Johnnie Walker Visits The Ice Chalet

Johnnie Walker has collaborated with luxury skiwear designer Perfect Moment for the launch of their limited edition blended whisky, Blue Label Ice Chalet. Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ice Chalet is inspired by ‘Blue Hour’ – the moment between sunset and twilight on the slopes when skiing turns to apres-skiing. Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ice Chalet […]

The post Johnnie Walker Visits The Ice Chalet first appeared on Whisky Critic – Whisky Reviews & Articles – Style. Attitude. Whisky..

Johnnie Walker has collaborated with luxury skiwear designer Perfect Moment for the launch of their limited edition blended whisky, Blue Label Ice Chalet.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ice Chalet is inspired by ‘Blue Hour’ – the moment between sunset and twilight on the slopes when skiing turns to apres-skiing.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ice Chalet was created with a whisky blend from high altitude distilleries such as Brora, Clynelish and Dalwhinnie and is said to offer notes of cinnamon-spiced apple, cloves and “Alpine smoke.”

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ice Chalet is also the second entry in the Cobalt series – following last year’s Johnnie Walker Blue Label Elusive Umami.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ice Chalet will offer a series of luxury ‘Blue Hour’ experiences at popular ski destinations in Deer Valley, Utah and Niseko, Japan, throughout the ski season.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ice Chalet is being made available worldwide for $350 per bottle.

The post Johnnie Walker Visits The Ice Chalet first appeared on Whisky Critic - Whisky Reviews & Articles - Style. Attitude. Whisky..

The Revival of Brora

Diageo’s Brora Distillery in the Scottish Highlands celebrated the third anniversary of its revival this summer, and is now pouring new Brora single malt whisky… Read More

Diageo’s Brora Distillery in the Scottish Highlands celebrated the third anniversary of its revival this summer, and is now pouring new Brora single malt whisky on its tours. The venerable distillery underwent four years of restoration work before reopening in 2011, and its whiskies from the days before 1983 when the distillery closed are becoming harder to find. We’ll talk with Brora’s Andrew Flatt on this week’s WhiskyCast In-Depth. In the news, taxes on alcohol are going up around the world, while one of the world’s leading online whisky shops is back in the U.S. business again following its sale. 

Episode 1069: August 11, 2024

Links: Brora | Master of Malt | Four Roses | Woodinville Whiskey | Chattanooga Whiskey | Three Chord Bourbon/Allman Brothers Collaboration | Teeling Whiskey Company | The Balvenie | Springbank | Knob Creek | Westword | Mile High Spirits

Image courtesy Diageo.

Inbox | The Week’s Whisky News | June 28, 2024

Welcome to Inbox – our weekly round up of whisky news and PR material that has found its way in to the WFE email. We started Inbox several years ago as we cannot write full articles or do justice to every piece received. It features items from arou…



Welcome to Inbox - our weekly round up of whisky news and PR material that has found its way in to the WFE email. We started Inbox several years ago as we cannot write full articles or do justice to every piece received. It features items from around the world of whisky and is published by us each Friday. Within Inbox we aim to write a few lines detailing each press release/ piece of news/ PR event that we have received and provide links, where possible, for you to find out further information. 
 
Here is a round-up of this week's whisky news. 
 
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The English distillery of White Peak has announced the second single malt whisky that will form its core range - the Wire Works Bourbon Barrel. It is the first bottling to use 100% first-fill ex-bourbon barrels, which are sourced from the Heaven Hill distillery in Kentucky, and features the oldest whisky to date. The new whisky will join the Caduro as a permanent expression in the core range.

The Wire Works Bourbon Barrel is bottled at 53.5% ABV and is both non-chill filtered and of natural colour. It will be available from the distillery shop in Derbyshire and via www.whitepeakdistillery.co.uk. It will also be available in selected specialist spirits retailers throughout the UK and several other world markets. A bottle will cost £65.
 
"Bourbon Barrel is a signature whisky for us, elevating our house style and showcasing our flavour elements; our Derbyshire home, lightly-peated malt barley, fresh local Brewer’s yeast, long fermentation and slow distillation."
Max Vaughan | Co-founder of White Peak.



