Rum of the Year 2023 – Appleton Estate 15 Year Old Black River Casks

A well-earned win for one of the oldest names in Jamaican rum – Appleton Estate 15 Year Old Black River Casks saw off stiff competition  to be named The Whisky Exchange Rum of the Year…

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Rum of the Year 2023 – Appleton Estate 15 Year Old Black River Casks

A well-earned win for one of the oldest names in Jamaican rum – Appleton Estate 15 Year Old Black River Casks saw off stiff competition  to be named The Whisky Exchange Rum of the Year 2023. Our panel of industry experts chose the single estate blend over a shortlist of exceptionally strong contenders that included innovative newcomers and heavyweights of the rum world.

To celebrate the occasion, we’re taking a closer look at this award-winning Appleton rum, starting with the most important question of all:

What does it taste like?

Nose: Rich molasses hits you right away followed by clove studded oranges, cinnamon, almonds, apricots and plums. In addition to the fruit and spice there’s also a pleasantly phenolic side with engine oil, a dab of shoe polish and a drop of tar. We’re definitely in Jamaica.

Palate: Brown sugar, really good orange curacao, guava and ginger root. There are some savoury notes around the edges – fennel and coriander seeds – that bring a great sense of complexity. Then green coffee beans, halva, black pepper, and toasted hazelnuts. Mellow and rich.

Finish: Long and nicely dry with leather, polished wood, caramel and shavings of dark chocolate.

Observations: Here we have an excellent example of rum bottled without added flavourings or sugar, as per Jamaican regulations. At 15 years old, it shows excellent maturity without too much oak influence obscuring the spirit character.

‘Appleton is a great distillery and this is a great rum,’ says our buying director Dawn Davies MW. ‘It shows the perfect balance between elegance and power and would be equally enjoyable for someone just dipping their toe into rum as those already in love with the category.’

What’s in the bottle?

It’s not unusual for distilleries around the world to import molasses to make their rums, but every bottle of Appleton Estate has its origins in its own cane fields in Jamaica’s Nassau Valley. – the estate that gives Appleton Estate its name. The rich soils and clement microclimate offer the perfect conditions for growing sugarcane, which has been cultivated there for centuries. Molasses derived from this single-estate cane is diluted with limestone-filtered water from the Black River – the lifeblood of Appleton since 1749 and the namesake of our rum of the year.

After carefully controlled fermentation with a proprietary cultured yeast, the fermented molasses is ready for distillation. A number of styles of rum are produced in the Appleton distillery using both stainless steel column stills and 5,000 litre copper pot stills. The Appleton Estate Black River Casks is a blend of heavier pot-still and lighter column-still rums, aged for a minimum of 15 years in American white oak casks.

The Jamaican climate has a profound impact on the spirit as it ages. All of the processes of maturation are intensified by the heat and humidity meaning that casks laid down in Appleton’s warehouses appear to age much faster than, for instance, a cask of whisky in the Scottish Highlands. After 15 years-or-so, Appleton’s rums show maturity and depth beyond their years. At this point, the casks set aside for this award-winning expression are ready for blending.

Who’s Behind it?

In the world of rum, there are few names as well-respected as Joy Spence. Raised in Kingston and studied in chemistry, Joy joined J Wray & Nephew – the owner of Appleton Estate – in 1981. In 1997,  her work and talents were recognised when she was promotion to the rank of master blender, making her the first woman across the global sprits industry to ever earn the title. She has created blends for royals and heads of state, she was instrumental in gaining GI status for Jamaican Rum, and she is involved in numerous philanthropic ventures that aid women around the world.

Decades after she arrived at Appleton Estate, Joy is still hands-on when it comes to selecting casks, developing new blends and ensuring consistency across the range of rums. The Black River Casks is her creation, introduced in 2021 as part of a broader revamp to the Appleton range. The Whisky Exchange Rum of the Year 2023 is just one of many awards accrued during a remarkable career with many achievements surely still ahead.

Where to next?

Appleton Estate 21 Year Old Nassau Valley Casks

If you enjoyed our rum of the year then this 21-year-old expression offers a logical progression in terms of style and maturity. Here we find the hallmark orange and spice notes from the 15-year-old greatly intensified and accompanied by stewed fruits, raisins, prunes and sweet, oaky notes of toffee and vanilla.

A very mellow style of Jamaican rum that nonetheless packs plenty of character. Just like our rum of the year, this is a blend of pot and column distillates aged at Appleton’s warehouses around the island.

Buy Appleton 21 Year Old Nassau Valley Casks >

Appleton 1984 37 Year Old Hearts Collection

For the die-hard fans out there we are very happy to offer this 100% pot still expression of Appleton Estate bottled in collaboration with Italian rum ultras Habitation Velier. Coming in at a punchy 63% ABV this is an intense, high-ester rum with bags of those industrial and tarry notes we found in the Black River Casks. It’s dry on the palate with aromatic spices, coconut and tobacco leaves. That familiar citrus note comes back right at the end in the form of orange bitters and burnt orange peel.

Very serious stuff indeed. It’s a real treat to try a Jamaican rum of this age, especially a rare traditional pot still bottling of Appleton. One for the hardcore rum drinker or the serious spirits collector.

Buy Appleton 1984 37 Year Old Hearts Collection >

If you’re looking for more from the distillery, you can find our complete range on The Whisky Exchange’s Appleton Estate Rum page. For more information on our other Of the Year winners, head over to our Rum of the Year page.

 

 

 

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Rum of the Year 2023 – Appleton Estate 15 Year Old Black River Casks

Sherry Cocktails – Lower Your ABV

Dropping the spirits from your Friday night cocktail, doesn’t have to mean compromising on flavour. Fortified wines deliver complexity in the same way spirits do without the alcoholic heft. Sherry in particular, with its flavour…

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Sherry Cocktails – Lower Your ABV

Dropping the spirits from your Friday night cocktail, doesn’t have to mean compromising on flavour. Fortified wines deliver complexity in the same way spirits do without the alcoholic heft. Sherry in particular, with its flavour enhancing powers of umami, makes a great stand-in for gin or whisky. Try subbing 50ml of dry manzanilla for the London dry in your Negroni and you’ll have a great aperitif that’s easier on your head than the original. The recipes below show how you can use sherry to effectively cut a few units out of cocktail hour.

