All posts by Jewmalt

SuperJew, Husband, Father, Scotch aficionado, Musician, Whisky Society President

How the good folks at The Isle of Arran Malt launched their new 14 Year Old Whisky…

How to launch The Arran Malt 14 Years Old (both historically and, in style!):

1. Duty pay a 25 litre cask and remove it from the warehouse of the Isle of Arran Distillery

2. Transport the cask by boat from Lochranza to Glasgow (on rough seas of course!)

3. Transport the cask by horse & cart to several famous Glasgow whisky pubs

4. Open the cask in the Oran Mor Whisky Bar at 6.30pm after being piped round the bar

5. Serve free drams to 200 thirsty fans of The Arran Malt

6. Pick up an empty cask the next morning……late the next morning!

Click here see some great film footage of this historic event.

The Knights of the Whisky Round Table reconvene…

The Whisky Round Table consists of 12 noble knights who discuss all things whisky on a monthly basis. This September issue was fired by Ruben’s (of Whisky Notes fame) question:

Most beginners seem reluctant to buy independent bottlings, as distillery releases are said to have more credibility and a constant quality. What are your experiences with independent bottlers when it comes to quality, pricing, availability, creativity…? Also, please pick one of your favourite bottlers (or ranges) and tell us why you recommend them.

Follow this link for the twelve answers to this great question.

As a reminder, the valiant knights (and links to their blogs) of this round table are:

Chris – Nonjatta
Keith – Whisky Emporium
Karen & Matt – Whisky For Everyone
Ruben – Whisky Notes
Mark – Glasgow’s Whisky (And Ale)
Neil & Joel – Caskstrength.net
Lucas & Chris – Edinburgh Whisky Blog
Jason – Guid Scotch Drink
Gal – Whisky Israel
Mike – Whisky Party
Peter – The Casks
Joshua (hey, that’s me!)– The Jewish Single Malt Whisky Society

Glenglassaugh Cask Ownership program

One of the questions we’ve been asked most often this week has been “what’s the point of drinking new make spirit?”  Well, it’s a great way to better understand the evolution of a whisky from still to cask to bottle.  “But you don’t get to follow a single distillation,” says you, “you’re just getting an approximation of distillery style.”  Well, aren’t you a smarty pants!  If you’re one of the many readers who has been thinking along these lines this week we’ve got great news for you.  The very best way to enjoy the development of spirit is to regularly taste from a single cask.  If you’re Gerry Tosh or Richard Paterson you get to do this whenever you like.  If you’re Jason or Josh, not so much.  So we’re both very excited to say that we’re now shareholders in a single cask of Glenglassaugh.  We get to visit the cask whenever we want and every year, on the anniversary of the filling of the cask, we receive a small sample of the spirit in order to chart its progress.  We could even have visited the distillery and filled the cask ourselves before returning in the future to bottle it, too.  Doesn’t that just sound like a lot of fun?

Our little darling !

A few months ago our two respective societies (The Jewish Single Malt Whisky Society and the Single Malt Whisky Society of the Palouse) bought a Glenglassaugh Octave: 50 liters of new spirit aged in a smaller than normal cask (think along the lines of Laphroaig’s Quarter Casks) for between 3 and 7 years.  Because of the smaller cask size the spirit is expected to mature quicker than spirit held in the larger casks.  We had a choice of peated or unpeated spirit and, being the chaps we are, chose the peated version.  As mentioned in our Peated Spirit Drink reviews the barley is peated to 30ppm.

The Octave of peated spirit cost us $900, including storage.  Split among 20 shares, our members (and a good friend of both blogs, Gal Granov of Whisky Israel) were able to invest $45 for at least three bottles of aged Glenglassaugh (the final tally of bottles will depend on the strength at which we bottle from the cask!).  We then need to bottle the whisky, pay duty on it and ship our bottles to the US.  It’s our hope that all of that will cost our shareholders another $45 or so.  If all goes according to plan, the hardest part might be designing our own label!

If this is the type of thing that interests you, and you have a group likely to have fun with an investment of this sort (don’t expect to make money, do it just for the fun of it and for the opportunity to follow the evolution of a single cask of spirit), then we recommend looking into it further.  Details and relevant forms can be found here.

And if you find yourself visiting your cask at the distillery one day please take the time to say hello to the JEWMALT/SMWSP Octave…

L’chayim/Slainte/Cheers!

