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Springbank 1964 Adelphi 32 Year Old – The Whisky Shop News

Springbank 1964 Adelphi 32 Year Old

A marvellous 32-year-old single malt. Hailing from Campbeltown’s Springbank Distillery, this expression was released by independent bottlers, Adelphi. Bottled at 50.8% abv, this is a simply breath-taking dram.

Expect smooth aromas of bramble, wood polish, and red berries on the nose. The palate is rich and brings toasted oak alongside pleasant jammy notes before leading into the thick, lingering, and drying finish.

Please note: This bottle is from a private collection.

£7,920.00
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Adelphi Selection Bowmore 26 Years Old at Aberdeen Whisky Shop – Islay Single Malt News

Adelphi Selection Bowmore 26 Years Old

ABV: 55.5% VOL: 70 cL

This incredible single malt was distilled at the Bowmore distillery on the Isle of Islay in 1997. It was matured for 26 long years in a single refill Oloroso sherry butt and bottled at natural cask strength without chill-filtration or artificial colouring by Adelphi. Only 507 bottles were produced.

NOSE:Umami-rich mushroom, rancio-style Madeira, Worcestershire sauce, truffle, decomposing wood, aged parmesan, old book, venison jus, eucalyptus, aged balsamic, Saint Nectaire cheese, and juniper.

PALATE:Stock cube, sweet celery, Bovril, poutine, hawthorn berry, smoked Old Fashioned, leather armchair, and cigar ash.

FINISH:Integrated and subtle peat smoke, endless complexity.

Mark’s Whisky Ramblings 530: Lagavulin Jazz 2022 – Islay Scotch Whisky News

Mark’s Whisky Ramblings 530: Lagavulin Jazz 2022

Mark Dermul, Belgian whiskyblogger, tries a special Lagavulin. Everyone knows Feis Ile, of course, the Islay Music & Malt festival, of which the bottles also fly off the shelves like hotcakes, including those of Lagavulin. Mark already tasted his share of those. But what is much less known is the fact that Lagavulin also sponsors the annual Islay Jazz Festival and also releases a bottle for that occasion every year, and… Mark consistently find those releases better than the Feis Ile releases! In the glass is a 7-year-old Laga released for Jazz 2022. It is perhaps one of the palest Laga’s he has ever poured himself.

https://youtu.be/TYLR9MF1awQ

The Art of Blending Prune Wine & Whisky – Old Whisky Industry News

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The Art of Blending Prune Wine & Whisky 

by Lawrence Graham, Keeper of the Quaich

Before legislation that guaranteed the quality of Scotch whisky, adulteration was quite common, often with a detrimental effect to the unsuspecting consumer. The fascinating book by Edward Burns, “It’s a bad thing whisky; especially BAD WHISKY”[i] neatly describes the lengths unscrupulous producers and publicans went to sell immature whisky as a mature and wholesome product.  Fusel Oil[ii], to use the term of the day, was the main culprit and producers, eager to rush immature spirits (often directly off the still) to market without the costly prospect of lengthy maturation in wood, added many adulterations to the whisky in an attempt to mask the foul taste of Fusel Oil.

Fusel Oil is initially noxious and completely ruins the taste of the spirit. To counter act the practice of selling immature spirit and to improve the taste, various products were added to the whisky including sherry wine, tartaric and acetic acids, sugar, pineapple, fruit essences, tincture of prunes, acetic ether, oil of wine, spirit of nitrous ether, glycerine, green tea and other repugnant substances.

The absolute best description of Fusel Oil that I came across was from J. Emerson Reynolds, Esq., M.D., Professor of Chemistry, Trinity College;- “I have always attached great importance to the practical freedom of Whisky from Fusel Oil, as the latter is an organic mixture which exerts a distinct poisonous action on the animal organism; and I am well aware that New Whisky too often contains this noxious body in comparatively considerable quantities.”

During the 1870’s ‘blending’ in reference to whisky meant the addition of non whisky ingredients rather then the mixing of malt and grain whisky as we are familiar with the term today.

Prune Wine was the best of the ‘adulterations’ and was marketed as a quality product (in some cases it was a better quality product than the whisky it was destined to be ‘blended’ with). Manufactured in Ireland from prunes imported primarily from Portugal the manufacturer conducted a brisk trade not only with whisky distilleries in the UK but also those worldwide, consequently Prune Wine was an important constituent of early malt whisky.

