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INTRODUCTION
The spelling whisky (plural whiskies) is generally used for those distilled in
Scotland, Canada, and Japan, while whiskey (with an e; plural whiskeys) is
used for the spirits distilled in Ireland and the United States; however, there
are exceptions. Kentucky, for example, usually spells its product "whisky".
A mnemonic used to remember which spelling is used is that "Ireland" and
"United States" have at least one "e" in their names, while "Scotland,"
"Canada" and "Japan" do not.
The Welsh version is wysgi. The name is derived from Gaelic uisge beatha
(water of life). (Other countries also have their own "water of life": also the
Scandinavian Akvavit, whose name derives from the Latin aqua vitae, or the
Italian Grappa)
Irish whiskey is typically distilled three times from a mash of several grains.
Scotch whisky is typically distilled twice, either from barley malt alone (see
single malt whisky), or from barley malts and other grain malts which are
then mixed together. Kentucky whisky, called Bourbon, is normally only
distilled once, as are most other American and Canadian whiskeys.
Whisky production began in grain-growing regions (the same regions where
beer was being produced) whereas the distillation of brandy developed in
regions producing wine. The first traces of distilled barley go back to the
13th century. In those times, whisky was not considered as a pleasure like
nowadays, but people thought it was a marvelous medicine, helping to heal
all kinds of diseases. It was used as an ointment as well as a drink.
The famous historian and chronicler Raphaël Holinshed wrote the following
about the results of distillation of malted barley in his "Chronicles of
England, Scotland and Ireland" in the 16th century:
"Being moderately taken, it slows the age, it cuts phlegm, it lightens the
mind, it quickens the spirit, it cures the dropsy, it heals the strangulation, it
pounces the stone, its repels gravel, it pulls away ventositie, it keeps and
preserves the head from whirling, the eyes from dazzling, the tongue from
lisping, the mouth from snuffling, the teeth from chattering, the throat from
rattling, the weasan from stiffing, the stomach from womblying, the heart
from swelling, the belly from wincing, the guts from rumbling, the hands
from shivering, the sinews from shrinking, the veins from crumpling, the
bones from aching, the marrow from soaking, and truly it is a sovereign
liquor if it be orderly taken."
The first whisky distillery to gain a licence to produce was the Old
Bushmills distillery, granted by James I in 1608.
Malt whisky consists of whisky made from 100 percent malted barley; malt
whisky from one distillery is called single malt to distinguish it from
blended varieties. The grains used to make whisky include barley in Ireland,
Scotland, Canada, and the United States, rye in Canada and the United
States, and corn in the United States. Pure pot still whiskey is made in
Ireland from a combination of malted and unmalted barley. Various types of
straight whiskey, such as Rye whiskey, Tennessee whiskey, and Bourbon
whiskey which are produced in the U.S. are aged in charred, oak barrels.
Blended whisky is made from a combination of any of the above whiskies
with the similar grain whisky or neutral grain spirits, which are much less
expensive to produce than the other types of whisky. Blends will almost
always identify the type of base whisky used, ie. blended Scotch, blended
Canadian, or blended Bourbon. Light whiskey is a style of American
whiskey made up almost entirely of neutral grain spirits, with small amounts
(typically less than 5 - 10 percent total volume) of straight whiskey and
sherry added for flavor and coloring.
At one time much of the whiskey produced in the U.S. was "Bottled-in-
Bond" according to the dictates of an 1898 Act of Congress; this practice has
been largely discontinued, because one of the requirements of the Act was
that such whiskey be produced at 100 U.S. alcoholic proof (50% alcohol by
volume). Whiskey this potent is currently rare in the U.S., partially because
of changing public tastes but also because an alcoholic content so high is
illegal in many countries, limiting the export market for it.
CHAPTER TWO
ORIGIN
The origins
Are the origins of whisky Scottish or Irish ? Naturally, opinions about this
question are drastically opposed depending on the native country of the
person to whom you ask.
Nevertheless, it seems that more and more people tend to agree on the
hypothesis of an Irish origin. It would be no one else than Saint-Patrick
himself, the patron of the Irish, who would have introduced the still in his
country at Vth AC, holding it himself indirectly from the Arabian. Irish
monks would have then spread from Vth before J.C. the art of distillation at
the same time as Christian civilization, in their own country to start with,
then in Scotland.
In any case, what one knows for sure is that the art of distillation is very old
and dates back too much more ancient time than the first origins of whisky.
The Egyptians are known to have practised the distillation of perfumes 3000
years before J.C. As a matter of fact, the word alcohol is directly derived
from the Arabic al-koh'l, koh'l being a dark powder from pulverized
antimony and used as an eye make up.
From XIIth onwards, distillation of water of life or aqua vitae spreads
progressively through Europe, notably in Ireland and in Scotland under its
Gaelic name of Uisge Beatha or Usquebaugh, which will eventually
transform into Uisge then Uisky, until becoming Whisky. Some virtues,
literally miraculous which were justifying its name, were attributed to the
water of life. Curing virtually any pain, it was then a medicinal potion which
was prescribed as well as an ointment as a remedy to be drunk. It was a long
way from possessing the flavours and the subtlety of the one drunk today,
and was consumed for its mere virtues as opposed for pleasure.
