Archive for September, 2020

Mark’s Whisky Ramblings 333: Compass Box Transistor – Scotch Whisky News

Mark’s Whisky Ramblings 333: Compass Box Transistor

Mark Dermul, Belgian whisky vlogger, enjoys a Boilermaker! BrewDog is an innovative, rebellious brewery in Scotland since 2007. They even have a bar in Brussels by now. They asked three whisky producers to create a whisky for a boilermaker. That’s the combination of whisky and beer – side by side. Duncan Taylor gave them Skeleton Key, the Dutch Zuidam delivered a 100% rye whisky Torpedo Tulip and Compass Box came up with this Transistor. It is created to be savored alongside the Punk IPA from BrewDog. The whisky is a blend of Cameronbridge grain with the following malts: Linkwood, Teaninich, Dailuaine and Clynelish. Parts of the whisky were matured on French oak from the Vosges.

https://youtu.be/Jgfz5APgEnY

SCOTTISH FAMILY FIRM LAUNCHES THE ANGELS’ SHARE GLASS – Whisky News

SCOTTISH FAMILY FIRM LAUNCHES THE ANGELS’ SHARE GLASS

The team at an award-winning family firm has created a new spirits glass – The Angels’ Share Glass.

The glassware, which features an angel’s wing and a flame, is launched online by Stirling company Angels’ Share Glass today.

It is the latest innovation from the firm which is renowned for a range of glassware including Whisky Angels, Whisky Water Droppers and Gin Pigs.

 

Angels’ Share Glass Managing Director Karen Somerville said: “We’ve always wanted to add our own glass to the range so this is a concept which has been in the making for a long time.

“We’ve gone back and forth in deciding how it should look and behind the design is the idea that it should be simple but bold and legendary but attainable.

“There is no pseudoscience involved. We wanted to come up with something for drinkers who don’t take their spirits too seriously and we’re delighted, that after all this time, we have our own glass reflecting the company’s journey and vision.”

“The Angels’ Share Glass is designed on elegance and grace much like an Angel and it’s ideal for everyone’s favourite spirit whether that be Scotch Whisky, Rum, Bourbon, Cognac, Vodka, Sherry, Port or Gin.”

There are two glasses in the range – a standard size which takes 100ml of spirits and a mini tasting version which is 50ml.

The glass was designed by Karen Somerville and her father, Master Glassblower Tom Young MBE, who were keen to incorporate the wing and flame which forms their company logo into the design.

It is aimed at all spirits-lovers and complements the firm’s existing bar and giftware range including gift sets.

The versatile glass can also be personalised with a name or brand and plans are underway to extend the range to include decanters and water jugs.

The company had intended to launch The Angels Share Glass during an Open Day at the firm’s headquarters in Bridge of Allan near Stirling, however, due to Covid-19 restrictions, the launch will be a virtual one instead.

Mrs Somerville said: “It’s a shame we can’t have a full launch at our studio, but like many small businesses we’ve had to adapt to the current situation and instead we’ve created a video featuring the Angels’ Share Glass which we hope everyone will enjoy.”

The video can be viewed here – www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw80vrjEDjk

The standard 100ml Angels’ Share Glass costs around £12 while the mini version, which is perfect for tasting sessions, is 50ml and £10.

For more details and to order go to – www.angelsshareglass.com/collections/gift-sets

For more information about Angels Share Glass, visit www.angelsshareglass.com

Notes:

Angels’ Share Glass is a family-run business based in Bridge of Allan, near Stirling. The firm was co-founded by Karen Somerville and her father Tom Young MBE – a world-renowned Master Craftsman who has been glassblowing and making lamp-work glassware for 60 years. More information about the company can be found at www.angelsshareglass.com

Jim Murray’s Whisky Bible 2021 – Jim Murray News

Make Mine a Double!
The Whisky Bible’s Two Editions.

Apart from being the most authoritative and detailed book on whisky in the world, Jim Murray’s Whisky Bible has always set out to be the most comprehensive and easy to use, too. That is why there is now both a standard and North American edition.