The Whisky Trade Review commented on the state of the industry:-“Distillers and Blenders of Whisky- Irish, Scotch, English or Welsh, for each country is now making whisky – use their best endeavors to supply the trade with an article which is palatable or which will be palatable after a little time. But it should be remembered that both the distiller and the blender uses his own idea almost entirely as to what he considers a palatable flavour. The public, whilst approving of nearly every honest whisky-by honest we mean whisky made of sound and wholesome cereals-invariably say that it lacks something; it wants a finish. No one has a right to shudder or pull a wry face after taking a glass of whisky; yet how often is this so, perhaps nine cases out of ten, yes, and this is in London, Dublin and Edinburgh.” 

The Wine and Spirit Trade Record, in referring to the foregoing, says, in its issue of May, 1900;- “How to meet this want-to supply this lack of finish-was obviously a matter of first importance to the Whisky Trade. This lead to numerous articles being, from time to time, offered on the market.  Among these, Patent Prune Wine has obtained a position so exceptionally high, that there can be no hesitation in saying that it has successfully supplied the need. Those closely connected with home trade are aware that Prune Wine-having stood the severest of all tests, the tests of time-at present commands an enormous sale, whilst the Customs statistics of it exportation abroad furnish incontestable evidence that its merit is fully recognised in almost all foreign markets of importance.” 

In the 1870’s WM. & P. Thompson, Ltd of Dublin, Ireland manufactured ‘prune wine’ in what can only be described as a grand fashion, “The factory in Dublin is situated in Mabbot Lane, and compromises as extensive range of buildings, beneath which are spacious wine vaults. Steam power is employed in the manufacturing process, and the mills for grinding the prunes, the fermenting apparatus, the huge vats and other appliances, are all on a scale of magnitude commensurate with extensive business operations of the Firm.  Adjoining the Factory is a large Bonded Warehouse built by the Firm expressly for the storage of their own wines. Here Prune Wine remains until fully matured, previous to shipment to all parts of Europe, the United States, Canada, the West Indies, South America, etc..” 

Prune Wine, the manufacturers claimed, was used ‘upon young spirits, which have often to put into early consumption to meet the requirements of price, is to neutralize their acrid, fiery, and impure properties, as well as to give the appearance and the qualities of Age-for this purpose it is universally used.’ 

Prune Wine, they continued to claim, is also extensively used for old Spirit, with the admitted effect of imparting Body, and a character and Finish which cannot be acquired by any other known means. 

The use of Prune Wine not only effects a great saving, but invariably leads to an increase of business, as Spirit operated upon by it at once attracts the palate of consumers. Storing for years on Sherry Casks will not give that delicious aroma and roundness on the palate which Patent Prune Wine imparts in a few hours.

Endorsements of Thompson’s Prune Wine by Experts

WM. & P. Thompson, Ltd were quick to make much of endorsements from the scientific community to prove the ‘wholesomeness’ of their Prune Wine 

The “Scientific Times” New York, in its issue of Feb 24th, 1883 states:- “When added to spirits in proper proportions Patent Prune Wine effectually eliminates Fusel Oil, the presence of which is so objectionable and injurious to health, and imparts a delicious flavour and character.” 

Sir Charles Cameron[iii] wrote:-“The flavour of recently distilled whisky is extremely acrid, owing chiefly to the presence of Fusel Oil; on adding, however, a small quantity of Prune Wine, and allowing the mixture to stand for a day or two, the new Whisky acquires a most agreeable flavour.” 

Sir Charles goes on to state that “Unlike flavouring essences, this Wine is perfectly Wholesome per se; and I have no doubt but that its fragrance and pleasant flavour will induce many to make it their beverage, unmixed with other fluids.” 

Granville H. Sharpe, F.C.S[iv]., wrote:- “I find that, when added to a coarse Spirit containing an undue amount of Fusel Oil, and in the proportion recommended by the manufacturers, the objectionable flavour is at once removed, and a liquor of agreeable aroma and bouquet remains.” 