The Highland distillery of Tomatin has launched a limited edition 20-year-old single cask whisky to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Belladrum Tartan Heart Festival - the Tomatin 2003 Festival Edition 20 years old. The music and art festival has grown to be one of Scotland's largest and takes places on the Belladrum Estate in Kiltarlity near Inverness. 
 
The single malt was distilled in 2003 and has been matured in a single first-fill ex-Oloroso sherry cask for two decades. It has been bottled at 49% ABV and the cask has yielded just 153 bottles. They will be available to purchase at the festival and Tomatin distillery visitor centre, plus via www.tomatin.com and a handful of local retailers. A bottle will cost £300.
 
 

The reborn north Highland distillery of Brora has this week officially celebrated its third birthday, meaning the first casks that were filled in 2021 are now legally Scotch whisky. To commemorate this achievement the distillery has announced the release of a special bottling taken from some of the last maturing stock from before its closure in 1983 - the Brora 44 years old: Untold Depths.
 
The spirit for this bottling was distilled in 1977, a time when the distillery was experiementing with higher peat levels in their malt. It has been matured in a single ex-bourbon cask (Cask #2637) for over four decades in the distillery's legendary Warehouse No.1. This cask has yielded just 150 bottles at a strngth of 49.1% ABV. These will only be available to collect in person at the Brora distillery from early July onwards. Each will cost £10,000.
 
"Untold Depths is a classic pairing of a gentle cask and medium peating which explores the full depth of taste of which Brora is capable. It is a whisky from a bygone era that is helping us look to the future."
Dr. Craig Wilson | Master Blender for Brora.



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Port Ellen Distillery Reopens After 41 Years

41 years after the venerable Port Ellen Distillery closed in 1983, an all-new Port Ellen distillery has opened on Islay. The project, seven years in… Read More

41 years after the venerable Port Ellen Distillery closed in 1983, an all-new Port Ellen distillery has opened on Islay. The project, seven years in the making, completes Diageo’s £185 million investment in upgrading its Scotch Whisky distilleries and visitors centers.

The centerpiece of the project is an all-new carbon-neutral still house with two sets of stills. One set replicates the original Port Ellen stills, while the second set will be for experimental projects.

In a statement, Port Ellen Master Distiller Alistair McDonald said “It is an honour to take up this
new position at the helm of an iconic distillery and build on Port Ellen’s pioneering past. Port Ellen
holds a very special place in the hearts of passionate whisky aficionados, and to see spirit flow off
these stills once again is an incredible moment for the Islay community and wider whisky world. We
are deeply committed to pushing the boundaries of Scotch through experimentation – I’m excited to
see what we can now create.”

Diageo announced plans to revive Port Ellen in 2017, along with the Brora distillery in the Highlands. Construction issues on Islay caused by the COVID-19 pandemic delayed the Port Ellen project by nearly two years. Port Ellen is the first new distillery to open on Islay since Ardnahoe in 2018, and is the island’s tenth working distillery.

Image courtesy Diageo.

The Outlander and the Distiller

Actor Sam Heughan is best known for his starring role on TV’s “Outlander,” but he’s a whisky lover, too. Sam started his own whisky brand,… Read More

Actor Sam Heughan is best known for his starring role on TV’s “Outlander,” but he’s a whisky lover, too. Sam started his own whisky brand, The Sassenach, and he’ll join us on this week’s WhiskyCast In-Depth to talk about his love for whisky. We’ll also hear from the new master distiller at Angel’s Envy, Owen Martin. He’s just unveiled this year’s Angel’s Envy Cask Strength releases, a Bourbon, and for the first time, a Rye. In the news, Pernod Ricard is planning a new distillery on Islay, while Compass Box wants to build one in the Highlands. 

