Archive for 2017

Lagavulin 1991 200th Anniversary Charity Bottling Bottle Number 1 70cl / 52.7% at Whisky.Auction – Scotch Whisky News

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The full proceeds received by Diageo from the auction of the Lagavulin 1991 bottle number 1/522 will be donated to Islay Heritage (OSCR No. SC046938) to fund projects on Islay which are designed to enhance the knowledge and understanding of the rich and diverse history of Islay.

This stunning single cask charity bottling from Lagavulin is the culmination of its 200th anniversary celebrations, and will benefit Islay and the people who live there. This is Bottle Number 1/522 of a one-off release limited to just 522 bottles.

The full proceeds received by Diageo from the auction of the Lagavulin 1991 Bottle Number 1/522 will be donated to Islay Heritage (OSCR No. SC046938) to fund projects on Islay which are designed to enhance the knowledge and understanding of the rich and diverse history of Islay.
The nose has charred oak timbers, sawdust and voluptuous fruit backed by subtle milk chocolate and vanilla. The palate is hot and sweet. Searing, woody dryness, then calmer with mentholic chocolate notes and comforting honey underscored by a subtle chilli-like heat. The finish is quietly persistent with tart red-berry notes, cedar and a spicy, smoky ginger warmth. Leaves the palate minty, with a fruity coffee note and a sprinkling of salt.

A 10cl tasting sample will be provided with Bottle Number 1/522. The winning bidder will be offered the opportunity to have the bottle or box signed by distillery manager Georgie Crawford and the distillery team.

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Scotch Malt Whisky Society “February Previews: Luscious Remedy” – Scotch Whisky News

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FEBRUARY PREVIEWS: A LUSCIOUS REMEDY

We’ve just released five preview bottlings from next month’s Outturn, a luscious remedy to beating the January blues.  Only a small number of bottles are available ahead of February’s First Friday so be sure and order now online or at our Members’ Rooms.  The full February Outturn is available to buy from 9am on Friday 3 February.

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 here for membership information

This is your chance to join and to take advantage of their great offers!

Spot the SMWS bottles in this amusing You Tube video

That Boutique-y Whisky Company Tasting at Nickolls & Perks – Whisky News

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That Boutique-y Whisky Company Tasting with James Goggin Friday 24 February 2017

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James Goggin is joining us at the Nickolls & Perks shop to taste a range of independently bottled whiskies from That Boutique-y Whisky Company, down in the famous cellars at No. 37.

– FULL LINE-UP

– English Whisky Co. 5 Year Old (That Boutique-y Whisky Company) 49.5%

– Linkwood 26 Year Old (That Boutique-y Whisky Company) 52.3%

– Secret Distillery #2 21 Year Old (That Boutique-y Whisky Company) 49.7%

– Blended Whisky #1 35 Year Old (That Boutique-y Whisky Company) 46.5%

– Millstone 6 Year Old (That Boutique-y Whisky Company) 48.9%

The tasting will take place on
Friday 24 February 7.00pm

£25 per ticket

BOOK NOW

VENUE

Nickolls & Perks
37 Lower High street
Stourbridge
DY8 1TA

PLEASE ARRIVE AT THE VENUE FROM 6.45PM FOR A 7.00PM START

Ralfy Publishes Whisky Review #622 – Scotch Whisky News

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Ralfy introduces the benefits of whiskybase.com in Ralfy Review 622 – Ardmore 12yo Port Cask finish

Jim Murray – ‘the only criteria I look at is quality’ – Whisky News

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Jim Murray chats to Stuart of The Whisky Exchange

In the second part of our exclusive interview, Jim Murray explains his strict rules for choosing his World Whisky of the Year, his response to critics of the Whisky Bible, and his retirement plans.

How do you go about tasting for your Whisky Bible?
It averages out at 1,200 [whiskies]. It’s a good day if I’ve done 20, I’m concentrating so hard. I’ve had a number of girlfriends from different countries, and come the evening, they go quiet, because they’ve spent all day translating in their head. I’m a translator – that’s what I do with whisky. I listen to the whisky and I translate it into English.

When it’s something like the World Whisky of the Year, I taste it at three different times of day, always at the same temperature. And before I start, I always test my taste buds with something I know. If I’m not getting the right response, I’ll leave it for 90 minutes or two hours and come back and taste it again. If I fail a third time, I won’t taste that day.

If any of my staff have anything remotely like a cold, they come nowhere near me. If I pop over to the pub, the landlord will tell me if someone has a cold and I’ll walk out. I don’t even have sex during this time because from kissing you can pick up something, so it’s really miserable. But I will not taste a whisky if I don’t trust my taste buds.