Dr. William Wallace (Public Analyst for the City of Glasgow) wrote:- “I have made a careful examination of the Prune Wine manufactured by Messrs. Wm & P. Thompson, Dublin and have tested mixtures of with various brands of Scotch Grain Whisky. The liquor is itself very agreeable, and when added to silent or grain spirit it communicates to it a pleasant flavour and odour resembling very closely the taste and bouquet resulting from age. I consider it perfectly wholesome, and see no reason to doubt that it will be largely used in Scotland, as it has been for many in Ireland, as an improver of Grain Whiskey.  

The National Guardian, Glasgow, November 16th, 1900 wrote:- “Many attempts have been made to provide a specific capable of making whisky palatable, without interfering with its quality. The best, so far as we have seen, is Thompson’s Patent Prune Wine, which has obtained a high reputation. It is a genuine fermented wine, quite limpid, and of a flavour very pleasant, while not too pronounced. It has a great deal of body, and. On unmatured spirit, has a softening and improving effect which is very remarkable.”

Interestingly the Editor of the Licensed Victuallers’ Guardian wrote that “The article known as Thompson’s Prune Wine has been before the Trade a great number of years, and the steady and large increase of consumption is tangible evidence of its value. At present there is scarcely a part of the world in which it is not largely used and fully appreciated. The new law with regard to adulteration will still further increase the sale of Prune Wine, as worthless and spurious compounds, sold under various names, will be no longer saleable. We have ourselves examined this wine, and must pronounce it an elegant article. 

As further proof of the value of their product, Wm. & P. Thompson quoted from the ‘Scientific Times’ in New York, 24th February, 1883:-

“Patent Prune Wine was first invented by Mr. Wm. Thompson, of Dublin, head of the firm of W&P Thompson, of that city. From that day to this it is the only article fermented from the Prune, and the above firm is the only one in the world having the right to manufacture and sell it. After a careful examination and scrutiny of its merits, it proved so useful and valuable an adjunct to the trade that the patent rights were granted in England, (this would have included Ireland) and after the expiration of the time a further renewal was granted, which is irrefutable proof that it possessed all the merit at first claimed for it. Patent rights have also been secured for the United States, Germany, and France, and the name is protected in all these countries by Trade Mark.”

Further Proof of Quality from Warrenheip Distillery, Australia

William Strachan, Secretary of the Warrenheip Distillery in Australia, wrote to Wm. & P. Thompson in a letter dated Melbourne, 21st November, 1866 that he had experimented with Prune Wine on two samples of Warrenheip whisky, ‘with very satisfactory results . The first sample fresh from the still and he remarked that the ‘improvement was very marked; the acrid, fiery taste entirely disappeared, the flavour became mellow and pleasant, and I should have no difficulty in placing spirits so treated at once on the market.’ In the other instance the Whisky had been about three years in bond, and although the alteration was not so decided, the Spirit was considerably improved.

I intend bringing this subject under the notice of the Directors, as the advantage of converting raw Spirits into a merchantable commodity is obvious enough. 

Further evidence of the success of the Warrenheip Distillery in eyes of the public was available in the trade papers of the day. An extract from the “The Wine Trade Review” from January 15th, 1868 ‘is evidence of how much the Warrenheip Whisky was enhanced in the public estimation between the years 1866 and 1868:-‘ 

“At the Ballarat Agricultural and Pastoral Society’s Show, the following prizes were awarded for Whisky manufactured in the Colony:- 

12 Bottles Whisky, made in the Colony.

1st Prize-Warrenheip Distillery Co. 

Not unsurprisingly, the Australian agents for WM. & P. Thompson, Ltd also endorsed Prune Wine as follows;

“We wrote to you on the 27th ultimo, as per duplicate enclosed. Since then the Chief Inspector of Distilleries (Now, that would be an acceptable form of employment!) has tried some of your Prune Wine with spirits recently distilled, and he reports that it takes away the raw flavour, and imparts to the mixture a mellowness which only Old Spirits possess. With such a satisfactorily trial we think you ought to send out a shipment, as recommended in our last. 

We are, dear Sirs, yours truly,  

Lorimer, Marwood & Rome.” 

Fining of Whisky 

Further, Prune Wine was used by distillers, blenders and spirit merchants for Fining[v]  after the spirit had been reduced (with water) ‘it will make its way through the whole body of the blend, and fine it, carrying down all impurities, and will leave the spirit brilliant, and finished for almost immediate use.’

