Allotment Drams / Glenmorangie Lighthouse 12 years old & Redbreast Pedro Ximenez Edition

We have two more recent episodes from our Allotment Dram review series for you. Both are exciting and brand new releases. Firstly Matt discusses the Glenmorangie Lighthouse 12 years old, a distillery exclusive that he recently picked up when visiting. …

We have two more recent episodes from our Allotment Dram review series for you. Both are exciting and brand new releases. Firstly Matt discusses the Glenmorangie Lighthouse 12 years old, a distillery exclusive that he recently picked up when visiting. It has been created to celebrate the opening of the new experimental Lighthouse distillery that has been built next to Glenmorangie up in the north Highlands. Watch to find out more about the innovative project and the whisky, before Matt pops the cork and gives his thoughts and tasting notes.

Then on a very warm late September afternoon, Matt returns to the allotment and takes a look at the new Irish single pot still whiskey of Redbreast Pedro Ximenez Edition. Watch to discover more about the whiskey and the new range that it is joining, plus his thoughts and tasting notes.

To keep up-to-date-with all of our videos or to watch previous episodes of the Allotment Dram, then please subscribe to our YouTube channel.






#AllotmentDram

 

A trio of Strathmill

Strathmill 12 yo 2008/2020 (46%, The Whisky Lodge, Orcines)Strathmill 10 yo 2008/2018 (59.3%, James Eadie, recharred hogshead, cask # 806272, 266 bottles)Strathmill 27 yo 1991/2019 (51.2%, Cadenhead, Small Batch, 678 bottles)

Strathmill 12 yo 2008/2020 (46%, The Whisky Lodge, Orcines)
Strathmill 10 yo 2008/2018 (59.3%, James Eadie, recharred hogshead, cask # 806272, 266 bottles)
Strathmill 27 yo 1991/2019 (51.2%, Cadenhead, Small Batch, 678 bottles)

Mike And Matt Taste Four Roses Limited Edition Small Batch Bourbon 2021

Four Roses has had a decade-long tradition of issuing special bottles of Bourbon. They started by releasing special single barrel Bourbons, but after a few years, they decided that they did not have enough special barrels to support the demand,… Cont…

Four Roses has had a decade-long tradition of issuing special bottles of Bourbon. They started by releasing special single barrel Bourbons, but after a few years, they decided that they did not have enough special barrels to support the demand,... Continue Reading →

Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon

I’d like to thank ByrnePR and Lux Row for providing this review sample with no strings attached.

I’d like to thank ByrnePR and Lux Row for providing this review sample with no strings attached.

IMAGE: A bottle of Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon and two Glencairn glasses.

Last year, Lux Row launched Daviess County Straight Bourbon (for about $40) as well as a French Oak cask-finished bourbon and a Cabernet Sauvignon cask-finished bourbon (for about $45). Their timing on the launch wasn’t great. As their press release confirmed, a lot of things were going on right about the time the brand launched, and a lot of people, myself included, just forgot about them. Luckily for all of us, Lux Row has reminded us of the Daviess County line of bourbons by releasing a new variety: Double Barrel Bourbon. I did an in-depth discussion of the history of the Daviess County brand last year when the initial three products in the line were released so I won’t go into all that again except to say that I really enjoyed all three and was happy to receive the reminder that the line existed.

Daviess County Double Barrel is being released in partnership with Ducks Unlimited and the name is a play on both the gun often used in duck hunting as well as the finishing process used to create the bourbon. According to the press release:

Finished in Missouri white-oak barrels with toasted heads, Daviess County Double Barrel was created by Lux Row Master Distiller and long-time DU member, John Rempe. Double Barrel features a mashbill that is similar to the other Daviess County Bourbon variants, along with the same proof level (96 proof). The double-barrel finish gives this limited-edition release a unique flavor profile … Available for purchase beginning mid-September, Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon has a limited supply offering at a suggested retail price of $49.99 per bottle. DU members can sample and bid on Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon at a series of DU events to be announced later this year.