Links: The Sassenach | Angel’s Envy | Chivas Brothers Pernod Ricard | Compass Box | The One of One Auction | Holyrood Distillery | Stirling Distillery | The Macallan | Royal Salute | Torabhaig Distillery | Tincup Whiskey | Blue Run Spirits | Mash & Mallow | Heaven’s Door Spirits | Catoctin Creek Distilling | Chivas Regal | Malt Whisky Yearbook

Distillers’ One of One Whisky Auction Raises £2.2 Million for Charity

The biennial Distillers’ One of One auction held Thursday at Hopetoun House near Edinburgh shattered pre-auction estimates, with bids totaling £2,248,750 ($2,715,815 USD), more than… Read More

The biennial Distillers’ One of One auction held Thursday at Hopetoun House near Edinburgh shattered pre-auction estimates, with bids totaling £2,248,750 ($2,715,815 USD), more than double the pre-auction estimate. Distillers and bottlers contributed 39 one-of-a-kind items for the auction, which benefits The Distillers’ Charity Youth Action Fund and was managed by Sotheby’s.

The high bid came for the Bowmore STAC 55 Years Old, the oldest Bowmore ever released by the distillery. The bidding ended at £562,500, beating the pre-auction estimates of £300-500,000. The Brora Iris 50 Years Old 1972 set an auction record for Broras with a high bid of £400,000. In all, 19 separate records for various distilleries were set during the day’s bidding.

Several whiskies made their debut during the auction, including Dhavall Gandhi’s initial release of Kandoblanc AGA, which sold for £45,000. In addition, The Last Drop contributed a blending session allowing the winning bidder to create their own Scotch Whisky, bringing a winning bid of £60,000.

The biennial auctions have raised £4.2 million for the Youth Action Fund, which supports disadvantaged young people in Scotland. In a statement, Jonathan Driver of The Distillers One of One called the auction a resounding success.

Image courtesy The Distillers One of One.

A Craft Maltster’s Closing Leaves Distillers in the Lurch

The collapse of Washington’s Skagit Valley Malting last month left distillers and brewers alike searching for new suppliers of malted barley. The craft maltster had… Read More

The collapse of Washington’s Skagit Valley Malting last month left distillers and brewers alike searching for new suppliers of malted barley. The craft maltster had more than 270 customers when it closed unexpectedly, including Seattle’s Westland and Copperworks distilleries. We’ll talk with Copperworks co-founders Jason Perkins and Jeff Kanof this week on WhiskyCast In-Depth, along with Kate Bernot, who’s been covering the story for Good Beer Hunting. In the news, the Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame gets eight new inductees, while Woodford Reserve is teaming up with Kentucky farmers to develop the state as a rye-producing region. We’ll have all the week’s whisky news, tasting notes for whiskies from the U.S., Japan, and India, and much more on this week’s WhiskyCast. 

Episode 1011: July 2, 2023

Links: Copperworks Distilling | Good Beer Hunting | Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame | Woodford Reserve | Glenmorangie | Edrington | Diageo | The Northern Times | The Glenwalk | Chivas Regal | Wild Turkey | Booker’s Bourbon | Compass Box | Bimber Distillery

Diageo Unveils Third Prima & Ultima Series

Diageo has released the third collection of single malts in their Prima & Ultima series – dubbed “A Moment in Time” – including whiskies from both Port Ellen and Brora bottlings from the 1980s. Introduced during the global pandemic, in June 2020, the Prima & Ultima series comprise whiskies that are the first or last […]

Diageo has released the third collection of single malts in their Prima & Ultima series – dubbed “A Moment in Time” – including whiskies from both Port Ellen and Brora bottlings from the 1980s. Introduced during the global pandemic, in June 2020, the Prima & Ultima series comprise whiskies that are the first or last of their kind.

Diageo’s third Prima & Ultima series includes eight whiskies – many from Brora and Port Ellen -including the last ever Port Ellen 1980 cask. Similarly for Brora, one of the selections is from the last ever 1981 cask.

Aside from that pair, the Prima & Ultima third series includes a 1987 The Singleton of Glen Ord, a 1981 from Royal Lochnagar, a 1990 from Mannochmore, a bottle from the last Talisker casks from 1984, a bottle from from the oldest casks of Cragganmore and a 28-year-old Lagavulin.

Only 317 full sets of the Prima & Ultima collection are being made available for purchase, via the official website [www.theprimaandultimacollection.com] for $45,715 per set.