‘When much Fusel Oil was present’ the addition of Prune Wine in some cases could cause the spirit to become cloudy and if hard water, which contained lime and was not boiled, was used in reducing the spirit then the addition of Prune Wine could make the spirit appear to have a bluish discoloration. In this case WM. & P Thompson recommended ‘to get some Spanish Earth at a Druggist’s, make it into a past with hot water, then into a liquid with a gallon or two of the Spirit; throw all into the cask, rousing well wit a stick or brush. About one pound of Spanish Earth per 100 gallons of whisky is the quantity to be used.’

The End of an Era 

It is always seductive to apply the standards of today to the past and the past  generally loses. However one should keep in mind that whisky or whiskey was not the product that we are familiar with and the addition of flavorings and other adulterations was common practice all in an attempt to avoid the costly practice of lengthy & expensive maturation in wood.

Wm. & P. Thompson must have been horrified at the introduction of the Immature Spirits Act (1915) and the resulting destruction of their business in the home market. Internet searches reveal some interesting historical notes on Wm. & P. Thompson; the records of the Irish Dail show a debate the subject being the 1930 Treaty of Commerce and Navigation with Portugal. More interestingly is the discussion of the importation of prunes in March, 1944 and opposition claims that the Company was receiving special treatment due to the fact that the Secretary of the Minister of Supplies had a controlling interest in the Company.

Incidentally the three year rule for Scotch whisky maturation was introduced by the Immature Spirits Act (1915) and amusingly, two monkeys helped solve the problem. The first monkey was forced to drink new whisky and ‘became quarrelsome no doubt due to the fusel oil (which was well known for making men fighting drunk)’ and the other became acquainted with ‘fine old whisky’ and it soon became ‘markedly hilarious’. Once both beasts had returned to sobriety the experiment was reversed causing the ‘quarrelsome beast to cheer up somewhat and the contented one to become aggressive’. The general conclusion was the new spirit (containing fusel oil) did have an adverse effect, ‘at least on monkeys’. The type of monkeys has not been recorded but the odds are they were chimps, the Volkswagen Beetle of the primate world. Greenlees Brothers, taking advantage of the publicity, later introduced to the market place a blend called ‘The Monkey Special’ and is of no relation to the contemporary Monkey Shoulder I suspect.

Today Wm. & P. Thompson exists as Thompson’s Prune Wine Export Limited with an address in Nangor Road in Dublin. There is no indication, other than their name, of what business they conduct.

 


[i][i] (Blavag Books, Glasgow, ISBN 0951202022)

[ii] A most objectionable contamination of whiskey is the grain oil or fusel oil (amylic alcohol), which is generated during fermentation of the mash. Its boiling point being much above that of water and of ethyl alcohol, the greater part of it remains behind if the distillation be carefully conducted. Still, traces of fusel oil are generally present in whiskey. Amylic alcohol is the substance which imparts to raw spirit its disagreeable odor. By Harvey Wickes Felter, M.D., and John Uri Lloyd, Phr. M., Ph. D., 1898.

[iii] THE managing director of the Weekly Mail is a son of John Cameron, newspaper proprietor, of Glasgow and Dublin, and was born in the latter city in 1841. He was educated at Madras College, St. Andrews, and Trinity College, Dublin, where he was First Senior Moderator and Gold Medallist in 1862. In the same year he graduated M.B. and C.M., being First Place-man in both instances, and he continued his medical education at the great schools of Paris, Berlin, and Vienna. In 1864, however, he settled to newspaper work, in the editorial chair of the North British Daily Mail. This he continued till 1874, when he was elected M.P. for Glasgow. He represented the city from 1874 to 1885, the College Division from 1885 to 1895, and Bridgeton Division from 1897 to 1900. In the House of Commons he was an active member. Among many other labours, he carried through the resolution which led to the adoption of sixpenny telegrams; he brought in and secured the passing of the Inebriates Acts, as well as the Acts abolishing imprisonment for debt in Scotland, and those conferring the municipal franchise on women. He also secured various reforms in the Scottish Liquor Laws. He was Chairman of the Departmental Committee on Transit of Cattle Coastwise in 1893, and of the Departmental Committee on Habitual Offenders (Scotland), 1894, and he was a member of the Royal Commission on the Liquor Licensing Laws in 1895. At the same time he has been the author of a number of notable pamphlets on medical, social, and political subjects. In 1893 his long journalistic and parliamentary services were recognised with the honour of a baronetcy. Sir Charles has been twice married: first in 1869 to Frances Caroline, daughter of William Macaulay, M.D., who died in 1899, and secondly to Blanche, daughter of the late Arthur Perman. He resides at Glenridge, Virginia Water, and finds active recreation in motoring, riding, and travel. From Who’s Who in Glasgow in 1909