So, if you are in a hurry and have only moments to make a quick decision about buying a whisk(e)y, then if it is bourbon, rye and other American whiskeys you are looking for, the North American edition now lists those at the front of the guide lining up the brands alphabetically as well as by State. And this followed directly by the Canada section, making this edition of the Whiskey Bible even more North American user friendly.

For Scotch lovers around the world, the standard Jim Murray Whisky Bible presents you the single malts section distillery by distillery alphabetically as before.

whiskybible.com
The only place to order personally dedicated copies.

The Grand Whisky Auction “Auction is Now Live!” – Auction Whisky News

Auction Is Now Live!

THE LIVE AUCTION

21oo+ lots to bid on including a…

Macallan – 72 Year Old Lalique Genesis Decanter

Interested in selling whisky in our next auction?

+44 (0)1463 210 427

sales@thegrandwhiskyauction.com

 

🥃 Virginia Distillery Co. – Hello, September! – American Whiskey News

September Virginia Spirits Month Is Here

September in Virginia means one thing: Virginia Spirits Month! We’re excited to launch a new whisky cocktail kit, featuring our Cider Cask Finished Virginia-Highland Whisky. Perfect for those September evenings on the porch.

GET THE DETAILS

Hitting Store Shelves Near You

In the next week, Cider Cask Virginia-Highland Whisky will be hitting the shelves near you… just in time for the September weather. Keep your eyes peeled for its return. 🍏 Use our website’s store locator to find a bottle near you. If you live in Virginia, we can also ship a bottle to you direct from our distillery.

SHOP HERE

USA Today: Best Craft Whiskey Distillery Nominee

We’re thrilled to have received a nomination for USA Today 10Best’s Best Craft Whiskey Distillery. If you had a free second, head on over and give us a vote.

SUBMIT YOUR VOTE

Journey Cask: Britannia – Almost Sold Out!

Our Journey Cask: Britannia release is almost sold out (there are less than 5 cases left!). This limited release scored 93 points in Whisky Advocate, and is currently our only cask-strength offering. Grab a bottle before it’s gone!

Only available through our distillery store, shipping to Virginia residents only.

GET A BOTTLE

Edradour We Have Arrived – Apollo Moon Exclusive 🚀 – Scotch Whisky News

Edradour We Have Arrived – Apollo Moon Exclusive 🚀

Exclusive Apollo 10
“Charlie Brown”

‘We Have Arrived’ Edradour 10 Year Old 2010

Fifty-one years ago Apollo 10 pioneered a full dress rehearsal for the first historic moon landing. Command service module, dubbed “Charlie Brown” stopped short of landing on the lunar surface.

Commander Thomas Stafford proclaimed “You can tell the world that we have arrived”.

To mark this occasion, TheWhiskyBarrel.com has bottled a single first fill sherry butt distilled in 2010 at the Edradour distillery in the Scottish Highlands. Just 400 numbered bottles at cask strength 57.4%.

In the interest of fairness ‘We Have Arrived’ Edradour 10 Year Old is limited to 2 bottles per customer (but you don’t have to be an astronaut to buy it!).

Shop >> We Have Arrived – £120 / €135 / $133*

The Good Dram Show – Episode 376 ‘The Distillers Art Ltd’ – Scotch Whisky News

Whisky and Art collide on this weeks episode of the Good Dram Show youtu.be/ibL5l6kOHKU featuring the inaugural releases from Distillers Art Ltd.

GORDON & MACPHAIL COMMEMORATES 125th ANNIVERSARY WITH ‘LAST CASK’ RELEASES – Scotch Whisky News

GORDON & MACPHAIL COMMEMORATES 125th ANNIVERSARY WITH ‘LAST CASK’ RELEASES 

— 47YO Coleburn first in the series of four rarely seen whiskies — 

Gordon & MacPhail has revealed plans to launch four rarely seen single malt Scotch whiskies to commemorate the company’s 125-year history.