Rebujito

A popular way to beat the heat in southern Spain, the classic Rebujito is a simple highball of dry sherry and Sprite or 7up. It’s a fine drink as-is, but if you take the time to juice some fresh citrus – effectively making it like a Tom Collins – then the Rebujito really comes into its own.

Brandy Smash

Ingredients

50ml Valdespino Fino Inocente 
10ml Lemon juice
10ml Lime Juice
20ml 1:1 simple syrup
Soda Water
6 Mint leaves

Method

Pour the sherry, citrus juice, sugar and mint leaves into a highball glass. Lightly muddle the mint leaves to wake them up a bit and then fill the glass to the brim with ice cubes. Top with soda water and enjoy. You can easily scale this recipe up and serve it by the pitcher. It makes a nice little appetite-lifter to serve pre-dinner, particularly when the weather starts to warm up.

Valdespino is a little fuller than your average Fino, with a palate of toasted almonds and salted caramel that stands up nicely to the citrus and mint. A bottle will keep for about two weeks in the fridge after opening so you don’t have to finish it all in one night.

Bamboo

Fills a Martini-shaped hole without the large helping of gin. The Bamboo found its way into the cocktail canon in the late 19th century, when it began gracing the bar at the Yokohama Grand Hotel.

Ingredients

50ml La Gitana En Rama Manzanilla
50ml Carpano Bianco Vermouth
2 Dashes Regans’ Orange Bitters

Method

Put a cocktail glass into the freezer ahead of time, you’ll appreciate the extra few degrees you shave off when it comes time to drink. Stir all ingredients with ice until nicely chilled. Strain into your frozen cocktail glass and garnish with a lemon twist.

Any dry sherry will do the job here, but the fresh saltiness of Manzanilla lifts the botanicals in the vermouth nicely. La Gitana En Rama is unfiltered, showing lots of body and character, even when stirred down over ice. You could also use a dry, nutty Oloroso and a sweet red vermouth – but you’ll wind up with more of a digestif than an aperitif.

Sherry Cobbler

The Cobbler Is one of the earliest cocktails, arriving in American barrooms with its cousin the julep in the 1820s-or-so, around the time that block ice became commercially available. Drinks historian David Wondrich suggests that the relatively low-octane Sherry Cobbler occupied a similar role to modern soft drinks and helped to popularise both ice and the drinking straw.

Ingredients

75ml Gonzalez Byass Leonor Palo Cortado
2 Orange slices
1 Lemon Slice
20ml 1:1 simple syrup

Method

Muddle your sliced citrus fruit with the sherry and simple syrup in the bottom of a shaker. Add ice cubes and shake hard. Strain into a highball glass filled with crushed ice and top with a fresh orange slice. Cobblers are supposed to be pretty, so a sprig of mint, or some more fresh fruit for garnish makes a great addition – just use whatever you have to hand.

The Gonzales Byass Palo Cortado is dry and nutty, but also has a fruity, citrusy side that shows really nicely in a cobbler. A dash of orange liqueur or Maraschino will add an extra dimension, as will a few berries or some diced pineapple in the shaker. Like many classic cocktails, the format affords plenty of room to riff and remix.

PX Flip

A serious desert cocktail, the flip takes a little booze and a whole egg and gives you a glass of silky, creamy goodness. Lighter than the lactose-laden likes of a Brandy Alexander, the PX flip satisfies in a similar way as a cream liqueur but fresher and less cloying.

Ingredients

60ml Triana Pedro Ximenez
1 Whole egg
2 dashes Angostura bitters
Nutmeg

Method

Chill down a large cocktail glass in the freezer. Shake all ingredients as hard as you can with ice. When you’re trying to whip up a whole egg you need to make sure you’re shaking for at least 60 seconds. Fine strain into the chilled cocktail glass and you’ll be rewarded with a light but creamy cocktail that tastes of raisins, toasted nuts and baking spices. Garnish with a little grating of nutmeg and serve.

A little slug of good dark rum will add some extra backbone if the situation demands it, as would a little Anejo Tequila if you’re feeling adventurous. Such additions will start to raise the ABV, of course, but even 15ml-or-so will make a difference to the flavour.

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Sherry Cocktails – Lower Your ABV

Whisky of the Year 2022: An Interview with Deanston Master Distiller Brendan McCarron

When Brendan McCarron arrived at Deanston in 2021, he was greeted by terrible news. The distillery’s flagship 18-year-old expression had recently been de-listed. “I went outside and screamed into a bag,” Brendan tells us. “Then…

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Whisky of the Year 2022: An Interview with Deanston Master Distiller Brendan McCarron

When Brendan McCarron arrived at Deanston in 2021, he was greeted by terrible news. The distillery’s flagship 18-year-old expression had recently been de-listed. “I went outside and screamed into a bag,” Brendan tells us. “Then I came back in and composed myself and went ‘let’s try our best to keep the 18’ because it really is the rock star Deanston whisky… and it won a big award, I’ve heard?”

Indeed it has. Deanston 18 Year Old won convincingly at our annual Whisky of the Year blind tasting at the end of 2021, seeing off competition from heavyweight distilleries like Mortlach and Old Pulteney. We met with Brendan to discuss the secrets of Deanston’s waxy spirit character, this year’s winning whisky, and the best way to make a Deanston old fashioned.