Now, fast forward to a couple of weeks ago when I left on a wonderfully long vacation. The day I left, I happened to receive a FedEx package containing the newest release in Lux Row’s Daviess County line of bourbons. And because I am the type of person who likes to drink bourbon while on vacation, I immediately shoved the bottle into my luggage and brought it along. I also decided to grab a couple of Glencairn glasses so that I could do the tasting notes while I was gone as well. I mean, you folks probably want to know if it is any good, right?

Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon

Purchase Info: This sample was provided by the producer for review purposes. The suggested retail price is $49.99 for a 750 mL bottle.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $3.33

Nose: Bubble gum, mint, red fruits, good bread, and oak.

Mouth: Caramel, chocolate, mint, cinnamon.

Finish: Medium warmth and length. Notes of bubblegum, mint, cinnamon, caramel, chocolate, fruit, oak, and good artisan bread.

Thoughts from a Louisville Loft: This has a really nice finish. Tons of flavors coming through after you swallow. I'm a fan.

Thoughts from Home: This is really good. Powerful cinnamon with a lovely sweetness when compared to the Straight Bourbon. Double Barrel is much sweeter than the straight bourbon. It also has more defined cinnamon notes and is lacking some of the “burn.” One might say Double Barrel is “smoother” if they were apt to use that descriptor. I enjoyed the heck out of this while on vacation and will continue to enjoy the rest of it now that I am home.


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Lux Row and Ducks Unlimited launch Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon

In one of the strangest co-branding partnerships I’ve seen, Lux Row and Ducks Unlimited (DU) have announced the launch of Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon.DU Managing Director of Corporate Relations Jim Alexander says:We are thrilled to have L…

In one of the strangest co-branding partnerships I've seen, Lux Row and Ducks Unlimited (DU) have announced the launch of Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon.

DU Managing Director of Corporate Relations Jim Alexander says:
We are thrilled to have Lux Row Distillers as an official licensed partner of DU, and we're excited to see this high-quality bourbon come to life. Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon is certain to be highly sought after by DU members and supporters, and we're proud of our partnership with the team at Lux Row Distillers.

This release was created by Lux Row Master Distiller and Ducks Unlimited member, John Rempe. This release is finished in Missouri white-oak barrels with toasted heads and features a mash bill similar to other Daviess County Bourbon variants. Daviess County Double Barrel Bourbon comes in at 96 proof (48% alcohol) and carries an MSRP of $49.99. 

My Take

It wasn't expressly stated, but I'm fairly confident this will find it's way to Ohio. There is what looks like a placeholder on the State website describing it and having the same $49.99 price. In terms of the product... it's a very interesting partnership. Ducks Unlimited is dedicated to the conservation of wetlands so people can continue to hunt and shoot ducks. This isn't a charity that I care about and I'm sure contributions to DU are baked into the price. If this is something you're passionate about, this could be a good bourbon to give a go... otherwise, I think consumers are probably paying an inflated price for a partnership that doesn't have an impact in their day-to-day. 

Source: Lux Row

1950’s Wild Turkey Rye

I can’t overstate the value of having good friends in whiskey – especially good friends who appreciate Wild Turkey. One such friend is David James, Wild Turkey aficionado and collector extraordinaire. David literally owns a museum dedicated to Wi…

I can’t overstate the value of having good friends in whiskey – especially good friends who appreciate Wild Turkey. One such friend is David James, Wild Turkey aficionado and collector extraordinaire. David literally owns a museum dedicated to Wild Turkey, with bottles and memorabilia spanning back to the earliest days of the brand. In an […]

The post 1950’s Wild Turkey Rye appeared first on Rare Bird 101.