Exceptionally scarce, each whisky – either from a closed distillery or made on Lomond Stills no longer in production – is from the last cask held in Gordon & MacPhail’s famous warehouse in Elgin. The rare single malts will be released periodically during the rest of 2020, providing a fitting tribute to 125 years spent in pursuit of perfection of the art of maturation. Since 1895 Gordon & MacPhail has released single malts from over 100 celebrated, little-known, or closed distilleries.

The first of the anniversary whiskies to be revealed is the Gordon & MacPhail 1972 from Coleburn Distillery in Speyside. Coleburn Distillery, situated just four miles from the company’s Elgin home, started production in 1897 and it remained active until 1985.

Gordon & MacPhail 1972 from Coleburn Distillery [RSP £1500*]

Just 363 bottles of the sweet, intense and complex 47-Year-Old whisky from Coleburn Distillery are available. After spending its entire maturation in cask 3511, a refill sherry puncheon, the golden-hued whisky has been bottled at cask strength (62.4% ABV), developing a sweet aroma with butterscotch notes.

This sweetness is carried into the taste of the whisky, with apricots flavours, cooked apples and mint giving way to a medium finish with autumnal fruit and a slight herbal finish.

Stephen Rankin, a fourth-generation member of Gordon & MacPhail’s owning family and the company’s Director of Prestige, said: “The whiskies we have chosen to commemorate our 125th Anniversary are all truly unique and seldom seen in the market.

“They are bottled from the last remaining casks we have from these distilleries, and marks an emotional moment for my family as they leave the Gordon & MacPhail warehouse after being left to mature by my grandfather many decades ago.

“These single malts represent not only the skills and expertise in whisky maturation built and passed down through generations, but also the passion we have in advocating the discovery of rare whiskies from some of Scotland’s lesser known, but much sought after, distilleries.

“We intend to reveal details of the other three whiskies over the coming year, with each single malt honouring this important milestone for Gordon & MacPhail.”

For more information visit www.gordonandmacphail.com.

#GordonandMacPhail

*Prices in international markets may vary due to local taxes and import duties.

Tasting notes 

Gordon & MacPhail 1972 from Coleburn Distillery

Matured in cask 3511, a refill sherry puncheon and bottled at 62.4% ABV. 

Colour: Golden

Aroma: Sweet butterscotch, ripe fruit and subtle floral aromas. Caramelised sugar develops alongside waxy citrus peel, slowly transforming into fresh guava.

Taste: Intensely sweet; fruity flavours of apricot and cooked apple with a subtle mouth-warming chilli spice edge. Subtle charred oak flavours give way to a soft undertone of mint leaves.

Finish: A medium finish with sweet and ripe autumnal fruit and a lingering dry herbal note. 

Gordon & MacPhail Whiskies

Established in 1895, family-owned Gordon & MacPhail is curator of some of the world’s finest and rarest single malt Scotch whiskies from over 100 distilleries. Four generations of the Urquhart family have continued to pursue the perfect partnership between spirit and cask.

Since its foundation, Gordon & MacPhail has carefully matched spirit to the highest quality oak casks which are sent to distilleries throughout Scotland, filled with new-make spirit, and matured either at the distillery of origin or in the firm’s own bonded warehouse in Elgin.

It is this simple but endlessly complex pairing that creates an intriguing and unique portfolio of expressions – single malts that Scotch whisky lovers will not find anywhere else.

In April 2018, the company unveiled its streamlined portfolio:

  • ‘Discovery’ – Utterly dependable, this flavour-led range is the perfect introduction to our portfolio of quality single malt Scotch whiskies.
  • ‘Distillery Labels’ – A range celebrating our long-standing relationships with Scotland’s distilleries.
  • ‘Connoisseurs Choice’ – The heart of our portfolio – always unique, these non-chill-filtered, natural coloured, small batch expressions are genuine one-offs.
  • ‘Private Collection’ – Greatly-aged single malts from celebrated, little-known, or closed distilleries specially selected by members of the Urquhart family.
  • ‘Generations’ – A prestigious collection of old, rare, and exclusive masterpieces.