[iv] Granville H. Sharpe, F.C.S. was an Analytical and Consulting Chemist, was the former Principal of the Liverpool College of Chemistry (before 1892), scientific author and respected lecturer.

[v] Fining called collage in French, from the verb coller, to fine. This important cellar operation causes all sediment to fall to the bottom of the cask leaving the spirit bright and WM. & P. Thompson recommend the use of Spanish Earth (A substance obtained from the soil originally found in Spain. It is a complex silicate with the unique property of absorbing colloidal matter, both positive and negative and is extensively used in fining. The main sources of Spanish Earth today are the USA and parts of South America.)

This article was originally published by the Malt Maniacs and is reprinted here with permission of the author.

Whisky Auctioneer “Now Live: May 2024 Auction” – Auction Whisky News

May 2024 Auction // 31.05 – 10.06.2024

Now Live: May Auction

May 2024 Auction

A warm welcome to our May auction! Featuring over 7,000 rare whiskies and fine spirits, this is a unique opportunity to bid on some of the world’s most sought-after bottles. We are very excited to present whisky from all around the world this month – from legendary bourbon to new releases from Norway and an incredible selection of Scotch including some real gems from Islay.

SMWS US Import Selection

Bottles 1- 20 of Bivrost: The Nine Worlds of Norse Mythology Final Edition, Midgard

Gordon & MacPhail CASK

Signatory Vintage Port Ellen

Boone’s Knoll 1974 16 Year Old Straight Bourbon

The Whisky Lounge ‘What’s New? Festival Exhibitor Spotlight!’ – Whisky Festival News

How’s your week been? Ready for a dram or two? Me too!!

With two festivals – Edinburgh and Bristol – coming up up quick, we wanted to throw the spotlight onto a few exhibitors you might expect to see at the events this year. In this edition, we look at three very different but equally important producers of the tasty stuff!

Read on…

Bushmills haven’t been to any of our festivals since…. well, I cannot actually remember, it was that long ago! So we are very excited to see them and what they’ll bring along for you to sample.

One of the oldest still operating distilleries in the UK and world (even if you ignore the slightly spurious date of 1608, when a licence was granted for distilling on the land). It has been unapologetically been producing its iconic triple-distilled single malt whiskey since 1784.

It was bought by Proximo Spirits, from Diageo, in 2014, and we’re looking forward to seeing and tasting what the new owners have done so far. Janice Snowdon, who you may remember from hosting another Irish whiskey’s stand at our shows over the last few years, will be on hand to talk it all through with you. You can even ask her about their new distillery, ‘Causeway‘…

*Interesting fact. Bushmills (specifically the ‘Black’ Bushmills) was Amanda’s father’s favourite tipple…respect.

 

Another ‘new to us exhibitor’, and a welcome addition indeed.

Gleann Mòr are a relatively new operation, based in Edinburgh, bottling fine spirits, since 2015. Their main focus is whisky (yay!) and they have a couple of exciting whisky ranges, with ‘Rare Finds’ being at the top of the ‘tree’, which is a premium range of single malts and single cask, single malts.

Another familiar face, Emily Coyle, returns to TWL, at most of the shows, with Gleann Mòr, and will be more than happy to tell you more as you taste their whiskies.

Waterford is a really interesting project. Mark Reynier, one of the main men behind the revival of Bruicladdich Distillery on Islay, in the the late 90s, has poured everything he learned and loves about whisky into this innovative distiller.

His, and Waterford’s, core belief and ‘unique selling point’ is that the land, climate and soil (or Terroir, as the French would call it) impacts the the barley, which in turn impacts on the final whisky produced from it. You have to admire the attention to detail and sheer ‘geekiness’ of their undertaking.