In his "Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland" published in 1577,
Raphael Holinshed describes as follows the incomparable virtues of Uisge
Beatha :
Whether distilled from malted barley or from fermented wines, in both cases
the spirit of life offered, when compared to the drink from which it
originated - a kind of rough beer or a wine - the triple advantage of allowing
preservation without problem, of being more economical to transport and of
being more palatable.
Uisge Beatha
In 1494 is to be found the first official and indisputable reference concerning
distillation of whisky in a document from the Scottish Exchequer Rolls
mentioning "Eight bolls of malt to Friar John Cor wherewith to make
aquavitae".
"The best Scotch whiskies taste of the mountain heather, the peat, the
seaweed. They taste of Scotland, more obviously than even Cognac tastes of
its region or the best Tequila of its mountain soil"
"Eight bolls of malt to Friar John Cor wherewith to make aqua vitae"
The entry above appeared in the Exchequer Rolls as long ago as 1494 and
appears to be the earliest documented record of distilling in Scotland. This
was sufficient to produce almost 1500 bottles, and it becomes clear that
distilling was already a well-established practice.
The distilling process was originally applied to perfume, then to wine, and
finally adapted to fermented mashes of cereals in countries where grapes
were not plentiful. The spirit was universally termed aqua vitae ('water of
life') and was commonly made in monasteries, and chiefly used for
medicinal purposes, being prescribed for the preservation of health, the
prolongation of life, and for the relief of colic, palsy and even smallpox.
There were monastic distilleries in Ireland in the late-12th century.
The primitive equipment used at the time and the lack of scientific expertise
meant that the spirit produced in those days was probably potent, and
occasionally even harmful. During the course of the 15th century, along with
better still design, the dissolution of the monasteries contributed to an
improvement in the quality of the spirits produced. Many of the monks,
driven from their sanctuaries, had no choice but to put their distilling skills
to use. The knowledge of distilling then quickly spread to others.
A long and often bloody battle arose between the excisemen, or gaugers, as
they were known, and the illicit distillers, for whom the excise laws were
alien in both their language and their inhibiting intent. Smuggling became
standard practice for some 150 years and there was no moral stigma attached
to it. Ministers of the Kirk made storage space available under the pulpit,
and the illicit spirit was, on occasion, transported by coffin - any effective
means was used to escape the watchful eyes of the Excise men.
Clandestine stills were cleverly organised and hidden in nooks and crannies
of the heather-clad hills, and smugglers organised signaling systems from
one hilltop to another whenever excise officers were seen to arrive in the
vicinity. By the 1820s, despite the fact that as many as 14,000 illicit stills
were being confiscated every year, more than half the whisky consumed in
Scotland was being swallowed painlessly and with pleasure, without
contributing a penny in duty.
This flouting of the law eventually prompted the Duke of Gordon, on whose
extensive acres some of the finest illicit whisky in Scotland was being
produced, to propose in the House of Lords that the Government should
make it profitable to produce whisky legally.
In 1823 the Excise Act was passed, which sanctioned the distilling of whisky
in return for a license fee of £10, and a set payment per gallon of proof
spirit. Smuggling died out almost completely over the next ten years and, in
fact, a great many of the present day distilleries stand on sites used by
smugglers of old.
The Excise Act laid the foundations for the Scotch Whisky industry, as we
know it today. However, two further developments put Scotch Whisky on
firmly on the world map.
Until now, we have been talking about what we now know as Malt Whisky.
But, in 1831 Aeneas Coffey invented the Coffey or Patent Still, which
enabled a continuous process of distillation to take place. This led to the
production of Grain Whisky, a different, less intense spirit than the Malt
Whisky produced in the distinctive copper pot stills. The lighter flavored
Grain Whisky, when blended with the more fiery malts, extended the appeal
of Scotch Whisky to a considerably wider market.
The second major helping hand came unwittingly from France. By the
1880s, the phylloxera beetle had devastated the vineyards of France, and
within a few years, wine and brandy had virtually disappeared from cellars
everywhere. The Scots were quick to take advantage of the calamity, and by
the time the French industry recovered, Scotch Whisky had replaced brandy
as the preferred spirit of choice.
Since then Scotch Whisky, in particular blended whisky, has gone from
strength to strength. It has survived USA prohibition, wars and revolutions,
economic depressions and recessions, to maintain its position today as the
premier international spirit of choice, extending its reach to more than 200
countries throughout the world
SCOTCH TIME LINE
The distillation of Irish Whiskey has a long history, no one knows for sure
when it first began some sources place it as early as the 6th Century when
travelling monks on their return to Ireland brought with them the knowledge
of distillation.
We may never know for sure but can be thankful it was started sometime in
the distance past, enabling many hundreds of years of experience and
perfection to bring us to the stage we are at today. Certainly the distillation
process in Ireland is many hundreds of years old....