Diageo Special Releases 2020 – Rare by Nature – at The Whisky Exchange – Scotch Whisky News

Diageo Special Releases 2020 – Rare by Nature part two

This year has gone both strangely fast and slow. The whisky calendar is all over the place and while most things have been delayed, others are keeping to plan or even arriving earlier than expected. Case in point: the Diageo Special Releases 2020 were announced back in May and will be launching about a month earlier than usual, in September 2020. Along with this earlier scheduling came the bit I’m most interested in – the chance to try them: read on to learn more about the new Diageo Special Releases, and what they taste like…

What are the Diageo Special Releases?

Simply put, they are a much anticipated range of annual whisky releases from Diageo, the world’s largest whisky company. They’ve been going since 2001, and took over from both the Rare Malts Selection and a few occasional special releases (no capital letters) from Diageo and its precursor companies, DCL and UDV.

These days, it’s an established part of the yearly whisky release line-up. The past few years have seen some shake-ups, with the annual releases of whisky from closed distilleries Port Ellen and Brora disappearing from the range in 2018,  and the long-running Caol Ila release – pretty much the only way for the general public to get their hands on unpeated whisky from the Islay favourite – disappearing last year.

Despite rumours of the Special Releases’ potential demise, last year’s rejig of the range both down in price and into a new look has had a good response, and they’re back again for another year. The Diageo malts team have been working on next year’s releases for a couple of months already and the range looks to have a new lease of life.

Read more in my post – Diageo Special Releases: what are they? >

This year’s line-up

If you remember last year’s Diageo Special Releases, then the line-up for 2020 might look somewhat familiar. Not only do we have eight whiskies again, but seven of the eight distilleries are the same as those in 2019 – Singleton of Glen Ord has been replaced by Singleton of Dufftown – and even some of the ages and vintages match up.

Dr Craig Wilson, the current curator of the range, explained this as being a reaction to the reception of the 2019 line-up – it went down rather well. As such, the single malt team at Diageo built this year’s range using the same distilleries, but exploring different facets and flavours of each.

But what are the whiskies, and what do they taste like?

Cardhu 2008 11 Year old

An obvious opener to the range, and not only because its first alphabetically, It’s an interesting Cardhu, having not only been matured in refill and ex-bourbon American-oak casks (I assume this implies the potential presence of refill American oak sherry casks), but also in new oak. While some Scottish producers have jumped on new oak for their whiskies, Diageo hasn’t released any whiskies that trumpet its use, as far as I remember – let me know in the comments how bad my memory is. Cardhu is a distillery that sometimes gets a bit of stick for being safe and boring, so what does the new oak add?

Nose: Crunchy green apples and just-ripe white pears. Toffee notes build, with heather honey and crunchy barley sugar not far behind. Green herbal notes develop, with sage and rosemary alongside fresh lemon peel and candied orange.

Palate: Toffee leads – Highland Toffee bars with zesty lemon and singed orange. The toffee becomes Crunchie innards with a drizzle of honey, a pinch of ginger, spicy baked apples and a dusting of cocoa.

Finish: Burnt toffee and baked apples fade to expose gravelly minerality, custard and spice.

Comment: Nicely balanced, with the classic Cardhu honey character perked up with some zesty fruit, and spiced up, maybe, by the new oak.

Singleton of Dufftown 2002 17 Year Old

The only distillery change this year, but it’s still keeping in the same range – Glen Ord (last year’s entry), Glendullan and Dufftown make up the Singleton collection. Dufftown’s the distillery in the range that’s easiest to find in Europe, making this less interesting to me (a Glen Ord fan) than the 2019 Special Releases entry, but former Special Releases curator Maureen Robinson is behind this bottling, and anything Maureen’s had a hand in is worth trying.

This is, in cask terms, one of the most boring whisky in the line-up – it’s all matured in refill American-oak hogsheads. However, I’m a contrary whisky fan who loves refill-cask-matured whisky, so it’s towards the top of my list.