Brendan McCarron: Master distiller, barley whisperer, wax wizard

What was it like leaving Glenmorangie for Deanston?
That was almost a year ago now and it was with quite a bit of trepidation. I’m pretty confident in my own abilities and I have faith in what I can do, but it was still a big move. And it was going great and I was really enjoying it and I was very happy, but there was something missing. I was working in blending and creating but I did miss the production side, I wanted to put it all together. And so that’s what I saw at Distell, which includes Deanston but has me across all of our distilleries and all of our whiskies.

Was there a particular appeal to Deanston?
I felt like there was massive opportunity with Deanston and I felt there was this incredible, incredible whisky that was a little bit undersold. I’m a geek at heart and Deanston is a super-geeky whisky. I always knew about this crazy, waxy character that it creates. And the great thing about my job is that it’s about getting all the secrets and getting the recipes and all the ingredients. I really wanted to rip it apart.

It’s also a distillery that I live very close to, it’s about ten minutes’ drive from my house. And I’ve had history with it because I used to buy Deanston spirit when I worked at Diageo and use it to make Johnnie Walker. So there was just all these things happening and when I joined it was just a crazy nine months, joining during COVID and meeting my boss one time in six months was insane.

But it’s honestly given me a new lease on life. I’m back out travelling between distilleries, I’m back into production and there’s a real rhythm and a heartbeat to that. I get to eat my cake and have it too, because I get to make all the whiskies as well as getting to blend and to create and get to do slightly strategic stuff because I’m really trying to influence how much stock we make and how much we lay down. I get to do blended Scotch because I was only doing malts before and I also get to make gin and I get to work with great people. I’ve got zero regrets, I’m just absolutely loving it.

Deanston distillery occupies the old Adelphi Mill which opened in 1875

And how does the spirit get that waxy character?
To make a waxy spirit, it’s kind of like a combination of witchcraft, magic, luck and a wee bit of science as well. You want have super-clear wort, so you need a very slow, steady mashing regime. Which works for us because we have a traditional open-topped mash tun. You also want to do a super-long fermentation because that allows esterification and the creation of all those fruit flavours. It’s kind of like concentrated fruit. But you don’t want to ferment for too long, because if you go for too long it’s going to start going floral. Now, floral is lovely but it isn’t going to cut it for waxy.

Then, there’s this incredible single vessel where the fermented wash goes and also the heads and the tails of other distillations as well. There’s this constantly in flux, constantly changing feints charger, almost like an infusion chamber, and in there the alcoholic concentration is always changing. You get layering of some of the fatty acids and the different alcohols and you get these levels, almost like a layer cake. If you could somehow get in there and take it out at different sections there’d be different things happening, different flavours there.

You also get – it’s not so good for the marketing, but it’s good for the geeks – you get this crazy black wax in there, almost like gunge that forms around the top. It looks like superheroes, it looks like Venom. And what’s even cooler is if you take this stuff out of the feints charger, this infusion chamber, to try to find out what it is it almost immediately, goes completely clear. Because it only thrives in an alcohol-rich environment. So, when you take it out it’s like it disappears.

But It’s that layering, changing, infusion that when you then distil that, it goes from being a very fruity to spirit to being this waxy spirit. My favourite way to describe it is: Imagine eating an orange like it was an apple. You bite, you get that texture of the orange skin, and you bite a little further and you get this explosion of juice – that’s Deanston.

Is it right to say this is an old-fashioned style of whisky?
Well I do like to drink a Deanston Old Fashioned every Friday, if that’s what you mean.

I think as single malt whisky has grown up two things have come out on top and that’s those really classic Speyside and Highland fruity whiskies with the other style being smoky, peaty whiskies. And it’s really these two styles that have dominated.

But as the people who drink single malt are maturing, and as the people who drink single malt are getting more curious, and as more people drink single malt, I’m really noticing a kind of thirst for more and a thirst for different. And that’s why you see a huge range of innovations from various distilleries where they’re going ‘hey, we normally do an un-peated, here’s a peated one. We’re normally in Bourbon, here’s a sherry.’ Because people really want to see it in a different way.

But the other thing that’s happening is you’re seeing these single malt distilleries that have had very different characters and make blends incredible – but it almost feels like it’s their time to shine. I’m thinking of competitors like Mortlach, which was totally unknown unless you knew about it. And now everyone’s going ‘holy shit, this stuff’s incredible’. Stuff like Clynelish, for the same reason – incidentally, the other waxy distillery in Scotland. Dailuaine, Linkwood, Longmorn, I could go on and on – and I really feel like that’s where Deanston is right now. It’s this brilliant single malt you can just drink and enjoy if you’re new to whisky but also for the people who want different and unusual.

So I don’t know if that makes it an old fashioned whisky or not but it’s a different whisky.

The stillhouse at Deanston

Has this signature style changed much over the years?
I certainly have made some changes immediately. I increased the gravity in the washbacks because higher gravity promotes greater production of esters and fruity flavours. And that is one of the key parts to making waxy spirit. And we have noticed the consistency of our spirit and the waxy level is more consistent. It’s always been waxy but it just jumps up and down less.

I think, this is just an assumption, but I think when they opened the distillery in the 1960s, I don’t think they said ‘we are going to be the distillery that makes the waxy spirit’ – I don’t think that’s what they set out to achieve. But I think it’s the design and the steel in the washbacks and the type of vessel that they put in the stillhouse.

What I think is genius is that someone’s tasted It and said ‘well this isn’t what we were trying to make, but it’s amazing, let’s just keep doing this’ and I think that’s the cool part of it. I don’t think it was ever by design.

What about using 100% Scottish barley at the distillery, is that a recent change?
When the switch happened, I’ve no idea. But it’s been that way for a long time. To be honest with you it’s probably always been Scottish barley for Deanston but it’s not a legal requirement for the barley to be from Scotland.