Also, no cooking in this place, none whatsoever. If I have hot food, it is brought in and I eat outside. Nothing with spices. I eat the most bland food – fish, boiled potatoes, nothing with lingering flavour. If I go to Kentucky to taste, I hire a suite and I have one bedroom and a separate room [for tasting]. The staff are not allowed to go in there and clean, so I have a controlled area. Here, cleaners can’t come in and polish while I’m working. It’s control, control, control.

Have your tastes changed over the years?
Not at all. I still don’t like whiskies which are too much of one thing, and that includes peaty. Or, if you can only taste the sherry and nothing else, even if it’s clean, then you might as well buy a bottle of sherry. The reason [Yamazaki Sherry Cask 2013] won was because it was the most extraordinary ‘intertwangling’ between the oak – big oak – and the most gorgeous sherry. It was the closest thing to Macallan of the mid-1970s.

Scotch whiskies haven’t won your top award for a while – why not?
They’re not winning because there are whiskies out there that are better. It’s like joining the European Cup. You may be absolutely brilliant in your country but then you play against other teams and suddenly you melt. You just haven’t quite got what they’ve got to lift it, and Scotland’s been a bit like that.

Scotland has two problems: they’ve got the sherry-cask problem and they’ve got a problem with older bourbon casks, because older bourbon casks get worn out. In Kentucky, they were saying ‘Why are we spending massive amounts of money to get this wood in absolutely fantastic condition but we can only use the barrel once?’

And by the time it gets to Scotland, a lot of the good has been sucked out of it. Instead of it lasting three fills, by the time it’s getting to the end of the second, you start picking out a milky note where the chemicals that once upon a time would have been way back further into the wood are being leeched out far quicker, so the Scots are a bit unlucky from that point of view.

There’s a problem with [Scottish] blends, because the distillers have closed down so many grain distilleries that they are now much of a muchness. Absolute insanity. So, why aren’t they winning the prizes? Well, if they hadn’t closed down those grain distilleries and they hadn’t polluted so much of their whisky with sulphur, maybe they would be winning them, so they’ve got themselves to blame in some respects. But let’s get something absolutely straight: there is fantastic Scotch whisky; it’s just not winning the World Whisky of the Year.

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Jim Murray’s Whisky Bible – the first edition was published in 2004

Talk us through the Bible front cover…
It’s Doctor Who! The 2017 edition marks 25 years of me being in the industry, so there’s a picture from about 23 years ago and an up-to-date one. The yellow eyes? A bit of fun. At the end of the day, you want to sell books, and if people do a double take, you’ve grabbed their attention. And people who know me know I’m a massive practical joker.

What do you say to critics of the Bible?
I get a bit cheesed off when people say I give an award for this and that because I’m on the take. These people don’t have a clue what I’m about; I believe in total honesty. When I gave World Whisky of the Year to a Canadian whisky [Crown Royal Northern Harvest Rye], people said I did it for publicity. Selling books in Canada is virtually impossible! If you sell 5,000 books in Canada, it’s a bestseller. If we gave the award to a Scotch whisky company, we’d make far more money. So you get these idiots coming out with no idea about the reason why you give the award. There’s only one reason: because it’s the most complete, the most beautiful whisky I’ve tasted that year, wherever it’s from. The only criteria I look at is quality.

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Michael Jackson, described by Jim as a ‘dear friend’

You were good friends with the late whisky writer Michael Jackson…
Michael was a beer guy – and a dear friend. We were both ex-Fleet Street; we had certain things in common and lots of things we didn’t have in common, but he was a terrific writer. He had a meeting with his publishers about a new book, and his editor said to him ‘What do you know about whisky?’ and Michael said he knew virtually nothing. But he could see that the amount of work he was getting from beer was drying up so he said: ‘I can learn.’ He fell in love with it [whisky], but it was never his passion. If I put a pint of Chiswick Bitter in front of him, his eyes would absolutely sparkle. If I put a Lagavulin – which he loved – in front of him, he would smile. But his eyes never sparkled, and that was a huge difference.

And what about the new crop of whisky writers – or rather, the lack of them?
When I first became a full-time whisky writer in 1992, there was virtually no internet; you had to do all your research the hard way. When I did Jim Murray’s Complete Book of Whisky, I had to do old-fashioned journalistic legwork to find out where all these distilleries were, so I went out and found them.

But now you get people on the internet who have probably been to three distilleries and get a bunch of whiskies sent to them and claim they’re experts. I don’t get that. I can’t get my head around what they’re thinking. I couldn’t get anything around their egos because there’s probably nothing big enough. I don’t read anything [on the internet] now, because I don’t want anything to influence what I think about a whisky. I used to, but I got so frustrated with what I was reading.

I think probably the most honest is Dominic Roskrow. I don’t always agree with what he says, which is great, because we’ve all got our own views on things, but you know that his passion is absolutely there and I admire that. Who’s the next Jim Murray? I don’t know. I’ve been looking, though.