Our Top 10 Whiskies of 2021

This is always one of our favourite posts to write each year. The Top 10 is something we first began way back in 2009 and within it we celebrate the finest new whisky releases of that calendar year. Our first selection crowned Benromach 10 years old as…



This is always one of our favourite posts to write each year. The Top 10 is something we first began way back in 2009 and within it we celebrate the finest new whisky releases of that calendar year. Our first selection crowned Benromach 10 years old as our Whisky of the Year. We decided some time ago to no longer give a top prize. Instead, each of the ten whiskies that we have chosen is a winner in its own right and for differing reasons.

As the world continued to do battle with the Covid-19 pandemic, the whisky world seemed to respond with some excellent releases. The adversity and uncertainty acted as inspiration for some of the companies to bottle some of their best whiskies of recent times. It has been difficult to select just ten to be honest.

As with all Top 10 selections, the choices are subjective. Everyone will pick a different set of whiskies to feature and that is what makes the industry so interesting and diverse. What would you pick as your favourite of 2021? Let us know in the comments please - we would love to hear. Click on each heading to read our full review with thoughts and tasting notes.

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Our Top 10 Whiskies of 2021


This one may surprise a few as the Aber Falls distillery in north Wales has slipped under the radar somewhat. However, they pulled off a major coup in appointing Dr. Kirstie McCallum as Master Blender this year. Her years of expertise within the Scotch industry has led to a couple of fabulous releases, with this 2021 Bottling being the best. This whisky forms the beginning of a core range and is a marriage of three year old whiskies matured in ex-bourbon, ex-Oloroso and Pedro Ximenez sherry, plus virgin oak casks. The brand should also be congratulated on pricing this under £30. So often new distilleries put their early whiskies out as expensive prices so few get to taste them. Hats off to Aber Falls for doing the opposite.
 
 

Ardbeg 8 years old : For Discussion
A fabulous offering from the Islay distillery of Ardbeg. This year was a busy one with a number of limited edition releases coming out. This single malt eclipsed them all though and would be seriously close to obtaining our Whisky of the Year crown if we had one. Dr. Bill Lumsden, the Director of Distilling & Whisky Creation at Ardbeg, put this whisky our to get people talking and comparing whisky. It was only available to members of the Ardbeg Committee and for a short time, and we were delighted to secure a bottle before it sold out. This is classic Ardbeg. Peaty, powerful, sweet, earthy, ashy and cask strength. Delicious.


Benriach Malting Season (First Edition)
The innovative Speyside distillery of Benriach has always been a little underrated in our view. So much goes on there - three styles of single malt come off the stills which are combined with a plethora of barrels from different origins around the world. Now, we can add their own floor malting into the mix. This is a rare product as they are one of only two distilleries in Speyside, and seven in Scotland, to malt some of their own barley. This has been distilled and matured separately from their other spirits and finally released for the first time. The result is delicious and has been matured in ex-bourbon and virgin American oak casks.

 

Brora Timeless Original 38 years old

One of the undoubted highlights of 2021 was the reopening of the Brora distillery in the north Highlands. To celebrate, owners Diageo put out a rare set of three vintage whiskies - the Brora Triptych. The trio were all distilled in the pre-closure days of the 1970s and early 1980s from the final remaining casks. The Brora Triptych is formed of the Timeless Original 38 years old, Age of Peat 43 years old and Elusive Legacy 48 years old - the oldest ever official release of Brora by Diageo. All are exquisite but our favourite was actually the youngest, which was distilled in 1982 and matured in American oak re-fill ex-bourbon casks. An absolute stunner.

 

Lagavulin 13 years old Feis Ile Edition
This limited edition was released for the Feis Ile festival that happens on Islay each year. Again, this year's events were largely virtual due to ongoing pandemic but that did not stop most of the distilleries releasing a special bottling or two. This cask strength offering from Lagavulin is superb and bottled at 13 years of age. Initial maturation was in American oak re-fill ex-bourbon casks before being transferred to highly charred ex-Port barrels by Pierrick Guilaume, the Distillery Manager at Lagavulin. The result is a fabulous mix of classic Islay peat smoke, rich juicy sweet fruits and biscuity cereals.


