 2012).

However, if you live in the UK or another country, and would like to buy a bottle without coming to the Highlander Inn, please email Duncan Elphick and he will be happy to post a bottle to you (provided it is legal in your country to receive whisky by post!)

Scotch Malt Whisky Society ‘January 2012 Previews Released’ – Scotch Whisky News

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January Previews Released: 125.37 & 71.34
Our first bottling release of 2012…the first of many great casks! Soothe the soul (along with the January blues) with our preview pick from this month’s Outturn…

71.34 Rabbit, ginger & treacle tart
£46.20
Speyside Lossie
Big rich sweet aromas accosted the Panel – ginger cake, strawberry Chewits, treacle tart, cinnamon, malt loaf but also earthy mushrooms, Marigolds (the gloves not the flowers), leather and musky horses

125.57 Delicate vitality
Exclusive to Jan Preview Pair
Highland Northern
Aromatic and delicate – iced cakes and floral bouquets made us think of wedding parties; we also found wine gums, Turkish delight, vanilla fudge, tablet and tickles of white pepper

Pick-me up Preview Pair
71.34 & 125.57 for only £89
Speyside Lossie & Highland Northern
With the ‘wonderful vitality’ of 125.57 and the ‘big, sweet aromas’ of 71.34 our pair is the perfect January ‘pick-me up’

ALSO last chance to buy bottlings and offers from Whisky Season

Whisky Season & Previews
Browse all bottlings

New Year, New Adventure
Join us and fellow members at a Society tasting near you…56 events up and down the country are available online NOW.

Society Tastings & Events

Whisky Magazine’s 2012 Independent Bottler of the Year www.whiskymag.com/awards/ibc/2011/

The Scotch Malt Whisky Society,
The Vaults, 87 Giles Street, Leith EH6 6BZ
Contact: sales@smws.com or call 0131 555 2929 (Mon-Fri 9am-4.45pm).

Visit the Society at http://www.smws.co.uk/memberships for your chance to join and to take advantage of their great offers.

Scotch Whisky Auctions January UPDATE – Scotch Whisky News

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The ninth auction ended on Wednesday, December 28, 2011. The next (tenth) auction will begin on January 14 and end on Sunday, January 29, 2012. 

www.scotchwhiskyauctions.com

Grant’s Scotch Whisky ‘The whole package?’ – Scotch Whisky News

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The whole package?

Hello all,

In 1909, William Grant’s son-in-law wrote in his diary ‘All things must yield to industry and time. None cease to rise but those who cease to climb’.  We like to think that we apply this ethos to all the work we undertake here at Grant’s. So, with some industry and a little time, we’ve…(please click on the link below to read the remainder of the article)…

THE LINK

Kind regards,
Ludo

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HAPPY NEW YEAR 2012 From Single Malts Direct – Scotch Whisky News

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Single Malts Direct would like to wish all of our customers a “Very Happy New Year”, and we would like to say thank you for your very valued custom during 2011. We are really proud of our level of service, the team worked tirelesly last year. We have increased our product selection and more importantly kept our prices at the lowest possible to benefit our customers. Below was our best seller for 2011, best price online anywhere, grab one whilst stocks last!!!

Shackleton
Mackinlay’s Rare Old Highland Malt
Limited edition bottling

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Special commemorative bottling of a truly unique blended whisky liquid.

Faithful reproduction of the actual Mackinlay’s whisky taken on the ill-fated Shackleton Antarctic expedition to the South pole in 1907. Presented in a replica bottle and wooden case – just as Shackleton left it.

“The most exciting find of scotch whisky since days began”

Tasting notes:
Colour – Light honey, straw gold with shimmering highlights.

Nose -Soft, elegant & refined. Delicate aromas of crushed apple, pear and fresh pineapple arouse the senses. The spirit is exciting and vibrant with attractive notes of oak shavings that release hints of buttery vanilla, creamy caramel and nutmeg. A whisper of marmalade, cinnamon and even a tease of smoke, ginger and muscovado sugar completes this spectrum of delight.

Taste -With a generous strength of 47.3% this gives the spirit plenty of impact on the palate but in a mild warming manner. Harmonious and exhilarating. Whispers of gentle bonfire smoke slowly give way to spicy rich toffee, treacle and pecan nuts. These enticing flavours linger lovingly on the palate but are soon combined by a sensual, complex array of creme brulee, orange rind and freshly baked bread. It is a remarkable tapestry of tantalising taste sensations which truly rewards the palate

£95.99 inc VAT

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW

Keens Steakhouse Masters Series Winter 2012 Tasting-Glenfarclas at 175 Years – Scotch Whisky News

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Masters Series Winter 2012
Join us for a series of tastings featuring wine and spirits
chosen by one of America’s foremost wine and spirits authorities,
F. Paul Pacult, editor of The Spirit Journal.

Monday, January 30, 7:00 p.m.

Robbie Burns Night Celebration
Glenfarclas at 175 Years

Please join us in celebration of the birth of the Bard of Scotland. This festive annual event will feature the legendary malt whiskies of Glenfarclas, one of the oldest and last family owned distilleries in Scotland, famous for their robust sherry cask aged traditional Speyside malts. Come share traditional fare, listen to the Scottish bagpiper, hear the immortal “Ode to Haggis” and raise a wee dram to the greatest Scot.

Master of the Quaich F. Paul Pacult will lead us through the surprisingly wide range of Glenfarclas Single Malt Scotch Whiskies, including:

Glenfarclas 105
Glenfarclas 10 year
Glenfarclas 12 year
Glenfarclas 21 year
Glenfarclas 25 year

$95 per person

For reservations call Keens Steakhouse (212) 947-3636
– Please register early as we expect this event to sell out –

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Please fax back to us at (212) 714-1103

For further information
please visit our Upcoming Events page
Or Call (212) 947-3636.

See us on Facebook

The Spirit Journal Inc. and Keens Steakhouse espouse only the responsible
use of beverage alcohol. The Masters Series is an educational project.
Guests must be 21 years of age or older. Invitation is non-transferable.
An RSVP is required for attendance.


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