Friday, 18 October 2013
Monday, 15 April 2013
Macallan 12 Fine Oak
Macallan 12 Fine Oak
A review by Tommy Byrne
Overall rating: 8/10 (Single Malt notation)
Macallan is one of the most famous distilleries in the world. It is predominantly known for its special maturation process involving sherry casks. Even if Macallan has an extensive fan base, they keep aiming at new markets with many new ranges of products. Macallan 12 years old Fine Oak, is part of that new range of 8 whiskies called Fine Oak, where bourbon, American and European oak casks are vatted together. It could not find any information backing this, but I believe this wide range is aimed, in my own opinion, at a younger and less experimented crowd.
Macallan 12 Fine Oak is a pale gold whisky that takes quite a while to open up. At first I couldn’t find anything really complex and interesting in the nose, aside for the obvious oak and cereals, but after 10 minutes, it started to develop delicate sweet hints of honey and vanilla. The palate is dry, but quite soft with the same features than its nose. Some toffee and older wood casks are revealing themselves after a while. The finish a little bit short, but not unpleasant at all.
Unlike the traditional Macallan sherry cask whiskies, the Fine Oak range, or at least its 12 years olds expression, is putting a greater emphasis on American oak and bourbon casks. There are very little spices in that whisky, it hard to find any components of its sherry casks. I seriously doubt any malt heads to drink this whisky on a regular basis, I see it more a whisky to offer as a gift to a novice drinker. Overall, it’s a good whisky to start the apéro, but it’s too weak to follow a meal and act as a digestive.
Friday, 12 April 2013
Glenmorangie The Original
Glenmorangie The Original
A review by Tommy Byrne
Overall rating: 8,5/10
In the past 10 years, I have had a love/hate
relationship with Glenmorangie The Original. Even if it’s the whisky that
hooked me up to single malts in 2003, I abandoned it when I fell in love with
Islay malts in 2010. It took me 3 years to reopen that Highlands golden bottle
and since then we have started to flirt again. Being the top selling single
malt brand in Scotland and the second in the world, after Glenfiddich, thanks
to its acquisition by the LVMH group, Glenmorangie is a wonderful whisky not
only for new malt head, but also for connoisseurs.
This first 10 years old expression of the
Glenmorangie range as a nice pale gold colour, but it’s a wee bit too dark for
assuming it hasn’t been tainted with the magic touch of e150. On one side, the
nose is sweet with hints of pears and peaches, brioche, cinnamon and some bubble-gum.
On the other side, it’s lightly smoked
with a touch of toffee, vanilla and oak. Having been aged in white American oak
and bourbon casks, the palate is very close to sour mash bourbon with notes of
cereals, light smoke and oak. It has a
sour and bitter medium finish.
I was very surprised by this whisky; it was
nothing as I expected and as I remembered. By having the highest stills in
Scotland, Glenmorangie has to reputation of producing very light whiskies. For
some reasons, I was expecting something like a sharper and rougher Speyside
malt. Lke Glenfiddich 12, Glenmorangie The Original is a great whisky to get acquainted
with single malts. The many extra matured versions of this whisky are great for
experiencing various types of cask finishing, such as sherry, port and
sauternes.
Thursday, 11 April 2013
Clynelish 14 years old
Clynelish 14 years old
A review by Tommy Byrne
Overall rating: 8/10 (Single Malt notation)
Clynelish is to Johnnie Walker’s Gold Label what
Ardmore is to Teachers Highland Cream. Both Highlands distilleries produce a lot of
whisky, but bottles only around 5% of its production under its own name.
Clynelish is present is most Johnny Walker Labels, but it is the main malt used
blending the Gold Label.
Colour wise, Clyneslish 14 years old has a golden
coat. This whisky is all about its nose, very close to a cognac. It’s very creamy,
floral and delicate with subtle hints of a fruit market (and or basket!),
vanilla, lemon ice tea and some smokiness. Very dry and oaky, the palate doesn’t
follow up to the nose aside from the obvious bourbon cask. This is sad, but at
least the finish is strong and persistent.
After nosing the whisky, while knowing what we
know about its main use, I automatically made a strong sensorial connection between
Clynelish and Johnnie Walker Gold Label.
It’s the almost exact same creamy delicate smoothness, but after tasting
it, I understood why it’s usually blended with grain whisky. The palate of the
two whiskies is very different. Even if apparently there’s a certain amount of
people devoted to Clynelish arguing its masterful craftsmanship, I would only recommend
this whisky to make the fun comparison with its Johnnie Walker’s cousin.
Wednesday, 10 April 2013
Buchanan's 12 De Luxe
Buchanan's 12 De Luxe
A review by Tommy Byrne
Overall rating: 8,2/10 (Blended whisky
notation)
It’s interesting to see how segmented blended
whisky brands are. A top selling European
brand such as J&B is very little known in Latin America, while a top
selling brand in Latin America, like Buchanan's, is hardly recognized in Europe and
in the rest of the world. I was absolutely
amazed about the huge fad surrounding Buchanan’s blended whiskies when I moved
to Mexico. With ambassadors such as Sting,
Elton John, Bon Jovi and many Latin artists, their promotional campaigns
reaches a huge number of consumers. I had never heard about this brand in Canada
or in Europe, but I soon realized that in the Latin America upper classes
(mainly Colombia, Mexico and Venezuela), Buchanan 12, 18, 21 or Red Seal is the
posh drink of choice…with lots of ice and mineral water! No comments!