Review / Torabhaig Allt Gleann

The Allt Gleann is just the second ever single malt release from Torabhaig (pronounced tora-vaig), the newest distillery on the isle of Skye. This follows the inaugural Legacy Series 2017 bottling that was released earlier this year in February and sol…


The Allt Gleann is just the second ever single malt release from Torabhaig (pronounced tora-vaig), the newest distillery on the isle of Skye. This follows the inaugural Legacy Series 2017 bottling that was released earlier this year in February and sold out immediately. Allt Gleann, meaning 'old glen' in Gaelic, is the second of four planned releases for 2021 and 2022 in The Legacy Series. The new whisky has been created from just 30 first-fill and re-fill ex-bourbon barrels that were distilled and filled in 2017. It is bottled at 46% ABV and is both non chill-filtered and of natural colour. Torabhaig Allt Gleann is available from the distillery shop and via selected specialist whisky retailers. A bottle will cost £50.

The Torabhaig distillery was founded in 2016 by Mossburn Distillers. It is housed in old farm buildings dating back to the 1820s and located in the village of Sleat, close to the mainland ferry terminal on the south western tip of Skye. Production started in January 2017 and the visitor centre opened a year later in March 2018. They use barley peated to level of 55-60ppm (phenol parts per per million), which puts it on a level with some of the heavier Islay malts. The annual capacity is half a million litres, but they are currently operating around the 400,000 per annum mark.

Our tasting notes

The colour is pale lemon yellow and the nose is powerful and peaty. The hefty peat smoke rises from the glass and has a distinct earthy and seaweed-like quality to it - think of damp moss, dried kelp and bonfire embers. Underneath are further aromas of green grass, crisp apple, malted cereals and a whiff of salty brine.

On the palate this whisky feels robust and hot. Peppery spices and that punchy peat smoke lead the way. The combination has a hot, acrid and savoury feel to it. Black and pink peppercorns mix with green chilli and clove, with the ashy ember-like smoke drifting around them. There is also the damp earth and moss from the nose, plus the dried seaweed and salty sea spray and brine. It grips the tastebuds and becomes a little chalky and flinty with time. A distinct underlying note of malted cereal is also evident.

Then comes some much needed sweetness to temper the robust savoury notes. These are barely detectable to begin with but evolve as the savoury notes mellow a touch. Vanilla and honey come through first, followed by white chocolate and coconut cream. Then comes a hit of sweetened cooked fruits - imagine baked apple with bitterscotch sauce and poached pear with milk chocolate.

The savoury nature returns for the long finish as the sweet and fruity characteristics fade after their brief appearance. This brings back the warmth and spiciness taking the whisky in a drying and peppery direction once again.

What's the verdict?

It is always interesting to taste a whisky from a new distillery, so we were delighted to receive this sample from Torabhaig. This is a very expressive whisky for one so young and has a feisty and fiery edge to it. The peat smoke and savoury notes dominate but it shows potential. For us, these notes need taming a little to give balance and make this an easier whisky to digest and enjoy.

Torabhaig should also be congratulated for putting this whisky out at a competitive and accessible price. This is not always the case with new distilleries when they release early limited editions, so £50 for a bottle (if you can get hold of one) is an excellent price. We look forward to seeing what the future holds for Torabhaig and how their whiskies will evolve with a bit of extra time in the cask.


The Gladstone Axe Competition

Be it for one of our industry leading Tweet Tastings or one
of our monthly bottle competitions, we love nothing more than being able to
share and giveaway some of our favourite drops of dramspankage.Talking of which, for our latest bottle competition w…

Be it for one of our industry leading Tweet Tastings or one of our monthly bottle competitions, we love nothing more than being able to share and giveaway some of our favourite drops of dramspankage.Talking of which, for our latest bottle competition we’re teaming up with The Gladstone Axe, to giveaway a pair of their American Oak and Black Axe bottlings.The Gladstone Axe malt whisky brand, is

Whisky Show Bottlings 2021 – Adventures in Flavour

Whisky Show is almost upon us again. It’s our lucky 13th show – 12th in person – and the first year where we are combining our traditional weekend of whisky at Old Billingsgate with a…

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Whisky Show Bottlings 2021 – Adventures in Flavour

Whisky Show is almost upon us again. It’s our lucky 13th show – 12th in person – and the first year where we are combining our traditional weekend of whisky at Old Billingsgate with a whole host of online virtual sessions. We’ll be mixing up online and real life from 1-3 October and then going fully virtual from 4-6 October. You can find full details on the Whisky Show website.

