News

Sullivans Cove Christmas Sale – Tasmanian Whisky News

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Welcome to our special Christmas release!

The wait is over and we are delighted to offer some truly fabulous whisky just in time for Christmas. The whisky has taken it’s time getting ready, but that’s the way it should be – we don’t want to rush a very good thing. Today, for your drinking pleasure we are excited to present the dark caramel and fruit cake flavours of French Oak Cask HH0422, the vanilla, butterscotch and spice of American Oak Casks HH484, HH0100 and HH0102 and finally the smooth toffee and fudge of Double Cask DC73. Based on past experience you are well advised to HURRY, because stocks won’t last! Finally – we are pretty heavily under the pump trying to make more whisky, so there may be a delay in postage. If we compound that with AusPost’s general performance over Christmas then it’s fair to say you might only get your bottle in January. We will do everything that we can to get your order into the Auspost system ASAP, but please don’t expect the bottle to be with you immediately.

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The Party Source Christmas! – Whisky News

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With round one of the Holiday season behind us, we thought now would be a good time to fill you in on some important dates, as well as make sure you’re aware of our updated holiday Spirits Library hours. Also, we recently received a plethora of Single Malt Scotches from Signatory as well as Gordon & Macphail, not to mention two new blends from Compass Box and a handful of distillery bottlings from the likes of Auchentoshan, Bowmore and Glengoyne. So, if you’ve got a Scotch-lover to cross off your holiday shopping list be sure to stop by and see us for a recommendation. Cheers, -The Party Source Spirits Department

Please Note: The Jimmy Russell signing date has been changed to December 11th from 4-6 pm

12.10.14 – Wes Henderson from Angel’s Envy Bottle Signing, 5-7 pm

12.11.14 – Jimmy Russell of Wild Turkey Bottle Signing, 4-6 pm

12.12.14 – Chris Morris of Woodford Reserve/Old Forester Bottle Signing, 4-7 pm

12.12.14, 12-8 pm and 12.13.14, 9 am – 5 pm – a bottle engraver will be here to engrave Jack Daniels Single Barrel, Gentleman Jack, Woodford Reserve.

Monday and Tuesday – Closed Wednesday and Thursday – 12-8 pm* Friday and Saturday – 2-10 pm Sunday – 12-8 pm *Wednesday, December 24th – 10 am – 6 pm *Thursday, December 25th – Closed