Nose: Damp, freshly mown grass leads, with sweet coffee pastilles and medium-dark chocolate following. Lighter floral notes develop, with boiled sweets and chocolate limes. Toast and honey notes build, joined by a touch of buttery pain au chocolat.

Palate: Rich and honeyed with more weight than the relatively fresh nose suggested. The toffee, lime and chocolate are back, with rich stewed orange notes. Fruity dark chocolate rolls in, with a touch of bitter char and rye crisp-bread to balance the sweetness. More floral notes develop with some time in the glass: grass meadows and spring blossoms.

Finish: Honey and chocolate lead to warming spice, green apple and gentle grassy notes.

Comment: The nose zigged and the palate zagged, with extra weight and complexity coming through on the tongue. Nice rich back-end for a 100% American-oak dram, with the whisky showing lots of chocolate – the darker side of the oak’s usual cream and vanilla character.

Pittyvaich 1989 30 Year Old

A fifth Pittyvaich to pop up in the Special Releases, and the third year in a row for one to appear. In keeping with all the others, this is a 1989-vintage release, now clocking in at 30 years old. The distillery wasn’t open for long and closed in 1993, but there must be something about the vintage that keeps Diageo coming back for more. It is definitely the best vintage from the distillery that I’ve tried.

This one is all first-fill ex-bourbon casks, a switch from the sherry-finish of last year and the refill casks from the year before. An extra year or two and an extra bit of bourbon-cask punch – how does it work with Pittyvaich’s spirit?

Nose: Fruit Salad sweets, unripe pineapple, aromatic apple and perfectly ripe pear. Sweet cream follows, studded with dried fruit: tropical trail-mix with sultanas and milk chocolate buttons. Pink shrimp sweets develop along with leafy green herbs.

Palate: Soft and rounded with a core of tropical fruit – a tin of fruit salad (drained) with a drizzle of single cream. Oaky spice develops along with biscuit notes and the leafy green notes from the nose: freshly picked, hand-rubbed hops and aromatic herbs.

Finish: The leaves linger, with flashes of fruit and spice. Fruity hops remain.

Comment: I’ve got a weird, leafy, hoppy note off the last few Pittyvaich Special Releases, and it’s back again here in spades. PIttyvaich continues to be ‘the weird one’, but if you like the green note, you’ll like this.

Dalwhinnie 1989 30 Year Old

Dalwhinnie is one of the first distilleries I loved, and I always look forward to trying older editions. Last year’s release brought in some of the distillery’s usual sherry-cask influence, and while this year’s just says ‘refill hogsheads’ – which could conceal some fortified wine – I suspect this is much more straight down the line: a rare style of Dalwhinnie that I rather like.

Nose: Elegant, with dusty polished oak and slowly building butterscotch to start. The polish notes become treacly, backed up by concentrated orchard fruit: stewed apples and pears. A touch of black liquorice hides underneath, washed over by building fruit. Tarragon and leafy green notes develop.

Palate: Rich and creamy with crunchily topped crême brûlée concealing fresh orange and lemon peel under the creaminess. Coffee notes build and gentle black pepper spice isn’t far behind. The butterscotch from the nose pushes through, with toffee and cream in tow.

Finish: Toffee fades to leave sweet pear, wax-polished oak and treacle toffee.

Comment: Another whisky that pulls out some of the darker side of oak, with dark sugars balanced against solid fruity character.

Mortlach 1999 21 Year Old

Mortlach has had a lot of love from Diageo over the past few years. First, the distillery’s whisky was shifted into the limelight as the company’s flagship premium range. It was a move which led to a step down a few years later when it didn’t do as well as expected, and a new range was launched, focused on sherry maturation. Then came last year’s 26-year-old sherried dram in the Special Releases, sticking with the the rest of the range’s style. So what do we have here? Another sherried edition.

Unlike with last year’s sherry-heavy release, this time Craig Wilson has focused on a sweeter and more elegant side of the distillery’s nature. The casks are just used for finishing, and their influence has been appropriately dialled down:

Nose: Big sweetness to start: syrup and singed toffee – wide, rich and sweet. Orchard fruit, vanilla and toffee notes build – well structured and elegant. Pineapple hints develop, both freshly sliced (and very ripe) and barbecued.