The following pages cover some of the recorded history of the production of
Irish Whiskey, or you can find out some information about the various
distilleries in Ireland through the Distilleries
Uisce Beatha"
By 1785 the tax on whiskey stood at one shilling an tupence the last straw
for many was in 1815 when the tax was levied at a crippling six shillings. It
was this high tax which drove many to produce there goods illicitly and by
the end of the 18th century it is thought that there were some 2000 stills in
operation in Ireland. Many of these producing "Poitien" or Poteen which is
illicit whiskey. Some of these distillers decided to distil legally and tried to
raise the capital to set up larger distilleries of these by far the most
successful were the four big Dublin distillers: They were John Power, John
Jameson, George Roe and William Jameson.
CHAPTER FOUR
MANUFACTURING OF WHISKY
To produce a Malt Whisky, you need barley, water, yeast, heat and (much !)
time.
This process can be broken down in Six main steps :
1 - Malting
2 - Milling
3 - Mashing
4 - Fermentation
5 - Distillation
6 - Ageing
Even if today's distillers benefit from analysing tools which enable them a
better understanding and an improved control of the process, achieving the
"marvellous" balance in the combination of all the factors being involved
remains a particularly delicate art in which Scotsmen and Irishmen are the
undisputed masters.
One of the consequences of the complexity of this art is that the variety of
characters to be found among whiskies is definitely comparable to the one
that can be observed among wines.
This is precisely this richness which makes this spirit so unique and so
fascinating !
Malting
After it has been harvested, barley contains starch which is a non
fermentiscible sugar. The process of malting is aimed at transforming this
starch in a fermentiscible sugar which itself will be able to be transformed
into alcohol.
To start with, barley is soaked in water for two or three days before being
spread as a layer approximately twenty to thirty cm thick on the malting area
made as a wide flat concrete surface. This is where its germination will start,
lasting for about eight days.
Barley
will have
to be
turned
over
several
times a
day with
wooden
shovels so as to allow steady and uniform germination, and its temperature
will be controlled permanently. Once the starch has been transformed into
sugar, germination will be stopped through the heating of the barley in a kiln
during 20 to 48 hours.
Milling
The malt is then ground in a mill containing two or three pairs of steel
rollers and transformed into grist. The latest must consist of about 10% flour,
20% husks and 70% "middles" or actual grist to allow for a satisfying
mashing.
MASHING
Grist is then mixed with hot water in the mashing machine which pours it
into the mashtun, which capacity can be in excess of 25.000 litres. Three
successive waters, with temperatures varying from 63 to 95°C, are used to
produced a sugary liquid known as wort.
The mashtun possesses a double bottom finely perforated which will allow
the wort to be drawn off through the underback at the same time as it will
retain the solid particles known as draff. Those will be taken away at the end
of the process and are excellent food for cattle.
The last water used for mashing will be directed to a tank and used as the
third water of the next mashing. Wort will then travel through a heat
exchanger to be cooled to about 20°C, to prevent yeast cells which will
ferment it from being killed.
Some distilleries use fully closed vessels made of steel which are easier to
clean.Yeast is added, being either distillers yeast or a mixture of the latest
with brewer yeast, and will start fermentation. The action of yeast on wort's
sugar will produce alcohol and carbon dioxide. Wort will bubble, and may
even in some occasions generate strong vibrations of the washback itself in
spite of its impressive size.
After about 48 hours, bubbling and fermentation are over and the wort has
been transformed into wash, an alcoholic liquid of 7 to 8% vol. and not
unlike a sort of crude beer, which is pumped into the wash charger.
Distillation
This is the process which is at the heart of whisky making. It consists
essentially in separating the alcohol contained in the wash from the water,
taking advantage of the fact that alcohol boils at a lower temperature than
water, at about 80°C. Distillation comprises two stages accomplished in two
stills varying by their capacity and by their shape.
First distillation is done in the wash still which capacity maybe reach 25 to
30.000 litres and will transform the wash into low wines at about 21% vol.
Originally heated by a naked flame, usually from the burning of coal or gas,
the majority of stills are nowadays heated by coils placed inside them and
through which steam circulates. Evaporated alcohol rises up to the upper
part of the still, the swan neck, and then through the lyne arm after which it
enters the condenser in which alcoholic vapours will transformed into liquid.
Traditional condensers were made as coils immersed in large open wooden
vessels and cooled by water flowing through them.
Nowadays the vast majority of distilleries are equipped with tubular vertical
condensers offering improved calorific efficiency.
The low wines are kept in the spirit charger, wastes of the first distillation
known as pot ale being conveyed to a dark grain plant to be transformed into
cattle food.
The second distillation takes place in the spirit still which usually has a
capacity equal to about two third of the wash still's. This is where the
stillman's art expresses at its best, when he must retain only the middle cut,
eliminating the heads which contain too much high volatility alcohols
running at about 80% vol., and the tails comprising the heavy components.