AUCHENTOSHAN Single Malt Scotch Virgin Oak – $139.99

BOWMORE Single Malt Scotch Dorus Mor 10 Year Batch II – $99.99

BOWMORE Single Malt Scotch Signatory 2002 11 Year – $90.99

BLADNOCH Single Malt Scotch Gordon & Macphail 1993 18 Year – $97.99

CLYNELISH Single Malt Scotch Signatory 1998 15 Year – $64.99

COMPASS BOX Great King Street Glasgow Blend – $44.99

COMPASS BOX The Lost Blend Blended Malt Scotch Whisky – $104.99

FETTERCAIN Single Malt Scotch Signatory 1996 17 Year – $68.99

GLENBURGIE Single Malt Scotch Signatory 1995 19 Year – $72.99

GLENGOYNE Single Malt Scotch 15 Year – $72.99

GLENLIVET Single Malt Scotch Signatory 1997 16 Year – $82.99

GLENROTHES Single Malt Scotch Signatory 1999 14 Year – $58.99

HIGHLAND PARK Single Malt Scotch Signatory 1988 25 Year – $261.99

INCHMURRIN Single Malt Scotch Signatory 1996 17 Year – $66.99

JOHNNIE WALKER Blended Scotch King George V – $599.99

LEDAIG Single Malt Scotch Gordon & Macphail 16 Year – $56.99

Top Picks at K&L California – Scotch Whisky News

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  • 1990 Glenfarclas K&L Exclusive Single Malt Whisky 750ml ($169.99) We’ve always loved Glenfarclas. As you may or may not know, this distillery is one of the last independently owned in all of Scotland. It’s owned by the Grant family. It also happens to be on most knowledgeable people’s list of top distilleries and has consistently provided us with excellent sherried Speyside offerings at incredible prices. We’ve had success finding single casks in their vast warehouse system, but found that current market conditions have made purchasing a single cask from the Grants rather cost-prohibitive. Negotiating the price down on those casks is also out of the question as wholesalers worldwide are privy to the price structure and the Grants are very loyal and fair. With that option off the table we decided to get creative. Those single casks have a set price list, but picking multiple casks for one bottling afforded us some flexibility. We knew we were onto the next crazy value, but we never imagined how versatile a mu lti-cask bottling could be. So, into the warehouse we went. George bragged about the quality of the 1990 vintage, but we had no idea how special they were until we were standing in front of the barrels. These casks are from a sequential lot of first fill Oloroso sherry butts at 24 years old. Without a doubt, ‘Farclas fans will be pleased, but this bottling is approachable enough for even the most novice whisky lover to appreciate. ETA 12/1/14
  • Glenfarclas “The Faultline Casks” K&L Exclusive First Fill Oloroso Sherry Casks Single Malt Whisky 750ml ($109.99) When George Grant offered us the opportunity to take multiple casks for a special exclusive bottling, we were over the moon. The creative juices began flowing. We talked about doing an ultra-aged expression, but we didn’t feel we could match the outrageous cask from the 1970 vintage, which we’d acquired a couple of years back. Instead, we decided to focus on a NAS (no age statement) mixture of casks from earlier vintages. The goal was to create a high proof, heavily sherried ‘Farclas that we could sell for around $100. After tasting multiple vintages from 8 to 15 years of age, we settled on three of our favorite casks in the 9-10 year range. At no other distillery is vintage so important and the importance of their vessel was clear when tasting these younger expressions. We’ve ended up with a mixture of young casks that surpass even our own high expectations. This is full fledged and powerful, yet tempered by the strong influence of that speci al wine of Andalucía. If you love sherry, if you love high proof single malt, if you love powerful flavors and massively textural whisky, then this bottling is for you. Even better, if you love not spending a ton for a bespoke offering from one of the world’s best distilleries, don’t wait to order. We’ll have more than the standard single barrel, but this bottling is still highly limited. Expect this to arrive in time for the holidays, hopefully by early December.
  • Balvenie 30 year old Single Malt Whisky 750ml – 6 available ($999.99) 96-100 points Wine Enthusiast: “Bouquet offers hints of mead, almonds, pencil eraser, coffee grounds, pork and old leather. Palate entry is intensely resiny, smoldering warm and waxy; at midpalate, taste explosions of honey, oloroso sherry, dark caramel, hard cheese, malted milk, and Christmas pudding treat the taste buds to an extraordinary library of flavors. Ends deliciously sweet and honeyed. The best Balvenie I’ve ever reviewed.” (02/2005) 90 points Whisky Advocate: “This is a big and brooding dram. The aroma suggests it is aged in both bourbon and sherry oak. It’s complex and richly flavored (sweeter up front and increasingly dry towards its finish), with notes of honey, candied fruit, thick cut marmalade, vanilla, almonds, and prominent spicy oak notes. I’m picking up plenty of sherry in this new expression, which I like. It finishes firmly dry, with notes of spice and tannin. (Vol. 14, #2)”
  • Macallan 18 year old Single Malt Whisky 750ml ($209.99) 92 points Wine Enthusiast: “This Speyside single malt is matured in Sherry oak casks from Jerez, Spain, for a minimum of 18 years. The amber spirit has a big, warm caramel flavor, finishing with a touch of sweet honey, bitter chocolate and espresso on the lingering finish. Viscous, creamy mouthfeel.” (12/2011) 91 points Whisky Advocate: “Macallan’s 18 year old expression is, for me, the highlight of its regular sherried range. Deep amber in color. The nose is rich and heavily fruited: fruit cake, mulberry, a little moist gingerbread, the bloody depths of molasses. On the palate, dried fruits — more figgy than raisined — while the natural oiliness in the spirit balances the boisterous tannins from the European oak. A singed note on the finish (an extension of the molasses?) completes the picture. Balanced and complex. (Vol. 20, #3)” Wine Spectator: “An object lesson in what Sherry does to whisky. A telltale nuttiness appears right on the nose, before spice and fruit join in on the palate, with a sort of chewing gum quality. The nutty notes return in earnest on the meaty finish. ” (02/2011) K&L Notes: The Macallan’s benchmark excellence is nowhere more evident than in the 18 year old, which is matured for a minimum of 18 years in seasoned, Sherry casks. Classic Macallan, with aromas and flavors of dried apricots and figs, spice, chocolate and orange zest.