But enough show shenanigans – what about the special Whisky Show bottlings? Well, we are very pleased to announce their arrival: Adventures in Flavour.

Meanwhile…

Every year we produce a range of whiskies for The Whisky Exchange Whisky Show, and the past few years have seen Elixir Distillers’ creative director Raj ‘Mr C’ Chavda go further with his label designs than ever before. We’ve seen lenticular 3D, riffs on modern art and labels covered in UV sensitive ink, but this year he’s stepped back in time and added a classic twist – comic book heroes and anaglyph 3D.

Adventures in Flavour

Superheroes of Flavour

Inadvertently, I helped Raj come up with this year’s idea:

“I was thinking about the show theme – a journey through flavour and having just completed my WSET Level Two Spirits qualification with Billy, words like ‘phenol’ and ‘congener’ came easily to mind. I started to think about what makes up flavours themselves and imagined these compounds as the heroes of whisky.”

As a comic book geek, it was fascinating to see Raj’s process of pulling part old silver-age covers and reassembling them as whisky labels, as well as creating his four superheroes of flavour, each named after something that gives whisky its character:

  • Congeners – a term that covers all flavour compounds
  • Phenols – the compounds that give peaty whisky its distinctive smokiness
  • Aldehydes – the things that make nuts nutty, cinnamon spicy, and whisky both
  • Esters – fruity flavours, from apple to mango and pineapple to banana

Along with the superheroes, each bottle comes with a pair of 3D glasses, which reveal hidden depths and layers in the labels.

I sat down with Raj to dig into his ideas a bit more:

But enough about the labels, what about the whisky?

Bunnahabhain 19 Years Old – Ester ElektronEster Elektron

A 2001 vintage from the Islay favourite, matured in a sherry butt. It’s a classic from the distillery, with all the rich fruit and rancio that you’d expect. Bottled at 54.3% ABV and priced at £150.

Nose: Rich fruit and damp leaves – forest floors covered in rogue raisins. Toffee apples and toffee sauce build with apple crumble and a dollop of rich vanilla custard. Raisin jam, malt loaf and butter cookies fill in the gaps.

Palate: Thick on the palate and very rich. A touch of forest pond and bracken-covered earth is overtaken by dark chocolate sauce and heavily spiced fruit cake – buttery nutmeg and hot cinnamon. Cake-batter notes develop, sweet and creamy.

Finish: Spiced apple purée, toasted rye bread and a drizzle of custard on bread-and-butter pudding.

Blended Scotch Whisky 41 Years Old – Aurora AldehydeAurora Aldehyde

A long-aged blend that has spent a large chunk of its recent life in a single sherry butt. We don’t know for sure what’s in it, but if you’ve seen similar whiskies to this around recently, you might have some guesses. Bottled at 57.6% ABV and priced at £240.

Nose: Fruit cake with lots of fruit: glacé cherries, sultanas, plump raisins and juicy dates, all topped with fruity caramel. Ginger cake develops, as well as leafy notes and damp earth. Polished oak, candied orange peel and spiced dark chocolate build.

Palate: Fruit loaf studded with singed raisins and spread with raisin jam is joined by charred staves, baked apples and woody spice with notes of candied pear developing. Riverbank loam and damp bark emerge, balanced by spiced toffee, dark chocolate, and black cherries and their stones.

Finish: Damp oak, cherry stones, char, lingering dark chocolate and singed orange.

A Speyside Distillery 20 Years Old – Captain CongenerCaptain Congener

We can’t say any more about where this is from, which in turn might help you guess which family-owned producer it is who has asked that we don’t tell anyone its provenance. This one came from a sherry butt, the type this distiller is well-known for, is bottled at 57.6% ABV and priced at £135.

Nose: A balance of raisin fruitiness and savoury leafy bracken notes. Fruity cherries, and buttery an almondy Cherry Bakewells build. Green and leafy notes hide beneath, joined by runny caramel, stewed apple and white-wine-poached pears.