As the distillation progresses the alcoholic strength of the flowing distillate
diminishes regularly : the moment when the stillman stops collecting the
middle cut or heart of run is called the cut, and will usually happen when the
hydrometer will read about 62/65% vol. If the cut is made too late, too high
a proportion of the tails will result in an unbalanced whisky with unpleasant
aromas. To the contrary, if the cut is made too early, the spirit will be
deprived from some of its components indispensable to achieve a whisky
with satisfying character. One will then obtain a product without major
default, but without real interest and personality either.
Speed of distillation also has a direct influence on the quality of the
collected spirit.
The latest which is perfectly colourless is at about 70% vol. and is pumped
into the spirit receiver. The stillman has to do all his operations by
intervening on the spirit safe, built with a copper frame holding plate glasses
and into which lead all pipes linking the stills to the various holding tanks. It
is usually a beautiful object duly padlocked under the control of Custom and
Excise, the stillman not being allowed to have any direct contact with the
product flowing from the stills.
For controlling the process, the stillman uses hydrometers and can check the
purity of the spirit in verifying if it does not get cloudy when mixed with
water.
Heads and tails will be pumped and kept in the low wine charger to be
redistilled in the spirit still at the same time as the low wine intended for the
next distillation. Waste of distillation known as spent lees will be thrown
away or treated.
Some whiskies, notably in Ireland and in the Scottish Lowlands, are subject
to a triple distillation process, which delivers a spirit of a higher alcoholic
strength at about 85% vol.
Ageing
Before being transferred into casks, the newly made spirit will have its
strength reduced to 63,5% vol. with demineralised water. The cask being
used are usually casks having been previously contained Bourbon, and are
used either as they come or after being rebuilt as hogsheads in Scottish
cooperage.
They will usually be kept on site for ageing or in a centralized warehouses
together with other spirits from a same company or group.
Last stage of the process of whisky making, ageing is at the same time the
longest one and one of the most important. The origin and the quality of
casks have a determining role in the end result, as well as, even if to a lesser
extent, the location of the warehouse. The quality of he air, its temperature,
its humidity, its coastal character or not, have an influence on the ageing
process.
It is only after three years of ageing in cask that spirit is entitled to be called
whisky, but one usually considers that it is only after 8 years that a malt
whisky reaches real maturity. Some can reach their optimum at the age of 10
or 12 years, many are those which will take advantage of further maturation
up to 15 years or possibly beyond. If some of them may become exceptional
at the age of 20 or 25 years, others might suffer of staying too long in a cask,
their character ending up in fading away and aromas directly imparted by the
cask becoming too preponderant.
Last of all, one should not forget the ultimate stage in the long process of
whisky making which is bottling. The reduction, which is the operation by
which the alcoholic strength, initially at around 60% vol, is brought down to
drinking strength - in most cases 40 or 43% vol - is much more delicate than
one usually imagines. Quality of filtration has also an important effect, in
particular depending whether it is a chill or non chill filtration process.
MANUFACTURING OF WHISKEY
Ingredients
The basic ingredients required to make Irish whiskey are pure clear water, of
which there is no shortage of in Ireland quality barley, and time (Lots of It)
and experience.
Malting
The first step in the process is known as Malting, this will release the starch
in the barleycorn by controlled germination. Traditionally the barley is
steeped in water for up to 2 days the water being changed several times
during this period, the water used in the last steeping is heated to help start
the germinating process.
The barley is then spread on a malting floor and turned daily to allow the
barley to germinate. As germination progresses the starch within the
barleycorn releases some of its sugars. It is at this stage that the germination
is halted by drying the malted barley in a closed kiln ready for the next stage
of the process.
Mashing
The malted barley is mixed with un-malted barley prior to being passed
through a mill to be roughly ground into grist The grist is then mixed with
water in a mash tun where it is slowly stirred. The addition of water allows
the natural sugars to dissolve in the water which is drained off this liquid is
called "wort"
Fermentation
The wort containing the dissolved sugars from the barleycorn is now
pumped into a set of vessels commonly known as "washbacks" into the wort
is added yeast. This causes the a reaction with the sugars to produce an
brown coloured liquid. When the fermentation process has run its course the
liquid ceases to foam and bubble at which point it is ready to be pumped to
the stills for distillation
Distillation
The distilling process is where the alcohol which has a lower boiling point
than water is separated from the fermented liquid or wash
from the washback. Traditionally Irish Pot still whiskey is
distilled three times in copper stills to ensure a smooth and
delicate spirit
It is this third distillation that gives "Irish" its different taste which is purer
and lighter than Scotch Whisky which is distilled twice. At the Midleton
distillery in Co. Cork depending on the desired outcome the spirit may have
been distilled as many as 5 times. The distilled spirit at this stage still has a
long journey ahead of it before it can be truly called whiskey.
Maturation
Having been successfully distilled the required number of times the spirit is
filled into wood casks and left to mature for a legal minimum of three years,
however more often than not it is usually more with eight, ten, or more years
required for some of the top brands.