You can actually split the UK right down the middle, the west coast – which is there I’m from, so obviously better – is hotter and wetter so it’s good for grass, which is why farmers that are breeding animals are on the west. The east coast is colder and dryer, so it’s a bit easier, a bit more predictable, there’s far less rain and that’s where you grow all the barley. So effectively, half of Scotland’s land is useless for growing barley, only half of it is good for growing barley. So all the way down the east coast and all the way down into East Anglia is again fantastic for producing barley. But the stuff from England tends to be higher in nitrogen and higher nitrogen suits brewers. So, it tends to be brewers who buy English barley, distillers buy Scottish barley.

I’d love to stand up and say the reason we choose it is because Scottish barley tastes better than any other barley in the world. But it’s not really that, it’s really that with Scottish barley it’s more sustainable, it’s far more supportive of the farming community. It just makes sense, you know.

What can we look forward to from Deanston in the near future?
When I started, the 18-year-old had already been de-listed, it had been announced that we weren’t going to be making it anymore and I was like ‘that’s not happening’. So a lot of our work is going to be just managing our stock to make sure the 18-year-old stays on shelf and is never ever, ever questioned again.

I want to make less one-off whiskies but the ones that I make I want to make them in a bigger scale. And the other thing that I’m really working hard on is refining the Virgin Oak recipe because it’s my favourite Deanston and was before I joined, but I think we can make it even sharper, make it really just pop a wee bit more. And that’s with the wood suppliers that I have the cooperages and giving them a little nudge to say ‘can you get me different toastings, can you get me char four on the casks’ and I’ve been ordering them since April when I started. That’s going to be an evolution rather than a new recipe for virgin oak, I’m just slowly tinkering with it and I’m increasing the average age as well.

beyond that, because Deanston’s got that waxy spirit, it’s got that incredible lightness and touch and still got a strong spine, you can kind of do anything to it. It works in wine casks it works in Bourbon it works in sherries of all kinds. So I think quite a few sherried experiments are where my head’s at for the special editions.

But the main thing is just to lay down more stock for single malt and start screaming about Deanston because it Deserves to be screamed about.

An award-winning dram

What can you tell us about the Deanston 18, what’s inside?
With Deanston, it really is a story of waxy spirit and American oak. It’s a lot of first fill ex-Bourbon, with a bit of second fill ex-Bourbon and a touch of refill sherry casks. But the sherry’s almost… you don’t need to know about the sherry casks because they’re refills, they’re in there for balance. So really it’s about getting that perfect balance between waxy spirit from the distillery and American oak.

It’s more oak-led than spirit-led as you’d expect from it being 18 years old. It has the classic candied orange peel that Deanstons always have but there’s also pears and apples in there and a real softness to the wax as well, it has a real lightness about it. But it also has some of those good classic whisky flavours, the caramel, the honey, the little bit of spice that’s in there. I’m a big texture person when it comes to food and drink and this has an incredibly long finish on it and an amazing feeling as you drink it, it’s soft, it’s light, but at the same time oily and waxy. It just has everything going on in it.

It’s the most overused word in whisky, unfortunately, but it’s a very complex dram.

So between the 18 and the Virgin Oak?
The 18 is the whisky that I’m proudest of, because I had a big influence in terms of saying ‘let’s not stop it. Please let me make some more.’ But I think Deanston Virgin oak has been my favourite for such a long time that it probably remains the one that I reach for the most often. But I reckon if you get 10 fans of Deanston in a room and ask them what their favourite is, eight or nine at the minimum are going to say the best is the 18-year-old.

A Virgin Oak Old Fashioned done right. Credit: @mcc_brendan

And that’s what you drink on a Friday evening?
Nearly every Friday on Instagram, we have Old Fashioned Fridays where we all make an Old Fashioned and tag each other. And there’s a lot of people going ‘I’d never made a Virgin Oak Old Fashioned and it’s really good’ and I’m saying ‘I told you’.

Try Deanston Virgin Oak >

Classic fruity American oak matured Scotches are great for Old Fashioneds and with Deanston you just add that layer of wax and off you go. I make my own simple syrup, which is the easiest thing in the world to make: one scoop of sugar, one scoop of water, leave it for 24 hours and you’re in.

I’ve got various bitters that I’ve sort of experimented around with. My two favourites are the classic Angostura and the other one that I’ve got really into is almost like doubling or tripling down on the orange notes with two dashes of orange bitters and a big garnish of orange peel. Seriously express out all those orange oils.

I think them quite savoury, just the tiniest bit of simple syrup, so quite boozy I guess is the right word. And then I just stir that down, get the dilution, and of you go.

I like to kid on that I’m Mr Lyan for the day. You know he does this beeswax old fashioned and I’m thinking beeswax honey old fashioned with Deanston is just going to be the dream.

Brendan’s Virgin Oak Old Fashioned

Ingredients
50ml Deanston Virgin oak
1:1 Simple Syrup to Taste
2 Dashes Angostura or Orange Bitters
Orange peel

Method
Combine the simple syrup, bitters and 50ml of whisky in a rocks glass and fill to the brim with ice. Stir, changing directions occasionally, until the whisky is diluted and the ice has melted a little. Add more ice and the remaining whisky and continue to stir until the dilution is right for you. Garnish with your slice of orange peel and serve immediately.

 

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Whisky of the Year 2022: An Interview with Deanston Master Distiller Brendan McCarron

Whisky of the Year 2022: Get to Know Deanston Distillery in Six Bottles

To continue our celebration of Deanston 18 Year Old winning our Whisky of the Year 2022 award, we’re taking a look at the history of this great Highlander.  Deanston scored a decisive victory at our…

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Whisky of the Year 2022: Get to Know Deanston Distillery in Six Bottles

To continue our celebration of Deanston 18 Year Old winning our Whisky of the Year 2022 award, we’re taking a look at the history of this great Highlander. 

Deanston scored a decisive victory at our annual Whisky of the Year blind tasting. The result confirmed without a doubt what the whisky world has known for some time, that this Stirlingshire distillery is a serious contender in the single malt category. However, it’s not long ago that Deanston was one of Scotland’s great workhorses – steadily turning out quality blending stock to little fanfare. But over the course of its relatively short history – at least by Scotch whisky standards – Deanston has distinguished itself as a distillery to be reckoned with. These are the six bottles that tell that story.