We are delighted that they will actually be premiering their oldest whisky to date – Cuvée Koffi – with a very interesting story behind it, at our Edinburgh event on the 15th June.

We will be spotlighting more exhibitors in coming newsletters, so keep an eye out for these!

If you haven’t got your tickets yet, simply scroll down to the festival of your choosing and click on the banner to be taken to the relevant Eventbrite page!

THE FAMOUS GROUSE DEBUTS SHERRY CASK FINISH IN THE UK – Scotch Whisky News

THE FAMOUS GROUSE DEBUTS SHERRY CASK FINISH IN THE UK

London, 28th May: The Famous Grouse has unveiled a new permanent edition to its portfolio, The Famous Grouse Sherry Cask Finish – now available in the UK. The new premium expression is a rich, flavourful blend with unmistakable sweetness earned from a period of maturation in ex-sherry casks.

Launching first exclusively at Morrisons from May, it will then be available in other major retailers from September with an RRP of £22.00.

The Famous Grouse Master Blender has meticulously selected Speyside malts for a second maturation period in sherry-seasoned European oak casks to deliver the rich, warming, and spiced characters that are at the heart of the new premium expression.

Marc Watson, The Famous Grouse Master Blender says: “This new, revived blend is finished in sherry casks seasoned in the region of Jerez, Spain. The aim was to create a blend that is slightly sweeter but still in keeping with the smooth and distinct DNA of classic Grouse. 

Once the blend is in its final stages of maturation, which involves the meticulous combination of hand-selected malt and grain whiskies, The Famous Grouse Master Blender does not stop there; the full blend is married in ex-sherry casks further to enhance their sweet, rich, and smooth characters. The Sherry Cask Finish is a decadent blend of flavours, including chocolate, almonds, dried fruits, and sweet spices.” 

A sweeter balance and smooth in texture, The Famous Grouse Sherry Cask Finish has been created with mixability in mind and the UK release aptly follows the launch of The Famous Grouse’s ‘Full of Character’ global campaign. Designed to introduce the drink to the next generation of whisky drinkers, the campaign also aimed to educate consumers on the accessibility and mixability of the liquid.

The Famous Grouse Sherry Cask Finish comes at a time when demand for sherry cask whiskies continues to grow*. Launching just in time for the summer, ‘The Sherry Cask Spritz’ is the ideal seasonal serve – combine 50ml of The Famous Grouse Sherry Cask Finish with 20ml of lemon juice and 20ml of Madagascan vanilla syrup, top with sparkling wine and ice.

“We are finding that consumers are actively expanding their blended whisky repertoire,” says Joakim Leijon, Global Brand Director for The Famous Grouse. “The Famous Grouse continues to go from strength to strength by maintaining its position as the UK’s No1 whisky and no.2 Spirit brand**. We are therefore perfectly positioned to drive further growth in the category through innovation and range development. The new Sherry Cask Finish will enable loyal consumers to expand their repertoire as well as introduce first time whisky drinkers to The Famous Grouse brand.”

The packaging of the Sherry Cask Finish plays host to the Spanish female Capercaillie. The Spanish Capercaillie was chosen for its link to the product’s Spanish sherry heritage and its vivid orange and red plumage, which echoes the deep amber of the liquid itself. Alongside the ongoing support for RSPB Scotland, The Famous Grouse plans to support further habitat protection projects focusing specifically on the Capercaillie.

*Source: IWSR| Total Scotch Whisky Value sales & Whisky “Sherry title” | 2020-2023|

**Source: Nielsen, Latest 52 weeks MAT – w/e 16.03.24

The Famous Grouse Sherry Cask Finish Tasting Notes 

  • COLOUR: Dark red-gold with an amber glow.
  • NOSE: A balance of fresh orange and poached pear, cherry blossom, moist sultanas, cocoa beans intermingled with sweet cinnamon and ginger spice.
  • TASTE: Smooth in texture, rich in character. A combination of oaky vanilla, dark chocolate, maple syrup, toasted almonds and hazelnuts.
  • FINISH: Rich and smooth. Warming notes of dried fruits in Christmas cake with a long sweet, spice finish. 