Palate: The hints of richness come through on here – it’s much bigger and weightier than the nose suggested. A kick of gingery spice leads into a pile of juicy raisins, with ginger cake, rum cake and pineapple upside-down cake underneath. Baked apples and poached pears appear, with notes of meaty spirit, spice and forest ponds growing alongside.

Finish: Soft spice and spongecake followed by damp apples and unripe pears.

Comment: It’s toned down from last year, but after the nose suggested some almost bourbon-cask elegance the palate wipes that from the mind – it’s ‘only’ a sherry finish, but it’s picked up a nice whack of flavour from the casks. Not enough to hide the spirit, though, which definitely elevates it.

 

Cragganmore 1999 20 Year Old

Of the whole Special Releases range, this is the one I was anticipating the most. After last year’s introduction of smoky Cragganmore – a spirit that I didn’t know existed – would Diageo bring it back for a second outing? Could Cragganmore become the anti-Caol Ila: a usually unpeated dram that appears in the Special Releases as a peated edition?

Unfortunately, it seems not.

With no mention of smoke – other than by Senior Brand Ambassador Ewan Gunn when talking through his tasting notes – this is described as being matured in ‘refill casks and fresh-charred casks’. The latter I’ve had confirmed by the Diageo team as being ‘new fresh-charred American-oak hogsheads’: more new oak? Could they be the source of Ewan’s smokiness?

Nose: Rich butterscotch and barrel char. Notes of roasted banana and shortbread develop, with sweet apple and poached pear not far behind. Polished oak and sweet, waxy notes develop with hints of sultanas and dried apricot. Brown sugar follows.

Palate: The butterscotch of the nose becomes burnt, with bitter sugar notes balanced by sweet polished oak, chocolatey mocha coffee and milk chocolate. Raisins and sultanas emerge with a fleeting hint of menthol, before dried apricot, dried apple and liquorice take over.

Finish: Sweetness fades to levae balanced char, forest pools and stewed apples.

Comment: There’s definitely a char note here, but not one that I see as being properly smoky. It could be the freshly charred casks allowing the spirit deeper access into the wood to pull out darker flavours, it could be auto-suggestion. Either way, it’s quite nice.

Talisker 2011 8 Year Old

A dram that immediately got people’s attention when it was announced – a hark back not only to the Talisker 8 Year Old releases of yore, but also the Special Releases entry of two years ago, which shot off the shelves in moments. A youthful expression from the Skye distillery, it was a raw look at what makes the distillery great.

Its follow-up is something quite different: a whisky finished in pot-still Caribbean rum casks, which Craig Wilson confirmed as being from Jamaica. It’s a first for Talisker and a rare outing, if not a first, for Diageo in general (again, please tell me below in the comments how wrong I am). It’s an intriguing prospect – how does Talisker’s maritime charm pair with funky rum?

Nose: Sweet and smoky with bananas, butterscotch, sea-spray and black pepper. Candied orange and lemon appear, surrounded by a cloud of sweet and salty peat smoke. More sweet fruit notes develop: overripe, roasted and grilled pineapple.

Palate: Rich, rounded and sweet. A big hit of pungent peat smoke is tempered by baked apples and toasted bananas, all dusted with freshly cracked black pepper and Maldon salt. A pinch of chilli heat is swamped by sweet and sour citrus: lemon, lime and Seville orange.

Finish: A hit of plimsoll rubber and tar leads to singed apples and liquorice sticks.

Comment: The rum works rather well, but it’s the nose where it has the biggest impact – is it Jamaican funk you can smell or damp, maritime Talisker? The palate is much more typical, but intense, sweet and fruity, with the ‘Made by the Sea’ tagline dialled up a notch. I think this might be the hit of the series…

Lagavulin 2007 12 Year Old

The final survivor of the old guard – the only whisky to appear every year since the first ‘proper’ Special Releases in 2002. It varies from year to year, but is very much the go-to dram of the range, with it often not really being seen as part of the line-up, but more of a special release (no capital letters) of its own.