Deanston distillery

The old Adelphi Mill was a technological marvel. As far back as the 1810s, its vast premises were lit by lamps fed from a central gas works and its machinery was driven by four colossal water wheels turned in the River Teith. These feats of engineering were so spectacular that the plant became a popular spot among tourists venturing north of the Highland Line. The village of Deanston grew outward from the mill in to house its various workers and visitors.

More than a century of prosperity came to an end in the 1900s when the Scottish cotton industry that had been a vital part of the industrial revolution began to fade. The Adelphi mill clung to life longer than most, but in 1965 its factory floors fell silent. However, they would not be idle for long.

Teith Mill Blended Whisky, 40% – Bottled 1970s

The 1960s are regarded now as a golden age of whisky production. Sales were strong and the high demand for blending stock saw a number of new distilleries spring into being across Scotland. Loch Lomond, Glenallachie and Tomintoul all came online during this period of optimism. Broker and blender Brodie Hepburn Limited moved into the old Adelphi mill soon after it shipped its last batches of cloth.

Deanston distillery came online in 1966, powered by modern electric turbines where its famous water wheels once stood. The new owners swiftly brought to market a range of blends containing Deanston and other malts from their portfolio including Macduff and Tullibardine.

Deanston Mill 8 Year Old Single Malt, 40% – bottled 1980s

Deanston Mill 8 Year Old >

Though the majority of production went for blending a few early bottles of single malt were produced, labelled as Old Bannockburn and Deanston Mill. Though the site was successful enough to attract the attention of Invergordon distillers, which acquired it in 1972, Deanston struggled in the lean years of the 1980s.

In 1982, poor trading conditions forced Deanston to close, with little hope that it would re-open. Its pot stills remained cold for years, as distilleries were shuttered around Scotland – but by the end of the decade, things were looking up. London-based Blender Burn Stewart took on Deanston in 1990, heralding a new start for the old mill.

Deanston 12 Year Old ‘Un-chill filtered’, 46.3% – old presentation, bottled 2009

 

After quietly modernising thorough the 1990s, the mid-2000s found the distillery at a crossroads. Its owners wanted to push it as top-drawer single malt brand and in 2009 they brought the Deanston name into the 21st century with a new 12-year-old single malt that proudly identified itself as ‘Un-chill filtered, exactly as it should be’. Since then, the brand’s reputation has grown massively among whisky drinkers.

Try the latest edition of Deanston 12 Year Old >

Today, the Deanston team carries out the sort of work that makes whisky drinkers take notice. They mash Scottish barley and ferment it for as long as four days prior to distillation. Pushing fermentation past the first couple of days won’t make any more alcohol but it does tend to make the alcohol you wind up with more interesting. All of their official bottlings are arriving on our shelves at respectable ABVs above 46%, non-chill filtered and without artificial colouring. These extra steps beyond what is legally necessary to make whisky, are often what it takes to make a whisky great.

Deanston 18 Year Old, 46.3% – Bottled 2021

Buy Deanston 18 Year Old now >

Master distiller Brendan McCarron joined Deanston’s owner Distell in 2021, a significant departure for the former head of maturing whisky stocks at Glenmorangie. Shortly after his arrival, Brendan fought to save long-running Deanston 18-year-old from discontinuation. As it turns out, he was right to do so. The distillery’s flagship expression shows exactly what modern Deanston is all about – waxy and tropical, with intense citrus fruit and a generous layering of American oak vanilla.

Deanston 1997 Palo Cortado Finish, 51.8% – bottled 2019

Recent years have seen a broader range of casks than ever before arriving at Deanston. While the oily, fruity spirit produced there is well suited to ex-Bourbon barrels it’s also robust enough to stand up to more boisterous casks like sherry and new American oak. The highly sought-after Palo Cortado matured expression sold out quickly, prompting yet more whisky lovers to take notice of Deanston’s new releases.

“I’ll be honest with you,” Brendan told us in a recent interview. “I think at Deanston we’ve made loads and loads of amazing whiskies but we’ve made them in tiny amounts. So in a way it’s almost just pissed off the Deanston fans. Deanston Palo Cortado was just phenomenal and there was a thousand cases too little of it because there were so many people who wanted to try that whisky and then it was all gone.”

Find out more about Deanston 1997 Palo Cortado Finish >

Part of Brendan’s plan for the future of the distillery involves laying down more casks for single malt and plotting the special editions of tomorrow. Or as he put it, “It’s now our time to be more selfish with this whisky.”

Deanston Virgin Oak, 46.3% – old presentation, bottled 2010

As well as being a vocal champion of Deanston single malt, Brendan has set himself to breaking down and improving the existing expressions. His particular pet project being the much loved Deanston Virgin Oak, which he is currently in the process of tweaking and developing – running trials with alligator char casks and American oak from different origins.

Try the new Deanston Virgin Oak >

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Whisky of the Year 2022: Get to Know Deanston Distillery in Six Bottles

Liberté, égalité, Lillet: Three Ways to drink Bordeaux’s favourite Aperitif

Sweet, aromatic Lillet Blanc has been a fixture on bars and dinner tables across France for more than a century. While this icon of bon vivant-ery is also exported around the world there is some…

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Liberté, égalité, Lillet: Three Ways to drink Bordeaux’s favourite Aperitif

Sweet, aromatic Lillet Blanc has been a fixture on bars and dinner tables across France for more than a century. While this icon of bon vivant-ery is also exported around the world there is some confusion about how best to drink the classic Bordelais aperitif. Being a blend of Sémillon and Sauvignon Blanc from Bordeaux, fortified with sweet and bitter orange liqueurs, Lillet is an aromatised wine a little like vermouth – perfect for stimulating the appetite and rounding out a good cocktail.