Linkwood 1981 Prima & Ultima
As mentioned later on, this year's line-up in Diageo's Prima & Ultima collection was pretty stellar. The limited edition whiskies, which are said to be either the first or last of their kind from each distillery, all have some serious age and cost to them. This Linkwood was the winner for us and was distilled in 1981, then bottled at 39 years of age. It had an initial maturation in ex-bourbon barrels before a super long secondary maturation in ex-Pedro Ximenez sherry casks. The sweet dessert sherry shows a profound influence that manifests itself in plenty of chocolate, Christmas spice and dried fruit notes. So luxurious, velvety and rich. How older whiskies should be.

 

Mackmyra Björksav
The Swedish distillery of Mackmyra have long been ahead of the curve in the 'new world' whisky scene. Their seasonal limited editions, one released each Spring and one each Autumn, have built up a cult following and this year saw one of the best. Björksav translates as 'birch sap' from Swedish and features ex-birch sap wine cask matured whiskies in the final product. Other cask types include ex-bourbon, ex-Oloroso sherry, virgin Swedish oak and even some ex-raspberry wine barrels. These were married together skillfully by Angela D'Orazio, the Master Blender for Mackmyra, and the resulting whisky is delectable and sweet with a wonderful mouth feel and flavour. An absolute 'must try'.

 

Redbreast 10 years old
Another limited edition, this time from Redbreast. The Irish single pot still brand had another strong year that also included the release of the excellent Pedro Ximenez Edition in the Autumn. This 10 years old expression was bottled to celebrate the 30 year anniversary since Irish Distillers brought Redbreast back from whisky oblivion. It was only available to members of The Birdhouse, the brand's fan club. In classic Redbreast style the whiskey features only ex-Oloroso sherry cask matured spirit, all aged between 10 and 15 years. Cool touches include the retro packaging that harked back to the final days of Redbreast in the 1950s and 1960s. What a cracker.

 

Starward Left-Field
The Melbourne-based distillery of Starward has gone from strength to strength and is leading Australian whisky into new territory. This UK exclusive saw a marriage of three different red wine barrels sourced from the Barossa and Yarra Valley regions - ex-Cabernet Sauvignon, ex-Pinot Noir and ex-Shiraz. Left-Field is absolutely delicious and is great sipped neat or over ice. However, it really comes to life when mixed in a classic whisky cocktail. Try using it in a Manhattan, Old Fashioned or Sazerac and tell us that we are wrong ... PS / it's a good price too and something of a revelation.
 

 

TOAD Red Red Rye
Another revelation, this time in the form of this fifth rye whisky release from The Oxford Artisan Distillery (TOAD for short). Red Red Rye was released to celebrate the English distillery's fourth anniversary and made using heritage strains of rye grain that had previously been lost to agriculture. This was harvested in Autumn 2017 and married with a smaller percentage of heritage wheat and barley. The spirit was then aged in an innovative combination of ex-bourbon, then ex-sherry and finally ex-Port casks. This is big, bold and super-charged with flavour and character. a great addition to our Top 10.

 

Close but no cigar ...
There were numerous whiskies that could easily have made our final Top 10 selection. For one reason or another they did not quite make it, but are very worthy of a mention. Click on the links to read our thoughts and tasting notes on each.
 
The 2021 set of Diageo Special Releases was particularly strong this year and accompanied by stunning artwork and packaging created by illustrator Ken Taylor. The standout whisky for us was the Royal Lochnagar 16 years old The Spring Stallion. Likewise for Diageo's Prima & Ultima with the Talisker 1979 41 years old another particular highlight.
 
Three more very old whiskies made a huge impression - the rare Ardbeg 25 years old, The Singleton of Glen Ord 39 years old and the Glenglassaugh 50 years old. The Speyside distillery of Glenallachie had another strong year with their Wood Finish Series particularly impressive. Glenmorangie in the north Highlands were busy with three notable excellent releases - X by Glenmorangie, the Lighthouse 12 years old and A Tale of Winter.