The Famous Grouse 

The Famous Grouse is the no. 1 whisky in the UK (*Neilsen UK, 2024). It has been the best-selling whisky in Scotland, the home of Scotch whisky, since 1980. The business was founded by Matthew Gloag, who started blending whisky in the 1890s and was launched officially in 1897 to be drunk by the gentry after a day of outdoor pursuits. Today, the brand is owned by the Edrington Group and is exported to over 100 countries.

The Famous Grouse has supported the RSPB, the UK’s largest nature conservation charity, for over 15 years. The partnership was established to improve habitats for resident black grouse on four RSPB reserves in the UK following the species’ rapid decline between 1995 and 2005.

www.thefamousgrouse.com/en

Edrington UK

Edrington UK is the UK’s number one whisky supplier, part of the global Edrington family and responsible for the UK sales, marketing, and distribution of a portfolio of ultra-premium brands, including The Macallan, Highland Park, The Glenrothes, The Famous Grouse, Naked Malt and Brugal.

As a valued distribution partner of Beam Suntory, Edrington UK also represents many of its brands in the UK marketplace, such as Jim Beam, Maker’s Mark, Bowmore, Laphroaig, Courvoisier and The House of Suntory range of Japanese craft spirits.

Be responsible. Drink with moderation

BeDrinkAware.co.uk

Sazerac Awarded 67 Medals at 2024 San Francisco World Spirits Competition – Whisky News

SAZERAC COMPANY AWARDED 67 MEDALS AT 2024 SAN FRANCISCO WORLD SPIRITS COMPETITION

Among the top honors is W.L. Weller 12 Year, which won its third consecutive Double Gold in turn earning a prestigious Platinum medal

 LOUISVILLE, Ky. (May 13, 2024) – The Sazerac Company is honored to have been awarded a total of 67 awards across spirits categories in the prestigious 2024 San Francisco World Spirits Competition (SFWSC). Top honors include 22 Double Gold medals – including the third consecutive Double Gold for W.L. Weller 12 Year Old Bourbon, in turn earning the expression a Platinum medal – as well as 12 Gold, 30 Silver and two Bronze medals.

Sazerac brands receiving prestigious accolades include 1792, Eagle Rare, William Larue Weller, Paul Masson, George T. Stagg, A. Smith Bowman, and more. Traveller Whiskey, Buffalo Trace Distillery’s newest whiskey innovation created in collaboration with Grammy-winning singer, songwriter and musician Chris Stapleton, was honored with its first award: a silver medal.

The competition, held April 5-7, is the oldest and largest competition of its kind. Founded in 2000, the SFWSC is one of many competitions hosted by The Tasting Alliance, a group of hundreds of judges evaluating the world’s best wine, beer and spirits.

“We are honored and humbled to have received dozens of medals across spirits categories from this year’s San Francisco World Spirits Competition,” said Jake Wenz, President and CEO at Sazerac. “These awards are a testament to our incredible team, whose dedication to premiere distilling and aging across Sazerac’s vast portfolio allows us to produce the finest spirits for our fans around the world.”

Sazerac brands awarded Double Gold and Gold medals at the 2024 San Francisco World Spirits Competition include:

Double Gold

  • 1792 Bottled in Bond
  • 1792 Full Proof
  • 1792 Single Barrel
  • 1792 Small Batch
  • 1792 Sweet Wheat
  • A. Smith Bowman Cask Strength
  • Benchmark Full Proof
  • Benchmark Single Barrel
  • Benchmark Small Batch
  • Buffalo Trace Distillery Bourbon Cream
  • Eagle Rare Straight Bourbon
  • E.H. Taylor Single Barrel
  • E.H. Taylor Small Batch
  • George T. Stagg Straight Bourbon
  • Mister Sam Canadian Whisky
  • Rich & Rare Reserve
  • Seagram’s VO
  • Stagg Straight Bourbon
  • W. L. Weller 12 Year
  • W. L. Weller Full Proof
  • William Larue Weller

Gold

  • 1792 Aged 12 Years
  • Benchmark Bonded
  • Benchmark Top Floor
  • Booth’s Finest Old Gin Sherry Cask
  • Buffalo Trace Distillery Straight Bourbon
  • Chestnut Farms Bottled in Bond
  • Eagle Rare 17 Year Old Straight Bourbon
  • Imperial 12 Year Old Blended Scotch
  • Legacy Canadian Whisky
  • Royal Canadian Small Batch
  • Sazerac 18 Year Old Rye Whiskey
  • W. L. Weller Single Barrel

For complete results from the SFWSC, visit thetastingalliance.com.