There are of course many ways to enjoy Bordeaux’s favourite aperitif, but these are three of the best.

Drink nicely chilled before dinner

Lillet

Paul and Raymond Lillé broke into the aperitif business in 1887 after more than 20 years making liqueur and trading wine in the Gironde. Their original recipe – known as Kina Lillet – was bracingly bitter, with a healthy dose of added quinine. This exotic ingredient is the same stuff that lends tonic water its distinctive bitterness and anti-malarial qualities. It also has an appetite stimulating quality that made Lillet a perfect choice for an early-evening sharpener. Over time, they reduced the quantity of quinine in the recipe and Kina Lillet evolved into the softer Lillet Blanc we enjoy today.

Bottlings from the mid-20th century still turn up at auction from-time-to-time with the words ‘serve very cold’ written around the shoulder in insistent block capitals. Today, the most popular way to take Lillet is well-chilled or over ice with a twist of lemon, ideally in the hour-or-so before dinner is served. The light acidity and whisper of bitterness make it an ideal way to raise your spirits and whet your appetite as afternoon turns into evening.

In Bordeaux it remains a popular choice for apéro – a pre-dinner drink usually accompanied by a snack to kick the night off properly. For pairing purposes it’s good to treat Lillet Blanc like a sweet white wine, matching its orchard fruit and citrus with contrasting flavours like soft cheese, pâté or salty Bayonne ham.

Serve it long with tonic

Fortified wines are a gift for the lower-ABV drinker. Possessing a little more body and resilience than table wines, they can bring the depth and complexity normally supplied by spirits to a highball or a Collins.

Lillet Rosé

This simple combination of Lillet Rosé and tonic water is bright and summery with a palate full of berries and citrus. Introduced in 2011, Lillet Rosé combines the base wines used in Lillet Blanc with Bordelaise Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. The classic Lillet orchard fruits and herbs are present and correct, accompanied by strawberry, pink lady apples and a gentle note of oak spice.

Ingredients:
50ml Lillet Rosé
75ml tonic water

Directions:
Grab yourself a highball or wine glass, pack it with ice and pour the Lillet. Then top with tonic water – no need to measure, you can just eyeball it – and garnish with a slice of orange or grapefruit. Give it a little stir with a bar spoon, or similar, to make sure the Lillet doesn’t just sit at the bottom of the glass, and serve immediately.

This is very much an afternooner, but you can dress it up for the evening with a slug of your preferred dry gin if the need arises. Plymouth performs admirably here, as it always does.

Shake up a cocktail

Lillet Labels

It’s not as common a sight behind the bar as its cousin vermouth, but Lillet still makes a welcome addition to any number of classic cocktails. Those fragrant orange oils and characterful Bordeaux wines offer fruit and freshness that has a civilising effect on more intense spirits. This is particularly true in the case of the below combination of gin, Lillet, triple sec, lemon juice and absinthe.

The Corpse Reviver No.2
The Corpse Reviver No.1 is a slightly wobbly combination of Cognac, Calvados and sweet vermouth that’s more commonly found in old cocktail books than on contemporary menus. In a rare instance of the sequel being far, far better than the original, the Corpse Reviver No.2 first appeared in the 1920s and remains a favourite among bartenders and those-in-the-know to this day.

Ingredients:
20ml Beefeater gin
20ml Cointreau
20ml Lillet Blanc
20ml lemon juice
2 dashes absinthe

Directions:
Put some cocktail glasses in the freezer in advance of happy hour, so they get nice and icy. When the time comes, take them out and throw you absinthe in the glass. A lot of recipes for this cocktail call for an absinthe rinse – in which the green stuff is discarded – but feel free to leave it in for the full effect and to get your money’s worth.

Combine the rest of your ingredients in a shaker with plenty of ice and given them a good, hard shake. Fine strain – use a tea-strainer or one of these – into the chilled cocktail glass and serve. A twist of orange peel makes a nice garnish, but the drink works just fine without it.

Lillet Grapes

Here we find one of the great strengths of Lillet as a cocktail ingredient. Its sweet, grape-y character rounds off the assertive botanicals in the gin and absinthe, bringing length and texture to this cult classic. Be careful with this one though. As the great Harry Craddock says in The Savoy Cocktail Book ‘three of these taken in rapid succession will un-revive the corpse.’ Wise words.

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – Liberté, égalité, Lillet: Three Ways to drink Bordeaux’s favourite Aperitif

The History of Cuban Rum in Three Drinks

The story of Cuban rum is, in many ways, the story of Cuba. Its evolution has followed changes in the island’s economy and culture, from the first aguardiente to the light aged rums we enjoy…

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – The History of Cuban Rum in Three Drinks

The story of Cuban rum is, in many ways, the story of Cuba. Its evolution has followed changes in the island’s economy and culture, from the first aguardiente to the light aged rums we enjoy today. For much of that history, one name has been synonymous with these unique Caribbean rums: Havana Club. It flew the flag for Cuban distilling and culture through difficult years and helped grow its reputation around the world. It is with that in mind, that we tell the story of Cuban rum with these three drinks – all of which have Havana Club at their hearts.

Hecho en Cuba

Sugarcane reached Cuba in the early-16th century and – following the universal rule that human beings will make alcohol from whatever’s handy – rum soon followed in the form of pot-distilled aguardiente, literally ‘firewater’ in Spanish. In the beginning, rum production in Cuba lagged behind what was happening in neighbouring Jamaica and Barbados. For many years, the Spanish crown outlawed rum production there for fear that new-fangled cane liquor would erode the trade in homegrown wine and brandy. From this we can infer with some certainty that even the earliest Cuban rums were pretty damn good.