K&L Wine Merchants
http://www.klwines.com
Phone: 877-KLWines (toll free 877-559-4637)
Email: wine@klwines.com
San Francisco, Redwood City, Hollywood CA

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Ralfy Publishes Whisky Review #505 – Scotch Whisky News

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www.ralfy.com heads into the winter time with a winter-warmer called Whisky Review 505 – Old Smuggler scotch

The Whisky Exchange “Sherry casks part one: what was a sherry cask?” – Essential Scotch Whisky News

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Sherry casks part one: what was a sherry cask?

Once you start getting into whisky, one of the first things you notice is the various types of cask that the spirit is matured in. While they all have their own distinctive character, the most common question we get asked is ‘Was this matured in a sherry cask?’

Such a simple question; such a difficult answer. Normally, we go for a simple yes or no, but, as usual, things are much more complicated than that.

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Some modern casks. Being more specific than that is difficult…

Firstly, there is no legal definition for ‘sherry cask’. The Scotch Whisky Regulations 2009 (the rules governing what Scotch whisky is and how it can be presented) don’t contain the word ‘sherry’, and the only mention of casks is to ensure that they are made of oak and have a capacity of less than 750 litres (SWR2009 3.(1)(c))

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So, what about sherry? There is a legal definition there, given that sherry is very strictly controlled by the Consejo Regulador (the regulatory board). Sherry wines have to come from within a region in southern Spain, an area known as The Sherry Triangle as the boundaries have traditionally been drawn between the three towns of Jerez de la Frontera, Sanlúcar de Barrameda and El Puerto de Santa María. While sherry is a tightly regulated term, with many wines outside of the area made in the same way unable to use the name, the addition of the word ‘cask’ makes it more generic and uncontrolled. The Consejo Regulador are looking to get more control over the term, but as yet, if a cask has held a sherry-style fortified wine, then most producers consider it to be a sherry cask.

So, strictly speaking, while it technically may not have been sherry that was previously in a sherry cask, we know it’s almost certainly something very similar. But that still doesn’t fully answer the question of what a sherry cask is.

Casks have been used in the sherry business for a variety of reasons over the years, but these days, the most common use is in the solera. Soleras are a key part of how sherry is aged, and while the term pops up in other parts of the drinks world (especially in whisky and rum in recent years), a sherry solera is usually quite different. Simply put, it’s a set of casks with an order. Each time you want to extract some sherry, you remove some (never all) from the final cask in the set, and then refill it with wine from the next in line. It in turn is filled from the next, and so on, working back through the casks until you hit the first one, which is refilled with new wine. This process blends old wines with newer ones repeatedly through the maturation process, meaning that changes in the finished wine, always drawn from the last cask in the solera, will be slow, allowing the wine’s character to be consistent over the years.

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A solera. Watching. Waiting…

Unlike whisky, sherry maturation is not focused on extracting flavour from the casks, and as such solera casks are almost always old, with little flavour left to give. They’re not new when they are added, and if a cask is ever removed from a solera, it’s almost certainly due it being broken or leaky. While a whisky matured in a sherry cask is obviously influenced by the sherry infused into the wood, it also interacts with the wood of the cask, and while a solera cask might have lots of sherry flavour concentrated into its staves, the wood itself is not going to have a big effect. These sorts of casks might be useful for certain whiskies, but they are far from being common – the sort of sherry cask you usually see is modelled on the transport cask.

Before 1981, sherry was often shipped around the world in wood. The sherry would be filled into the cask and then would be emptied at its destination, only staying in the cask for the duration of its journey. Even as far back as the 16th century, that would only be a matter of month – the time taken to travel from Jerez to northern Europe and then be sold – but it was enough to get lots of sherry flavour into the wood. Once a cask was emptied of sherry it would then be reused, and one of the traditional secondary occupants was whisky. There were significantly more of these transport casks in the wild than old solera casks, and the traditional Scotch whisky sherry-matured character is almost certainly based on whiskies matured in them.

However, I mentioned 1981 above, the year that Spanish export regulations for sherry changed, and the use of transport casks was outlawed. Along with the downturn in popularity of sherry, this has severely impacted the supply of casks to distillers, leading to both a huge increase in price (they currently go for more than 10 times the price of an ex-bourbon cask) and a new business: the construction of sherry casks for the whisky industry.