Last year’s edition was smokier than usual, and as a contrast Craig Wilson has leant on the same character that you may have noticed in many of the releases above: sweetness. It’s all matured in refill American oak – both hogsheads and butts – so there’s almost certainly refill sherry casks in here. How does it all come together?

Nose: Burning limes and peat fires. Sweet chocolate lime notes push through the smoke, followed by ozone-rich sea-spray and rock-pool brininess. Gomme sweetness mixes with brine and citrus: preserved lemons and lemon boiled sweets.

Palate: Thicker and richer than the nose suggests, with a lemon sherbet and toffee fudge kick up front. Leather and dark sweetness carry on underneath, laced with chocolate and sweet espresso, while zesty lemon and lime float on top. Earthy smoke and cocoa build along with chocolate icing sweetness.

Finish: Mint choc chip, damp ferns and lingering lime zest.

Comment: I was expecting sweet and light, but this is a richer and darker Lagavulin than you usually find in the Special Releases. Still intense and peaty, but balancing zesty seaside freshness against darker, sweeter notes. An interesting take on the 12-year-old expression.

When do they land?

We’re still waiting on confirmation of the exact date, but they should be with us in a couple of weeks – the middle of September. This year really is flying by…

Keep an eye on our Twitter, Facebook and Instagram accounts, as well as The Whisky Exchange homepage – they’ll be up on all of them as soon as they’re available

California Local Distilleries Whisky Tasting: TONIGHT! – Whisky News

Local Distilleries Virtual Tasting:
Friday, September 4 at 7:00pm PST

Let’s start off the well-deserved Labor Day weekend with a drink to celebrate our local, California work force. We have a plethora of local liquid artists, but we can only give you ten at a time.  Although we like to focus on whisky, we have varied a little with local distilleries that deserve a mention.  (Don’t make assumptions of what you think a liquor will taste like).

A bourbon that smells like chocolate? It is a limited release and can only be purchased on Treasure Island. What about a Rum /Whisky hybrid that is actually tasty?  What is a molecular whisky? How about Sweet Potatoes and Rye whiskey?

We will provide a tasting kit with samples of each product listed below that are available for pick up from our friends at Haberdasher and Shovels Bar. Then you can join us on Zoom as the brand reps, owners or distillers guide you through the tasting. A zoom registration link will be sent the day before the tasting.  A recorded version of the tasting will also be made available.

Your Social Bubble

Use this as a time to get together with your social bubble! (We can get you extra tasting kits. Email us for pricing and availability)

POUR LIST 
10th Street Coastal Blend (San Jose)
Corbin Cash Blended Whiskey (Merced)
Glyph Whiskey (San Francisco)
Spirit Works Four Grain Bourbon (Sebastopol)
Alley 6 Rye (Sonoma)
Wayward Bourbon (Santa Cruz)
Wright and Brown Single Malt (Oakland)
“Lawless Liqueurs” Apple Liqueur (San Jose)
“Lawless Liqueurs” Black Cherry Liqueur (San Jose)
Tree Craft Chocolate Bourbon (Treasure Island)
Reed and Lacey: California Gold (Richmond)

Tasting Kits can be purchased online at Shovels Bar in San Francisco and Haberdasher in San Jose. Pre-purchase kits  are now available for pick-up at the locations below. Order your kits today by clicking the link below.

Still available from Shovels (San Fran) and Haberdasher (San Jose):

American Single Malts:  A discussion with industry experts and highly respected distillers on the category of American Single Malts and why it is important to create this standard as we will also taste through and delight our palates.  Watch the recorded tasting at your leisure.

POUR LIST:

Balcones Single Malt
Colkegan Single Malt Whiskey
St. George Baller
Westward Single Malt
Alley 6 Single Malt
FEW Single Malt
Del Back Single Malt
10th Street  STR
Stranahan’s Single Malt Whiskey
Corsair Triple Smoke

Shovels Bar – San Francisco

Haberdasher – San Jose


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