No plans to retire, then?
As a Fleet Street journalist, I’m used to getting my head down and working solidly until the job was done. I’ve got no plans to retire, none whatsoever.

THE CHANGING FACE OF SOCIALISING – Whisky News

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THE CHANGING FACE OF SOCIALISING

Tracking the global trends that will set us apart from the crowd in 2017

Diageo’s first ‘Future Series’ trend report reveals the shape of socialising in the year ahead.

In the report, the team responsible for innovation and future-gazing at Diageo, the world leading drinks company behind brands like Johnnie Walker, Smirnoff, Captain Morgan, Baileys and Guinness, isolates three main social trends expected to accelerate into the mainstream in the year ahead.

Diageo worked with a team of cultural ethnographers to study social scenes from around the world and define three trends that will be influencing how we’ll spend our time in 2017:

  • ‘Exceptional becomes the rule’: socialising is becoming increasingly spontaneous and experimental.
  • ‘In with the ‘in’ crowd’: the home is turning into a place to create extraordinary experiences for friends and family.
  • ‘Optimise not compromise’: consumers want greater control and choice over what goes into their body, without compromising on excitement and experience.

Zoe Lazarus, Global Future and Culture Planning Director at Diageo, commented: 

”At Diageo, we are passionate about creating drinks of the future and helping people celebrate. We have been innovating for hundreds of years and have a strong history as industry pioneers in identifying and responding to trends.”

”Innovation drives our company forward and for us it means staying ahead of trends, continually creating new products, categories and experiences for people to enjoy around the world.”

”Our success relies not only on understating our consumers today, but also on tracking and responding to emerging socialising trends and behaviours that will become the mainstream of tomorrow.’’ 

Trend 1: ‘Exceptional becomes the rule’

  • Enhanced and enabled by digital technology, socialising is becoming increasingly spontaneous and experimental. The diary is dead. Fixed arrangements make way for spur-of-the-moment socialising that is dictated by the weather, a whim or what’s triggered an online buzz.
  • Our time is precious, and with increased and sporadic working hours, we desire more from our free time and crave unique experiences. 2017 will see immersive and shareable entertainment push the boundaries as people realise a growing desire to demonstrate their individuality through social media.
  • Virtual reality (VR) is also expected to become more prevalent with the number of active VR users forecasted to reach 171 million by 2018 and make immersive experiences more accessible to anyone, anytime. Diageo has already delved into this with an immersive VR adventure that allows whisky fans to discover and appreciate the flavours of its Singleton single malt Scotch whisky.

Trend 2: ‘In with the ‘in’ crowd’

  • In 2017, we will see the home become the place to create and curate extraordinary experiences for friends and family. It will become a destination to host events that previously we would have had to go out to enjoy: our personal theatre, pub and club all turned into one.
  • The huge proliferation of on-demand experiences and services is shaking things up and people can increasingly entertain at home with more and more products and experiences available the touch of a button.
  • Technology will continue to define at-home socialising. Tapping into this opportunity, Diageo recently launched its Johnnie Walker digital mentorship programme. Using their tablet, mobile or Amazon Echo devices, whisky fans are introduced to the brand’s heritage and blending expertise through a variety of unique experiences, heralding a new era of whisky education that can be enjoyed by adults from the comfort of their own home. 

Trend 3: ‘Optimise not compromise’

  • However and whatever, 2017 will be the year of choice. Leading a balanced lifestyle is becoming increasingly achievable and aspirational. And it’s not just technology that’s driving this trend. The increasing prevalence of clear nutritional and calorie information on packaging makes it easier to manage our diets.
  • This year, people will continue to opt for products, experiences and attitudes that say something unique about them. Optimising through personalisation is a case in point at The Artesian bar at The Langham in London for example, where bartenders tap into customers’ personal experiences by creating cocktails that capture their mood and essence in a glass.
  • Diageo is offering consumers a wider range of options than ever before with products like Baileys Almande, a dairy and gluten-free version of the original, in North America; Guinness Zero, a non-alcoholic variant of the famous stout, in Indonesia or Smirnoff Spiked Sparkling Seltzer, a low-carb, zero-sugar option, in the United States.

Notes    

About Diageo 

Diageo is a global leader in beverage alcohol with an outstanding collection of brands including Johnnie Walker, Crown Royal, JεB, Buchanan’s and Windsor whiskies, Smirnoff, Cîroc and Ketel One vodkas, Captain Morgan, Baileys, Don Julio, Tanqueray and Guinness.

Diageo is a global company, and our products are sold in more than 180 countries around the world. The company is listed on both the London Stock Exchange (DGE) and the New York Stock Exchange (DEO). For more information about Diageo, our people, our brands, and performance, visit us at http://www.diageo.com/. Visit Diageo’s global responsible drinking resource, www.DRINKiQ.com, for information, initiatives, and ways to share best practice.