It is during this maturation process that the magic that is Irish Whiskey takes
place. The clear spirit over time takes on the character of the cask in which it
is stored. The casks may have been used previously to store sherry bourbon
or rum although new oak casks are also used. While maturing in sherry
casks the alcohol's extract the sherry residue that has soaked into the wood,
or whilst maturing in charred bourbon casks the spirit will extract some of
the chemicals in the wood of the cask.
It is all of these factors along with temperature humidity and general storage
conditions plus the length of time the whiskey is left to mature that
contribute to the final product.
Blending
Prior to bottling the matured whiskey is vatted or "married" as it is
sometimes referred to In this the final stage of the distilling process. The
purpose of vatting is to fuse together many casks of whiskey in order to
produce as consistent a quality and flavour as possible . This is the art of the
blender, however Irish Whiskey producers have a historical disdain for
blended whiskey and even today with a few exceptions the vatting process
for brands such as Power's or Paddy will take only two or three days.
Bottling at the Cooley Distillery
CHAPTER FIVE
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
IRISH AND SCOTCH WHISK(e)Y
1.Manufacturing process
a) Malting
Irish Whiskey differs from Scotch in the malting stage. In the making of
Scotch whisky, malted barley is dried over peat fires. Thus allowing
smoke from the peat to penetrate the barley, This is what gives scotch
whiskies their distinctive smokey flavor. In the making of Irish Whiskey
malted barley is dried in closed ovens. The barley never comes in contact
with smoke, so the true malted barley flavor shines through with no
smokiness.
b) Mashing
The process of grinding the grain into grist and then mixing it with water
to produce wort are the same for Irish and Scotch Malt whiskeys
c) Fermentation
Once again the same basic process applies to both Irish and Scotch
Whiskeys. Yeast is added to convert the liquids' sugars into alcohol
c) Distillation
During this stage the alcohol with a lower boiling point than water is
steamed off. The shape of the still contributes to the final character of
the finished product and in Ireland the stills are generally larger than
Scottish ones. Generally, Scotch whiskies are distilled only twice. Irish
Whiskeys, however, are usually but not always triple distilled. Because
each stage of distillation increases the purity and smoothness of the
whiskey, This is what makes Irish Whiskey particularly pure and
smooth.
e) Maturation
Once again the process of making Irish or Scotch is similar in that during
the final stage of the process the whiskes is transfered intto casks to
mature for the required number of years, three is the legal minimum, but
some whiskeys are left for many years more.
2.Spelling
PROOF
This system dates to the 18th century, and perhaps earlier, when spirits were
graded with gunpowder: a solution of water and alcohol "proved" itself
when you could pour it on a pinch of gunpowder and still ignite the wet
powder. If it didn't ignite, the solution had too much water in it and the proof
was considered low. This process led to the nickname "firewater", coined by
Native Americans.
A "proven" solution was defined as 100 degrees proof (100°). This has since
been found to occur at 57.15% ethanol. This is still used as the British
definition. A simpler ratio to remember is 7:4 - 70° proof is 40% alcohol by
volume.
A hydrometer was traditionally used to measure the precise proof of a spirit,
a practice which has gone through many formal changes.
Very few microorganisms can live in alcoholic solutions. The main three are
yeast, Brettanomyces, and Acetobacter. In what is essentially disinfection,
yeast keeps multiplying as long as there is sugar to "eat", gradually
increasing the alcoholic content of the solution and killing off all other
microorganisms, and eventually themselves. There are "fortified" wines with
a higher alcohol concentration than that because stronger alcohol has been
mixed with them.
Introduction
To be classed as “Scotch” whisky must be both distilled and matured in
Scotland.
Scotch whiskies derive part of their flavour from the air in the locations
where they are stored during maturation. For example some people swear
that they can taste the sea from the strong, distinctively flavoured malt
whisky from the Island of Islay.
It should be noted that the production of all types of Scotch Whisky does not
allow for any additives or ‘enhancers’. Only cereals (barley, wheat, maize
etc) water and yeast may be used, although a small amount of caramel (burnt
sugar) is permitted at the point of bottling – this ensures a consistent colour
of the finished product.
By far the most popular worldwide, blended Scotch whisky accounts for
the majority of the Scotch that is consumed. Blends are created from many
different malt whiskies and grain whisky. Typically there would be about
80% grain and 20% malts in a blend with as many as 20 (but usually less
than 15) different malts being used. Blended whiskies are popular because
skilled master blenders can produce individual blends with consistent and
distinctive characteristics. These are sometimes blended with particular
markets in mind. For example at the end of the prohibition period in
America (1933) some distillers created blends specifically for the re-
emerging market there.
Single Grain Scotch Whisky
Single grain Scotch whisky is the product of a single distillery and made
from unmalted barley, corn (maize) or wheat, water and barley. There are
only a few single grain whiskies on sale to the general public and they are
often hard to find. Almost all grain whisky goes into the blending process to
create blended Scotch. The production process for grain whisky is
continuous process and therefore production volumes are much higher than a
typical malt distillery. This is reflected in the fact that there are only seven
grain distilleries operating in Scotland at present and they can cope with the
required volume.