Craft and artisan distilleries also had a strong year with a number of them releasing their first ever bottlings. Highlights included the Cotswolds Bourbon Cask and Pineau des Charentes Cask from the English distillery's Hearts & Crafts range, the Nc'nean Organic Batch 2 and the Torabhaig Allt Gleann.


1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years Review

I opened this 1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years earlier this year to celebrate my 40th birthday. Besides being my birth year, 1981 was an interesting year for Brora and you can find ones that were lightly peated, like this one, or heavily peated like some of the ’81 Signatory bottlings floating around. It […]

The post 1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years Review appeared first on The Whiskey Jug.

I opened this 1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years earlier this year to celebrate my 40th birthday. Besides being my birth year, 1981 was an interesting year for Brora and you can find ones that were lightly peated, like this one, or heavily peated like some of the ’81 Signatory bottlings floating around. It was also one of the last big years for distillation as the distillery was shut down in 1983.

1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years Review

I’ve had Brora that blew my mind, I’ve had Brora that was undistinguishable from low-mediocre, current, Clynelish and I’ve had a slew of Brora in between. It’s not a magical, mythical distillery that only produced the best whisky ever made. If that were the case it would have never closed, it was just a distillery. A distillery that ended up producing a lot killer single casks, but a distillery nonetheless. Yet, that doesn’t stop me, or many other writers, from romanticizing it just a bit.

There is something alluring and tragically beautiful about dead distilleries. The fact that what you’re drinking is not able to made again, combined with the decades since it was produced, gives it an unavoidable air of reverence. And this of course drives up the price, because we all feel it to some extent when looking at a bottle of the departed. But like all whisky, it isn’t sacred. It’s meant to be opened, drank with friends, talked about, and, in my case, written about. So let’s get to drinkin’ and do just that.

 

1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years – Details and Tasting Notes

 

Whiskey Details

Region: Highlands, Scotland

Distiller: Brora
Bottler: Old Malt Cask (Douglas Laing)
Mash Bill: 100% Malted Barley
Cask: ex-Sherry
Age: 19 Years (Sept 1981 – May 2001)
ABV: 50%

Non-Chill Filtered | Natural Color

Vintage: 1981
Bottles: 192

Price: NA – Auction, Specialty Store or Private Seller

White background tasting shot with the 1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years bottle and a glass of whiskey next to it.
“Single Cask, Single Malts are noted for the intensity and diversity of flavors they possess. Old Malt Cask range offers the finest and rarest Malts ever to be made available to the enthusiast.” – Old Malt Cask

Tasting Notes

EYE
Light copper

NOSE
Dried strawberries, candied tropical fruit, dried orchard fruit, toasted malt, lemon peel, pecans and baking spice with a light bit of smoke and a thread of OBE pulling through it all.

That musty old bottle effect was super prominent when the 1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years was first opened, but within 3-4 days it settled down to a background hum.

PALATE
Dried strawberries, roasted malt, lemon drops, dried tropical and orchard fruit, candied pecans, baking spice, and a touch of melon and brown sugar with a bit of smoke and musty OBE.

If this was the only whisky I could drink, I wouldn’t be mad at my lot in life. This is a flavor profile to celebrate.

FINISH
Long -> Complex dried and candied fruits, malt and OBE drift out to a soft olde candy sweetness.

BALANCE, BODY and FEEL
Perfectly balanced, medium-full body and soft velvety feel.


1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years – Overall Thoughts and Score

This bottle is elegant and complex but kept that musty, dusty quality till the end. It didn’t sit at a distracting level, more of a steady beat letting you know it’s been waiting 20 years to be opened. And for good reason: once opened, it had a lot to say.

It wanted to let you know it came from the last bit of the distillery’s life and that distillery could pump out complex, fruity and slightly earthy, whisky like no one else. This 1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years is a whisky to be savored till the last drop… and it was.

SCORE: 4.5/5

1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years Label

1981 Old Malt Cask Brora 19 Years Review N/A

Summary

I’ve had better Brora before, but not by much. This is an outstanding representation of what made this distillery so special.

Overall
4.5
  • Nose
    (4.5)
  • Palate
    (4.5)
  • Finish
    (4.5)
  • BBF
    (4.5)
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