About Sazerac:

With over 400 years of history, Sazerac is one of the world’s largest distilled spirits companies. Now in the fourth generation of the current family ownership, Sazerac strives each day to bring the finest spirits to consumers around the world.

Over 500 of the world’s most extraordinary brands are part of the Sazerac portfolio, including Buffalo Trace Bourbon, Eagle Rare, Weller, The Last Drop Distillers, Fireball Cinnamon Whisky, Southern Comfort, Wheatley Vodka, Meyers’s Rum, White X Cognac, Sazerac de Forge Cognac, Paddy’s Irish Whiskey, and many more.

Sazerac is also the steward of many fine distilleries internationally, including Buffalo Trace Distillery in Kentucky, United States; Domaine Sazerac de Segonzac in Cognac, France; Paul John Distillery in Goa, India; and Lough Gill Distillery in County Sligo, Ireland. Additional impressive locations can be found in New Orleans, Montréal, London, Cork and Sydney, to name a few.

To learn more, visit www.sazerac.com.

Sip to the Unofficial (Official) Start of the Summer with Clermont Steep – American Single Malt News

Sip to the Unofficial (Official) Start of the Summer with Clermont Steep

Clermont Steep – Suntory Global Spirits’ first foray into the American Single Malt category, this whiskey focuses on a single grain – 100% malted barley. It’s a unique and complex liquid that’s best enjoyed neat or on the rocks but plays beautifully in cocktails. Above all, it’s best enjoyed with loved ones who want to discover something new in whiskey. ABV: 47% | SRP: $60

The Single Malt Sidecar

2 oz Clermont Steep American Single Malt

1 oz Orange Liqueur

.5 oz Fresh Lemon Juice

Lemon peel, for garnish

Combine ingredients in a cocktail shaker with ice.

Shake and strain into a chilled cocktail glass.

The unique terroir of our home in Kentucky, where Clermont Steep is distilled, aged, and made one-of-a-kind.The first step in malting barley and a liquid steeped in family tradition, Beam history, and Kentucky culture. Kentucky limestone filters impurities. Climate pulls flavor from barrel to liquid. All so the single grain in Clermont Steep can shine. Freddie Noe tested 67 different barley varieties to find the perfect mash bill and fermented it with Beam family jug yeast. After countless tastings and evaluations, an American Single Malt Whiskey worthy of the Beam name emerged.

Tamnavulin 1991 33 Year Old, Finn Thomson Cask #1145 – Tyndrum Whisky News

Tamnavulin 1991 33YO Cask #1145

An old style of Tamnavulin that is almost lost, and what makes this cask so special is that the character of the original distillery shines through. Over thirty three years, a refill hogshead has allowed the malty and cereal notes to develop gradually with honey and brown sugar playing amid the cereal nuttiness.

£510.00 >

Few distilleries tell the modern story of Scotch Whisky Better than Tamnavulin. Built in the height of the blended whisky boom in the 1960s, much of its production was destined for the expanding American market. The style of the distillery represented the consumer tastes of the time: malty and light, this was a malleable whisky and a blender’s dream.

With the fall in fortunes of the industry in the 1990s, Tamnavulin was on of the many distilleries victim to closure. Indeed, this very cask was filled just a few years before the distillery was mothballed and not opened again until 2007. With the reopening of the distillery came wholesale changes in production style. It was out with the old stills and in with the new – a move towards a fruitier style of new make spirit.

That old style of Tamnavulin is almost lost, and what makes this cask so special is that the character of the original distillery shines through. Over thirty three years, a refill hogshead has allowed the malty and cereal notes to develop gradually with honey and brown sugar playing amid the cereal nuttiness. Childhood memories of eating bowls of Golden Grahams come flooding back. This is a flashback to the best of the 1990s, sadly never to be repeated again.

Distilled: 01/03/1991 | Bottled: 11/03/2024 | Cask no: 1145 | Cask: Hogshead | One of only 246 bottles produced | Natural colour and non chill filtered.

TyndrumWhisky.com
The Green Welly Stop
Tyndrumwhisky, Tyndrum
Crianlarich, Perthshire FK20 8RY
United Kingdom


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