Stills at the Havana Club museum in Havana

Stills at the Havana Club museum in Havana

Come the 19th century and the sugar business was booming. Plantations across the island began switching from coffee and tobacco to cane. Sensing an unexplored commercial opportunity, the islanders invested in the infrastructure and equipment they would need to make rum. The original home of Havana Club was built during this time – a large, modern distillery in Cárdenas in the island’s northern reaches. Column stills were brought in and the pioneers of Cuban rum began to develop an elegant style with a sense of identity. When the first cries for independence rang out across Cuba, the growing industry was an important symbol of the nation that might be.

Canchánchara

With the outbreak of The Ten Years War (1868-1878) Cuban rum took on an even greater importance. To the islanders It was a symbol of their fledgling nationhood: they drank it to steel themselves before battle and to toast the dream of an independent Cuba.

The country’s first native cocktail was popularised in this period, a fortifying blend of rum, lime juice and honey favoured by the rebel forces. This forerunner to the Daiquiri predated technological advances like the ice machine and the Boston shaker and so the rebels drank it as it came. The recipe given here is for a more modern version that’s well chilled and perfect as an early-evening livener.

Canchánchara

The trick is using a good-quality honey and, of course, the right rum. The aromatic, grassy Havana Club Professional Edition D contains a high proportion of fresh aguardiente that makes a fitting tribute to Cuban rum’s early history.

Ingredients:
50ml Havana Club Professional Edition D
20ml fresh Lime Juice
20ml honey Syrup

Directions:
To make the honey syrup combine equal volumes of hot water and honey. Stir until everything is dissolved and leave to cool to room temperature. Shake all ingredients with plenty of ice, strain into an ice filled tumbler and garnish with a wedge of lime.

El Presidente

Rum production flourished in the independent Cuban Republic. The use of column stills, charcoal filtration and refill casks made for elegant rum that proved popular with thirsty visitors to the island. By the early-20th century, word of Cuban rum’s quality had spread across North America. This good reputation proved especially important when overnight it became much harder to order a stiff drink in the USA.

After years of lobbying, a coalition of organisations including the Anti-Saloon League, the Women’s Christian Temperance Union and the KKK successfully outlawed alcohol ‘for beverage purposes.’ While January 17, 1920 was a dark day in the United States – it was the beginning of a new era for Cuban rum. Local cantineros reworked contemporary cocktail culture to suit the local climate and ingredients. Havana became a destination for thirsty holidaymakers, whose presence brought international renown to Cuban innovations like the Mojito, the Daiquiri and a Manhattan style drink called El Presidente.

El Presidente

While many recipes for this old classic call for lighter rums, this version draws on rich Havana Club 7 Year Old. The result is a medium-bodied drink with notes of orange, vanilla and dark chocolate – ideal for after-dinner sipping and perfect company for a Cuban cigar.

Ingredients
60ml Havana Club 7 Year Old Rum
20ml sweet white vermouth
2 barspoons triple sec
1 barspoon grenadine
1 dash Angostura bitters
Orange for garnish

Directions
First, put a cocktail coup into the freezer. Then combine all ingredients in a mixing glass with ice and stir to chill and combine – you can taste as you go to make sure the dilution is right for you. Strain into your frozen cocktail glass and garnish with an orange twist.

The Hemingway Daiquiri

Cuban cocktail culture retained its world-class status long after the repeal of prohibition. Many of the great drinks associated with the scene were direct descendants of the Canchánchara, built around the chemically harmonious pairing of light rum and lime juice. Towering above them all, we find the classic Daiquiri. Like all the great canonical cocktails, it works to a simple formula that’s ripe for reinvention: rum, citrus and a little sweetener to tie it all together.

For decades it was re-mixed in bars around the country with a few notable versions earning mentions in the history of drinking. This one took the name of its biggest fan, a certain Mr Ernest ‘Papa’ Hemingway – who was known for hunting, fighting and publishing the odd story here and there.

Hemingway lived in Cuba intermittently from 1940 onward. On the island he could fish and drink rum while the good weather offered comfort for his poor moods and worsening health. During this period, he purportedly liked nothing more than to post up at El Floridita in Old Havana and order what he called a Papa Doble – a king sized Daiquiri made with grapefruit juice and Italian Maraschino liqueur.

Hemingway Daiquiri

He said that because the drink contained no sugar it was less detrimental to his diabetes. A genius Hemingway was, but he didn’t know – or wouldn’t admit – is that there’s plenty of sugar in liqueur and grapefruits.

Havana Club 3 Year Old Rum remains the benchmark for Daiquiris and it performs admirably here. The fresh-cane grassiness, vanilla, and notes of citrus peel work perfectly with the bitter grapefruit and the botanical funk of the maraschino.

Ingredients:
100ml Havana 3 Year Old Rum
30ml lime juice
30ml grapefruit juice
25ml Maraschino liqueur

Directions
The recipe given here is a double portion and will comfortably serve two. To make it, shake all the ingredients with ice until the outside of the shaker turns frosty. Fine strain into a frozen cocktail glass and serve un-garnished.

Hemingway left Cuba in 1960 – barely a year after the Cuban Revolution. Despite what many have implied since, he met Fidel Castro only once before returning to the United States for the final time. They spoke about fishing. Revolutionary Cuba has since embraced its connection to the great novelist and the Papa Doble continues to flow at El Floridita to this day.

The future of Cuban Rum

Cuban rum fans have lots to be excited about right now. New brands exploring variations on that distinctive light, dry style are appearing in shops and bars around the world. It also seems that US-Cuban relations – which retain some residual chill from the Cold War – may be improving at last. This could spell an end to the embargo that has prevented Cuba from exporting rum to its nearest, and largest, potential market. It’s not a certainty yet, but this would start a new chapter for Cuban distilling, meaning more Cuban rum and – of course – new ways to drink it.

Now that’s worth raising a Daiquiri to. Salud!