More of which in our next post…

Whisky Wednesday Reviews GlenDronach 18yo Single PX Cask – Scotch Whisky News

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This week Joe Ellis reviews Glendronach 18yo Single Cask 1995 Batch 9 PX Cask. 

http://youtu.be/eVQD8DqJATc 

http://Twitter.com/whiskytube

https://www.facebook.com/whiskytube

 

Whisky Magazine – Forthcoming Issues – Whisky News

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The second issue of 2015 will be published on March 13, in time for St Patrick’s Day.  To celebrate, our editorial team reviews the distilleries, both old and new, and the ever evolving whiskey industry in both Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland.

With much happening in Bourbon country also, we review this region’s whiskies as well as visiting craft distilleries in America’s North West. Two key events are Whisky Live New York and the Travel Retail Show, The Americas, digital editions of Whisky Magazine will be available at both.

The following issue is published May 8 and this is a celebration of Whiskies, the liquid and the people and places that are associated to Whiskies with the announcement of the World Whiskies Awards and the Global Icons of Whisky Awards. The travel focus in this issue is the Lowlands of Scotland.

Editorial Features

Issue No.125 Special Features

Whisky Travel: Ireland Focus: Bourbon Special Distribution: Whisky Live New York, IAADFS The Americas,   Publication Date: March 13 Copy Deadline: January 2

Issue No.126 Special Features

Whisky Travel: Lowlands of Scotland Focus: Global Whisky Auctions Publication Date May 8 Copy Deadline: February 20

Whisky Magazine Celebrating the whiskies of the world

Discover Speyburn Bradan Orach – Scotch Whisky News

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Discover Bradan Orach

Whether you’re well versed in our wonderful range of single malt whiskies or just starting to discover them, we think you’ll agree that Bradan Orach embodies all that’s best about Speyburn.

Gaelic for ‘Golden Salmon’, Bradan Orach draws its name from the famously plentiful fish which in season populate the clear spring waters of the Granty Burn – the water which brings Speyburn to life.

The vitality of these magnificent fish is echoed in the qualities of Bradan Orach – a bright golden, easy-drinking whisky infused with a wonderful vigour and depth thanks to the bourbon casks in which it matures. Yielding green apple freshness, light citrus zest and honey sweetness, its well balanced creamy vanilla and floral flavours give way to a long-lasting spicy finish.

Intrigued? Then find out more via our website.

TIME TO GET PERSONAL at The Famous Grouse – Scotch Whisky News

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TIME TO GET PERSONAL

Christmas is a famously festive time, and we can’t think of a better way to celebrate the festive season than with a warming whisky in a crystal glass, served in front of an open roaring fire, with that perfectly personalised gift for your loved one wrapped up neatly under the Christmas tree. It’s Christmas shopping, with style. So make someone famous this Christmas and order your personalised bottle of The Famous Grouse whisky direct from Glenturret Distillery today. Even better, to say thank you for getting your order in early our Whisky Elves are offering 10% discount* on all orders placed before MIDNIGHT on Sunday 30th November.  Just use the code XMAS10% at checkout.

* Discount does not apply to postage and packaging. Discount not valid in conjunction with any other offer, discount or promotion. 

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Blablair “ALL I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS” – Scotch Whisky News

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ALL I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS…

This festive season give the gift of a Balblair Vintage and receive a complimentary Limited Edition Christmas tree decoration with every purchase of a 70cl expression from our collection of award-winning Vintage Single Malt Scotch Whiskies.  Available exclusively at Independent & Specialist whisky stores throughout the UK and via our online shop while stocks last.   All that remains now is for you to select a Vintage from our collection so here’s a little inspiration…

  • Balblair Vintage 2003, a perfect warming dram to sip after crisp winter walks; an every day Vintage, suited to every occasion.
  • For bringing families together and enjoying cosy nights in front of the fire, select Balblair Vintage 1999 2nd Release, a special dram best served shared.
  • Celebrate Christmas Day with Balblair Vintage 1999 2nd Release and savour a tipple as special as the occasion itself.
  • For a dram that deserves its own toast this festive season, choose Balblair Vintage 1983 and see in the New Year with this timed to perfection dram.

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