It is worth noting that only about 5% of the today’s malt whisky is bottled.
The rest goes into blends.
In malt whisky distilling only malted barley may be used. Distillers may
not use any other grains or fermentable products. Malt whiskies are
produced in pot stills. The pot stills used here at the Loch Lomond Distillery
are quite unusual. Four of these have rectifying heads and two have
traditional “swan necks”. This range of stills allows us to produce a total of
eight different single highland malt whiskies.
A single cask malt is one which is a bottling from a single cask. Since most
of the American Bourbon casks that are used are 200 litres, and by the time
the angels have taken their share, this means that not much more than 400
bottles will be available from each cask (depending on the age and type of
cask used). The angel’s share is what evaporates during the maturation
stage so it will be dependent on the time in storage.
While single cask malts are very exclusive their consistency cannot be
controlled by mixing the malts from different cask so don’t always expect
them to taste the same as other whiskies from the same distillery. Some of
these “single, single” malts are also bottled at cask strength, with no water at
all being added. This means that they often have 50% alcohol content or
more, with some being as high as 60%. Most distillers would recommend
that whisky be consumed at approximately 28 to 30%, typically 3 parts
whisky to 2 parts water. This allows all of the flavours (some of which are
dissolved in the alcohol) to be fully appreciated.
Pure Malt
Pure malt whisky or vatted malt is a blend of malt whiskies from different
distilleries. The term “Pure Malt” was coined to suggest exclusivity but it
really just means that the bottle contains no grain whiskies. Clearly all
Scotch malt whiskies are by definition pure malts or 100% Scotch malts.
This is not to say that pure malts are inferior. Once again the master blender
can marry together a number of malts in various quantities to produce a
distinctive whisky with its own character and traits.
Loch Lomond Single Blend Whisky
This allows us to use the word “single” in relation to our Loch Lomond
Single Blend.
For the purposes of The Scotch Whisky Act 1988 "Scotch Whisky''
means whisky
(a) Which has been produced at a distillery in Scotland from water and
malted barley (to which only whole grains of other cereals may be added) all
of which have been
(b) Which has been distilled at an alcoholic strength by volume of less than
94.8 per cent so that the distillate has an aroma and taste derived from the
raw materials used in, and the method of, its production;
(c) Which has been matured in an excise warehouse in Scotland in oak casks
of a capacity not exceeding 700 litres, the period of that maturation being
not less than 3 years;
(d) Which retains the colour. aroma and taste derived from the raw materials
used in, and the method of, its production and maturation; and
(e) To which no substance other than water and spirit caramel has been
added.
The Scotch Whisky Act 1988 prohibits inter alia the production in Scotland
of whisky other than Scotch Whisky. The Scotch Whisky Act 1988 and
European Community (EC) legislation both specify a minimum alcoholic
strength of 40 per cent by volume, which applies to all Scotch Whisky
bottled and/or put up for sale within or exported from the Community.
BRAND NAMES
SCOTCH
As any whisky lover knows, the precious water of life needs time to mature
before its charms can be savoured.
Inver House Distillers owns and operates 5 Highland malt distilleries. Each
produces excellent spirit of distinctive character sought after by blenders and
single malt connoisseurs alike.
The first official distillery on Jura was built in 1810 but there is evidence
that illicit distilling took place as far back as 1502. A unique Single Malt
which truly represents the island of Jura, its land, water, climate and people.
The Balvenie Distillery lies at the very heart of Scotch whisky country in
Speyside, in the Scottish Highlands.
The exceptional quality of our single malt is due to the fact that The
Balvenie Distillery retains and nurtures a high level of craftsmanship that
other malt whisky producers no longer employ.
Dalmore Distillery sits on the banks of the Cromarty
Firth overlooking the rich and fertile Black Isle, the
"big meadowland", from which it takes its name.
IRISH
Tullamore Dew
Now Owns by the Pernod Ricard group and part of the Irish
Distillers Group Bushmills Distillery promotes itself as being the
Oldest licensed Distillery in the World, remembered by the year of
1608 being displayed on every bottle produced.
Black Bush is a premier blended whiskey with a malty nose
whose nutty flavours are rounded off by a sherry sweet finish.
Green Spot
Distilled by John Jameson & Son for Mitchell & Son Green
Spot pot still has been produced since the turn of the 19th
century. It is currently the only brand produced and sold
under name specifically for an independent wine merchant
in Ireland. The last from a range of "Coloured Spot"
whiskeys.
A hard to find whiskey, It is a rich and complex pot still
whisky notable for an abundance of pot still character
Bushmills Original
John Powers
CHAPTER EIGHT
MacAlister
11/2oz Calvados, 3/4oz Whisky, 3/4oz Dry Gin
Shake with ice, strain onto ice with twist of lemon, drop in peel.
MacAlpine
2oz Whisky, 1tsp Sugar, 1tsp Lemon Juice, Ginger Ale
Shake with ice (not ginger ale), strain, add ice, top up with ginger ale.