Palate: Buttered sponge cake, candied orange, butter cream and baking spice. Rich and creamy notes build, followed by sweet apple and pear jam, a touch of blackcurrant and some barrel char. Buttered malt loaf, mincemeat and more spice bring up the rear.

Finish: Blackcurrant on spiced fruit loaf. Damp oak and lingering leafiness.

Ardbeg 20 years Old – The Phenolic PhantomThe Phenolic Phantom

Last in the Adventures in Flavour range, but from from least, we have something rather special from Islay – a refill-bourbon cask of Ardbeg. Filled in 2001 and bottled this year, it’s a classic Kildalton dram and a cracking Ardbeg. Bottled at 51.4% and priced at £450.

Nose: Sea spray and oily smoke. Darker notes of tarry ropes are balanced by singed citrus and buttery lemon shortbread. Orchard fruit – sharp apples and sweet apple purée – are dusted with icing sugar. Mulchy grass and fallen leaves roll in around the edges.

Palate: Sweet and smoky, with apple-and-cinnamon syrup poured over warm croissants, all topped with baked apples and pears. Mintiness builds through the middle followed by green leaves and driftwood. Seaside smokiness and salty sea air surrounds everything.

Finish: Singed oak, sweet apple and soft spice fade to leave barbecued fruit.

Ben Nevis 25 Year Old – WHisky Show 2021Whisky Show 2021

Alongside the Adventures in Flavour, we also have a bottle to celebrate Whisky Show’s return to being in real life. There are only 100 bottles of this cracking Ben Nevis, from the fabled 1996 vintage, and it’s packed with all the fruit and spice you’d expect. It’s bottled at 51.2% and priced at £250.

Nose: Buckets of fruit and spice: chilli flakes and black pepper sprinkled on apples, pears, pineapple and mango, all topped off with a handful of gummi bears. Butterscotch pastilles and vanilla cream float throughout the gaps.

Palate: Big spice leads – freshly stripped cinnamon bark, dark oak and clove hints. Orange builds and takes over: stewed segments, jelly and boiled sweets. As the fruit and spice fade, the vanilla notes dive back in supported rich and dark fruitcake: sweet pastry cream spilled on a freshly polished table all mopped up by dark-brown-sugar-slathered malt loaf.

Finish: The spice lingers, with layers of fruit and dark sugar circling as they fade: apples, pears and muscovado.

Comment: A fantastic combo of fruit and spice, with layers of both spanning the spectrum from fresh fruit salad to rich fruit cake.

How do I get one?

All five bottles will be on sale from the on-site Whisky Show shop for attendees of the show. Those who have virtual-only tickets will be sent a special secret link for them to be able to grab a bottle from our website. However, they are all very limited, so if you are one of the lucky ones who have a chance to pick up a bottle, don’t hang about…

In the meantime, there are still a few tickets to the physical show as well as virtual passes if you can’t make it down to London this weekend – you can find them all at the Whisky Show website.

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Whisky Show Bottlings 2021 – Adventures in Flavour

Whiskey Quickie: Stagg Jr. Dallas Bourbon Club Single Barrel

On this Whiskey Quickie by Bourbon Pursuit, we review a Stagg Jr. […]

The post Whiskey Quickie: Stagg Jr. Dallas Bourbon Club Single Barrel appeared first on BOURBON PURSUIT.


On this Whiskey Quickie by Bourbon Pursuit, we review a Stagg Jr. Single Barrel pick from the Dallas Bourbon Club. This non-age stated bourbon is 134.4 proof. Let us know what you think. Cheers!

Whiskey Quickie is brought to you by Barrell Bourbon. Learn more at BarrellBourbon.com.

DISCLAIMER: The whiskey in this review was provided to us at no cost. We were not compensated by the spirit producer for this review. This is our honest opinion based on what we tasted. Please drink responsibly. @dallasbourbonclub @staggbourbon


The post Whiskey Quickie: Stagg Jr. Dallas Bourbon Club Single Barrel appeared first on BOURBON PURSUIT.