Joshua & Jason

Glenglassaugh 40yr

Highland Region – 44.6%ABV – 750ml or 700ml outside of the US (with crystal decanter with 2 cut crystal glasses in a wooden gift box)– $2525.00 | £1400 | €1680

After having tasted the 26yr Glenglassaugh, I could not resist in tasting my sample of their 40yr cask strength whisky (a big, huge, ginormous thanks goes out to Alan for the sample!) – an IWSC trophy winning whisky!

This whisky will be available in the US through Purple Valley Imports (well, through stores who have access to the whiskies they import).  And actually, as I am told to understand, there will only be one bottle allocated to the US for the fair price of $2525.00 (suggested retail price).

You can also get this bottle through Master of Malt and other purveyors of fine spirits in the UK.

I’m not going to blather on any longer, I just need to taste this fancy juice:

On the nose Youthful nose filled with cherry tarts and fresh citrus notes (think Mineola oranges).

Quince jam – maybe with a bit of strawberry mixed in??

Hot soy latte.

Licorice twists.

Brown sugar oatmeal & fresh oats.

Oaken church pews.

More coffee notes – like lightly roasted, fresh ground beans.

Finally some garlic.

On the mouth Like liking the inside of a humidor thats got Acid “Liquid” or “Kuba Kuba” cigars (oh, to taste that smell!  Ab-Fab!).

That quince jam from the nose is back and along with it came some gorgeous honey and perhaps some fennel seed.

Cinnamon and indian spices (you name it, it’s in there – wow!).

Finish The spice remains throughout and a nice fizziness lasts a good long while.

In sum Ok, my birthday is coming up (sort of).  Remember this date: December 6th!  If you feel so inclined to buy me a bottle of this masterpiece, I thank you. 😉

Truly exquisite.  Layer upon layer of goodness.  Immensely complex and not what I’d expect from a whisky that is older than me (by four years) – youthful yet wise.

One to share with the closest of friends who happen to be whisky geeks/lovers.  One to impress the father-in-law with.

Glenglassaugh 26yr Whisky – 46%ABV

Highland Region – 50%ABV – 750ml (or 700ml outside of the US) – $260 | £150 | €180

After a few days of tasting “spirit drinks”, it’s nice to get onto some actual whisky.  Don’t get me wrong, I very much enjoyed the past three spirits I tasted but, to me, whisky is where it’s at.

Older Glenglassaugh whiskies are, well, old of course, but also very rare and therefore very expensive.  What we have here today, however, is a fairly old Glenglassaugh at a price that’s… not too bad (given the age and rarity of it).  Believe me, I understand $260 | £150 | €180 is A LOT of money for many people (myself included).

Let’s put the money out of our minds for a second and perhaps focus on the whisky itself.  As opposed to their 40yr (that review is forthcoming) and their 30yr expression, this whisky is NOT cask strength.  However, it’s still bottled at the fairly strong ABV of 46%.  Still acceptable, if you ask me (if it were 40%, I may have shuttered a bit but hey, that’s me).

This 26yr old whisky was distilled only 2 years before Glenglassaugh was mothballed back in 1986.  For more history on Glenglassaugh and it’s grand reopening back in 2008, you’ll find links at the bottom of this post to an interview I did with the distillery’s Managing Director, Stuart Nickerson.

Without any further ado, my review:

On the nose Smells juicy and fruity (think sugared lemonwheels).

Brown paper lunch bags.

Oaky new humidor scent.

The more I nose it, the more prickly on the nose hairs it becomes.

Vanilla and caramels.

More oak but, not over oaked – extremely inviting.

Smoke deep in the background?  Could it be?

On the mouth Oak and butterscotch.

Buttered cinnamon crumpets (my favorite breakfast treat!).

Such an wonderful balance, very well integrated.

Warmed nuts at a baseball game (on another type of  blog, this statement would mean something quite different).

The mouth feel is pleasant.  Not big and chewy like I prefer but nowhere near like holding water in the mouth.

Finish Short and nutty with that brown paper bag note I detected in the nose emerging from the palate’s belfry.

In sumAnother celebratory whisky from Glenglassaugh.  Perfect for when the air starts to cool as summer rolls into autumn.  The bottle is both sexy and regal (and can be reused as a decanter).

For Jason of Guid Scotch Drink’s notes, click here.

I recently had the honor and good opportunity to interview Stuart Nickerson (Managing Director of the newly re-opened Glenglassaugh distillery).  If you’ve not yet had a chance to read it, you may want to do so right now. Part 1 & Part 2