MacBean
11/2oz Whisky, 1tsp Chartreuse, 1tsp Crème De Menthe
Shake with ice, strain, add ice.
MacCrimmon
11/4oz Whisky, a little Dry Vermonth, a little Cointreau, 2 dashes Orange
Bitters
Shake with ice, strain, add ice.
Highland Fling
11/2oz Whisky, 3oz Milk, 1tsp Sugar
Shake with ice, strain, add ice, dust with nutmeg.
MacDonald
21/2oz Whisky, 1 Lemon, Ginger Ale
Pour in whisky, drop in spiral of lemon peel, add ice and ginger ale.
MacDonell
11/2oz Whisky, 2tbs Southern Comfort, 2 dashes Orange Bitters
Shake with ice, strain, add ice and a cherry.
Rob Roy
1oz Whisky, 1oz Sweet Vermonth, 1 dash Angostura Bitters
Mix in glass with ice, add cherry.
Flying Scot
2oz Whisky, 1oz Sweet Vermonth, tsp Honey, a few dashes of Angostura
Bitters
Shake with ice, strain
Het Pint
This drink was originally served on New Year's morning.
4 pints pale ale, 1 level tsp freshly grated nutmeg, sugar to taste, 3 medium
eggs, 1/2 pint whisky
Pour ale into large pan, add nutmeg and heat to just below boiling, stir in
sugar to taste, beat eggs in large bowl and stir in the hot ale slowly, stir in
whisky, pour liquid back into pan, stir, heat to just below boiling, then pour
back and forth from a height in warm tankards until drink froths and
becomes clear and sparking.
Christmas Cheer
A large bowl is needed and can be made several hours in advance, whisk
before serving.
6 eggs separated, 125g caster sugar, 600ml db cream, 350ml whisky, 200ml
light rum, 450ml ice-cold milk, finely grated rind 1 orange, 1 lemon and 1
lime, freshly grated nutmeg, little freshly groud cinnamon
Chill bowl for 1 hour, mix egg yolks and caster sugar in chilled bowl until
thick, whisk egg whites until forming soft peaks, whip in cream until
forming soft peaks, fold egg whites into egg yolks, then fold in cream, pour
egg and cream mixture into punch bowl, slowly whisk in whisky, rum and
milk, cover bowl and leave in fridge for 2 hours.
To serve-sprinkle top with grated orange, lemon and lime, freshly grated
nutmeg and cinnamon.
Christmas Toddy
Makes 8 glasses
Juice of 4 lemons, few lime or lemon slices, 90ml clear honey, 200ml
whisky, 1.1litres boiling water
In a large heatproof jug, place lemon juice, slices of lime or lemon, honey
and whisky, top with boiling water, stir well.
Irish Whiskey Cocktails & Punches
Dirty Irish Whiskey recipe
Mix in a mixing cup with ice and shake. Pour through a strainer, and drink.
Mix irish whiskey, irish cream, and ice cubes. Shake to chill. Serve with or
without the ice, it is very good either way.
Pour the Irish whiskey into a shot glass. Add the Goldschlager cinnamon
schnapps, then the creme de menthe, and serve.
Pour ingredients into a stainless steel shaker over ice, and shake until
completely cold. Strain into an old-fashioned glass, and serve.
SCOTCH
IRISH
Ingredients
1 cup pecans
1 cup chocolate wafer cookie crumbs
1 cup confectioners sugar
1-1/2 tablespoons light corn syrup
1/4 cup whiskey
powdered sugar for rolling
Instructions
Grind the pecans and the chocolate wafers coarsely in a food processor and
empty into a large bowl. Mix in the sugar, corn syrup, and whisky very
thoroughly (I use my hands). Shape the mixture into balls the size of a
quarter and roll in powdered sugar. Keep in an airtight container in a cool
place, or freeze on a baking sheet until each is firm and store in tightly
sealed plastic bags.
Instructions
Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. Combine all ingredients except topping.
Spoon into a greased 1-quart casserole. Top with pecan halves or
marshmallows. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes until bubbly.
Whiskey Sauce
Ingredients
3 cups heavy cream
1/2 cup bourbon
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons cornstarch
Instructions
Combine 2-3/4 cups of the cream with the bourbon and sugar in a medium-
size nonstick saucepan over medium heat. Stir to dissolve the sugar.
In a small bowl, dissolve the cornstarch in the remaining 1/4 cup cream. Add
this to the cream-and-bourbon mixture and simmer stirring often, until the
mixture thickens, 4 to 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and serve warm
with the fruitcake.
The sauce may be stored, after it has cooled, in an airtight container for 24
hours. When ready to serve, warm over low heat.
CHAPTER TEN
RESEARCH
QUESTIONNAIRE (Customers)
Name:
Profession:
Hotel/Restaurant:
Designation:
VII- Do you know that whiskies are of two types, if yes then
what are they and what the difference between them is.
Signature
QUESTIONNAIRE (Hoteliers and Restaurateurs)
Name:
Hotel/Restaurant:
Designation:
VI- Spell?