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – The History of Cuban Rum in Three Drinks

The Whisky Exchange Last-Minute Gift Guide

Need inspiration for that special bottle? Looking for a last minute stocking filler? Absolutely no idea what to get for secret Santa? Well fear not, because the always publishable Whisky Exchange Christmas gift guide is…

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – The Whisky Exchange Last-Minute Gift Guide

Need inspiration for that special bottle? Looking for a last minute stocking filler? Absolutely no idea what to get for secret Santa? Well fear not, because the always publishable Whisky Exchange Christmas gift guide is here. Our 12 drinks of Christmas has perfect presents for gin lovers, whisky botherers and cocktail fanciers. Just scroll away and let us take the hassle out of the seasonal mega-shopping.

Tanqueray No 10 Coupette Glass Pack

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A great gift for the aspiring mixologist in the family. Just tell them that the best way to judge a bartender is by how good their Martini is and that practice makes perfect – you’ll be kept in cocktails all Christmas. The iconic No 10 reinforces the classic Tanqueray botanicals with extra citrus fruit and chamomile. It’s a sure-fire way to upgrade any gin cocktail and is also very nice with light tonic and a wedge of grapefruit.

Monkey Shoulder Ginger Monkey Set

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This handsomely presented gift pack contains a bottle of the classic Monkey Shoulder blended malt and a supply of ginger ale to pair it with. Scotch whisky served long with ginger, ice and a slice of lime is a great highball with Christmassy notes of biscuits and dried fruit. As an added bonus, this gift set opens up a world of primate related humour you can deploy. We won’t ruin the fun by providing jokes for you, but punchlines you may want to use include: ‘the monkey bar’, ‘gorilla style’ and ‘merry chimpsmass’.

Plantation XO 20th Anniversary with Two Glasses

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A great alternative to the traditional after-dinner brandy. This well-aged rum began life on the Caribbean island of Barbados before making the long voyage to the Charente. On arrival, it went to rest once again in French oak cask in the cellars of the venerable Cognac house Pierre Ferrand. It’s a sweet and easy-going sipper with lots of marzipan, milk chocolate and vanilla custard. The tasting glasses included are perfect for nosing, sipping and savouring.

Talisker 2012 8 Year Old Special Releases 2021

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A real star of Diageo’s 2021 Special releases, this is the sort of whisky made for cold evenings and warm fireplaces. Talisker has been in business supplying hearty, fortifying drams to the people of Scotland since 1830 and is rightly held up as one of the world’s great distilleries. This limited expression is bold and briny on the palate with white pepper, apple butter, nori and lots of earthy smoke. The label features a Scottish Christmas sea monster – don’t google it or anything but they’re a real and very traditional part of yuletide in the highlands.

Taittinger Brut Reserve Champagne Glass Set

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The ideal board game to play on Christmas morning – simply pop the cork, pour the wine into the glasses provided and toast until the bottle is complete. Players must be 18 and up, everyone’s a winner and there’s no actual board or game. What could be better? Each box contains two lovely flutes and a bottle of Taittinger’s elegant, Chardonnay-forward Brut Reserve.

Perfect Measure Christmas sherried Whisky Tasting Set

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Six shots of pure, distilled Christmas presented in a smart gift box. Whiskies aged in sherry casks often take on festive flavours of dried fruit, chocolate, nuts and spice. This selection covers a variety of styles, from the rich and elegant to the robustly peated where smoke meets sherry. A great gift for sherry cask fans and anyone looking to explore the richer, darker side of Scotch.

Personalised London Dry Gin

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An absolutely classic, straight-down-the-line, god-save-the-queen London dry gin. This versatile blend of botanical goodness is produced exclusively for you, our lovely customers. It’s also available with custom labels so you can send someone special a Christmas message wrapped around a bottle of gin. Just select from a range of designs, add a few words of your own and cross another gift off the list. Easy.

Piper Heidsieck Hors-Serie Vintage Brut 1971

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The grapes used to make this Champagne were harvested in September 1971, around the time John Lennon released Imagine and T.Rex dropped Electric Warrior. It’s been aged for an incredible 50 years in Piper Heidsieck’s cellars prior to release. No glasses with this one, just five decades of history in a bottle. It’s a deep gold colour in the glass with an intense nose full of dried fruits, toasted nuts and tropical touches of pineapple and lychee. The palate is citrusy, with dried orange and mature layers of raw chocolate and earthy cep mushrooms.

Johnnie Walker 18 Year Old Glass Set

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After 200 years in the business, Johnnie Walker remains a benchmark for blended whiskies. Fans of the bestselling Black and Red Labels will appreciate this well-aged expression from the striding man. It’s a smooth but layered dram with candied peel, salted caramel and vanilla pastries on the palate and a hint of campfire smoke in the finish. Each gift box comes with two tumblers perfect for sharing a drink-or-two on Christmas day.

Graham’s Port Pack

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Port has been a part of the festive season for centuries – these complex fortified wines offering the perfect accompaniment to cheese and snacks as Christmas Day turns to Christmas Night. This tasting pack from Graham’s offers the opportunity to work through a variety of styles including the light and fresh Fine White Port and the rich, nutty cask aged tawny. World class stocking filler and god-tier mince pie washer downer.

Mr Black Cold Brew Coffee Liqueur

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Christmas is a marathon, not a sprint – so a little pick-me-up is always welcome. This superb quality cold brew coffee liqueur from Australia is the ideal base for an Espresso Martini. The perfect gift for anyone who’ll predictably be well stocked with coffee and vodka come the big day. The good people at Mr Black have even thrown in a cocktail glass for serving espresso martinis, swirling around and gesturing with to make a point.

Everything You Need To Know About Whisky
(but are too afraid to ask)

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Does exactly what it says on the cover – this deep dive into the whisky industry is essential reading for anyone who enjoys a dram. The beautifully illustrated volume from drinks writer Nicholas Morgan covers the history, culture and future of the world’s finest spirits. If someone you know wants to learn more about whisky, whether they’re new to the category or a seasoned Scotch drinker, this is the gift for them.

Originally published on The Whisky Exchange Blog – The Whisky Exchange Last-Minute Gift Guide