Celebrating life, every day, everywhere.

Gordon & MacPhail Masterclass with Stephen Rankin at The Midlands Whisky Festival – Scotch Whisky News

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NEW MASTERCLASS ANNOUNCED!

MIDLANDS WHISKY FESTIVAL: SPRING SHOW – MARCH 2017

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THE SPEYSIDE COLLECTION WITH STEPHEN RANKIN

Saturday 18 March 1.30pm – 2.15pm Tickets £75 (Included with a Premium Ticket)

Fourth generation family member of the Urquhart family (owners of Gordon & MacPhail and the Benromach distillery), Stephen Rankin, will be presenting the newly released ‘Speyside Collection’ in an exclusive masterclass at the show. The full collection was released in late 2016 for £10,500 and features vintage single malts from the 1940s to 1970s.

BOOK NOW

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Our festival returns on March 17-18 to where it all started and we’re back to present you with the World’s best whiskies, along with masterclasses, food pairings and whisky chat. The two-day show offers you the opportunity to learn more about the extraordinary spirit in a relaxed and friendly environment, at Stourbridge Town Hall.

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– WHISKY EXHIBITORS –

Meet dozens of exhibitors with first hand knowledge of what they love most – whisky. Every year the Midlands Whisky Festival team does their very best to bring you distilleries from each corner of the globe including some of the greatest independent bottlers, too!

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– MASTERCLASSES –

Want more from your whisky show experience? Our masterclasses offer an exclusive whisky tasting experience with well-known faces in the whisky industry. This year we’re delighted to announce the likes of George S. Grant from Glenfarclas, Stephen Rankin from Gordon & MacPhail and Brand Ambassador of The Macallan, Daryl Haldane.

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– TICKETS DETAILS –

Friday Ticket £35

Early Bird Standard Saturday Ticket £35 (Save £5)
(Sold Out)

Standard Saturday Ticket £40

Premium Ticket £75
(Inc. either the Gordon & MacPhail or The Macallan Masterclass)

Devotee Ticket £150
(Inc. George S. Grant Masterclass, Drinks By The Dram Devotee Tasting Set + More)

MORE DETAILS

VENUE & SHOW TIMES 

TOWN HALL CROWN LANE STOURBRIDGE DY8 1YE

Friday 17th 6:00pm – 9:30pm (last pour at 9:10pm)

Saturday 18th 12:00pm – 5:00pm (last pour at 4:30pm)

Gordon & MacPhail Ardmore 14yo at the Whisky Barrel – Scotch Whisky News

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Ardmore 14 Year Old

2002 vintage matured in sherry hogsheads before being bottled October 2016 for the Gordon & MacPhail Cask Strength series. A superb fruity and smoky number from the Speyside distillery established in 1898. £59.26 Nose: Sweet vanilla initially with subtle smoky notes. Stewed fruit aromas develop – cherry and raspberry – which mingle with milk chocolate aromas. Taste: Sweet and creamy with a touch of white pepper. Ripe plum, blackcurrant, and apple flavours combine with spicy cloves leading to a charred oak edge. William Teacher’s son Adam Teacher established Ardmore Distillery in 1898 at Kennethmont in Scotland’s Highland whisky region. He selected an ideal site to the south of Huntly with a plentiful supply of soft highland water from springs on the hills to the north and peat to hand. With Kennethmont railway station on the Great North of Scotland Railway was right next door. Now equipped with eight stills and continuing to supply a large proportion of its malt whiskey to blends, the official Ardmore single malt range, including Ardmore Taditional and Ardmore 12 year Port Wood, remains limited.

SHOP NOW >

TWB 10 Yrs

Douglas Laing Single Casks ~ WEB EXCLUSIVE OFFER AT MILROYS OF SOHO – Scotch Whisky News

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Weekly Web Exclusive

Douglas Laing “Old Particular” Single Casks ~ WEB EXCLUSIVE PRICE

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Douglas Laing was established in 1948, they specialise in the selection and release of specialist, craft Scotch Whiskies. They hand select the finest, and often rarest, Scotch Whisky stocks from across all of Scotland’s Whisky regions and bottle them as the Distiller intended: At high alcohol strength, and without colouring or chill-filtration. Their Single Cask “Old Particular” range have consistently released some of the finest malt whiskies to be found the world over.

Take advantage of a WEB EXCLUSIVE PRICE while stocks last.

Glengoyne 20 Year Old, Buy Now

Arran 20 Year Old, Buy Now

Girvan 27 Year Old, Buy Now

Ralfy Publishes Whisky Review #621 – Whisky News

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Ralfy shows off some collectable stuff with Ralfy Review 621 – collectable whiskies update 2017


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