VII- Do they take by brand or type?
Signature
CHAPTER ELEVEN
GLOSSARY
A
Abv. Or alcohol by volume. The strength of an alcohol or
spirit measured as the percentage of pure alcohol
contained in the liquid. For instance, a whisky of 40%
abv. will contain 40% of pure alcohol, the rest being
made up of water mainly plus various congeners.
Age The minimum age for a whisky in Scotland and Ireland
is 3 years old. The age figuring on the label is always the
one of the youngest whisky contained in the bottle if it is
the result of a blending or a vatting. Once bottled, a
whisky does not mature any more.
Ageing See maturation.
Angel Share The name given to the alcohol which evaporates from
the casks during the ageing process, and amounting to
approximately 2% per year of the cask's content.
B
Barley The cereal from which Malt is made.
Barrel A term refering to a cask in general. Barrel is also often
used to refer specificaly to the traditional American type
of cask with a capacity of about 180 l.
Blend Or Blended Whisky. The result of the blending of Malt
Whisky with Grain Whisky, the latest being largely
predominant in proportion.
Brewing mashing.
Butt A type of cask currently used for the maturation of
Scotch Whisky or Irish Whiskey, with a capacity of
approximately 500 l.
N
New make Newly made spirit, yet perfectly clear, which has not yet
been matured and is therefore not entitled to be called
whisky.
P
Patent still Or Coffey Still. A type of still working through a
continuous process. It is composed of an analysing
column and of a rectifying column and is generally used
for the production of Grain Whisky.
Peat Organic compound resulting from the partial
decomposing of plants. Smoke produced during its
combustion at the kilning stage allows the production of
peated malt, which is used to produce whiskies of a
particularly powerful character, which are held in a high
reputation and whose origin is generally the island of
Islay.
Phenol Chemical compounds acquired by malt from peat during
the kilning process. It is responsible for the peaty flavour
of Islay whiskies in particular.
Pot ale Residues remaining in the wash still at the end of the
first distillation.
Pot still Device used for batch distillation process, which is a
kind of large copper kettle filled with wash which is then
heated. Alcohol, being more volatile than water,
evaporates first before being condensed. The first
distillation produces the low wines, with a strength of
about 25% abv, and which are then distilled a second
time to produce the spirit, collected at about 70% abv.
Pure Malt A whisky which has been produced exclusively from a
mash of malted barley.
R
Rummager A mechanical device found in wash stills which are
heated by a direct flame, as opposed to steam. An
arrangement of arms and copper chains scour the bottom
of the still, preventing solid particles form sticking to the
bottom and consequently bringing unpleasant taste by
getting burnt.
S
Scotch Whisky distilled and aged in Scotland for a minimum of
Whisky 3 years.
Single cask Whisky which has been bottled from with content
collected from a single cask.
Single Malt Malt Whisky originating from a single distillery, as
opposed to a Vatted Malt.
Sparging The action of spraying the mash by above with hot water
so as to extract all remaining sugars in it. The resulting
part of the wort, rather week in sugar content, is usually
kept in a vessel and used as the first water or first liquor
for the next mashing.
Spent lees Residues remaining in the spirit still at the end of the
second distillation.
Speyside The area of the Spey valley, situated in the Highlands.
The highest concentration of distilleries in Scotland is to
be found here, some of them being among the most
famous one.
Spirit The Middle Cut collected from the Spirit Still on the
occasion of the second distillation with a strength of
about 70% abv. It is only after it will have matured in
cask for a minimum of 3 year that it will become
whisky.
Spirit charger Vessel in which the low wines produced during the first
distillation in the wash still are kept before they are to be
redistilled in the spirit still.
Spirit receiver Vessel in which the Middle Cut collected from the
second distillation is kept, before being diluted to
appropriate strength and put into casks for ageing.
Spirit safe A kind of safe made up from a copper framework and
through which flows the alcohol coming from the stills.
Closed by the padlocks from he fiscal authorities, it is
nonetheless here that the stillman controls the
characteristics and nature of the alcohol, and depending
on the latest will redirect it to the next stage (Second
distillation, holding vessel).
Spirit still Pot Still used for the second distillation and in which the
low wines are transformed into Spirit.
Staves Longitudinal pieces of wood which are assembled for
making the body of the cask.
T
Tails The last fraction of the second distillation, following the
Middle Cut, and which is not kept for whisky.
U
Underback The intermediate vessel, situated below the mashtun,
through which flows the hot wort before entering the
cooler which will bring it down to the adequate
temperature required for fermentation.
V
Vatted Malt Whisky produced from the vatting of Malt Whiskies
originating from several distilleries, as opposed to Single
Malt.
W
Wash The produce of the fermentation of wort, not unlike a
rustic beer and with a strength of about 7% abv.
Wash still Pot Still used for the first distillation and in which the
wash is transformed into low wine.
Washback A large circular vessel of important height, made of
wood or of metal, in which fermentation takes place.
Vs
Compiled By: - Rajiv Chaudhary
3rd year
D.I.H.M.
Lajpatnagar