Buchanan's 12, also called the De Luxe version, is a gold/light amber
whisky. At first, it has a sharp and
floral nose with hints of green apple and pineapple. After opening up, it
develops a smooth nose with notes of white chocolate, nutmeg, light caramel and
toffee. The palate is amazingly smooth, some
oak, cereals and leather are the most recognizable notes Not much going on
there, but I guess that’s exactly the point. It has a short to medium finish.
This 12 years old expression of Buchanan's is
probably the best blend in its own category; smoother than the Johnnie Walker
Black Label and way more refined than the vulgar Chivas Regal 12. On the down side, I believe it is way overpriced
for a product with no or very little personality. Glenfiddich 12 is probably
the best alternative for a better experience at the same price. To my own experience, this blended whisky is
bought not for its actual intrinsic qualities, but rather for the statement it
is making in its top markets.
Tuesday, 9 April 2013
Glenfiddich 18 years old
Glenfiddich
18 years old
A review by
Tommy Byrne
Overall
rating: 8,8/10
Glenfiddich
is the top selling single malt brand in the world. Even in remote areas of the
globe, there is a good chance to find their start of the line green bottle. This
means that it’s an industrial product, but also means it’s decently
priced. When so many single malts are
overpriced these days, Glenfiddich stays an excellent value for money. Having said so, today’s review is about the
Glenfiddich 18 years, which is not so cheap. Putting “ancient” after 18 years olds is a wee
bit pompous, but I suppose the marketing department had its reasons.
18 years in
various casks, notably sherry casks in the end of the maturation process, gives
a nice amber/copper colour to the final product. The nose is smooth and fresh
with notes of pineapple, honey, vanilla, nutmeg and lemon zest. It is also toasty and floral, nothing very
complex, but very nice overall. The
palate is smooth, sweet and malty with notes of fruit cake, toffee and also
vegetal with some cauliflower and celery. It has not an extravagant finish; it’s
rather smooth and delicate.
I was very
pleased with this whisky. Glenfiddich 18 may not have all the subtleties of the
15 years old Solera version, but it is a great product. What I like in general
about this brand is the choice that it offers to the consumers. Usually, every common liquor stores sells the
12, 15 and 18 years old versions and many speciality stores offers older
bottles. This gives single malts apprentices
the chance to learn more about whisky maturation process in its many steps and
always at a decent price. I am pretty
sure that there is no specific whisky drinker niche for the 18 years old bottle,
but it is probably the safest choice for a very nice present to give to someone
who likes whisky.
Ardmore Traditional Cask
Ardmore Traditional
Cask
A review by
Tommy Byrne
Overall
rating: 9/10 (Single Malt notation)
I have said
it in the past and will say it again: Speyside malts are not my favourites. Being a peat-head I often find Speysiders too
light and too sharp for the standard 10-12 years old bottles. Not being chill-filtered and with its 46% alcohol
volume, Ardmore Traditional Cask is an outsider in the region, almost a
Highlander and that’s why I am very fond of it.
With no age statement on the bottle, it is very similar to Laphroaig’s
Quarter Cask finishing method. Traditional cask means smaller cask for the
last part of maturation process (see Laphroaig Quarter Cask review).
With its
nice gold colour, I highly doubt there is any e150 (caramel) added only for
looks. The nose is intense. First, the peat and phenols kicks in with some spices. Then, citruses appear with some notes of
white grapefruit and green pineapple. After
adding a few drops of water, some sweetness emerges with chocolate notes in the
end. The palate is far dryer and bitter.
Oak is omnipresent. Adding water will loosen its edges and more vegetal and
cereal notes will appear. The finish is
medium-long.
This is a
spectacular full body whisky leaving oily tears in the glass. The bottle, label and packaging are also
flawless, nothing flashy as we like it. Ardmore Traditional Cask is a great
alternative to Talisker in terms of character. Being one of the biggest distilleries in
Scotland, only a very small part of the production goes for crafting single
malts, the vast majority of the production goes directly into the blend of Teacher’s
Highland Cream, a great old school blend with a very high content of malt
(around 40%, unlike the most blends at around 20-30%).
Monday, 8 April 2013
Johnnie Walker Green Label
Johnnie Walker
Green Label
A review by
Tommy Byrne
Overall rating: 9/10 (Blended Malt notation)
Having
brought up the subject of blends in my last post, I’m going to stay in near
waters by reviewing the now discontinued Johnnie Walker Green Label. It is a blended whisky, but not in the traditional
sense where grain whiskies are added to malt whiskies. Green Label is what used to be called a “vatted
malt” or a “pure malt”, i.e. a whisky made only out of malt whiskies, no grain,
no junk. Nowadays, the whisky inteligencia is calling this “blended malt” or
“Malt Blend”. This whisky, which
appeared only in 2004, is no longer produced by JW since the end of 2011 due to
poor sales and the launch of a new range of products. Sadly, it was the best JW product in the
market and every whisky enthusiasts will say to it was far superior to the Gold
and Blue Label.
Where the
Gold Label is a whisky mainly crafted with some 15 to 18 years old Clyneslish,
the Green Label is the result of blend of at least 15 years old whiskies from
only four distilleries: Talisker, Caol Ila, Cragganmore and Linkwood. Knowing this, the tasting is even more fun,
one trying to identify each of the characteristics of those 4 malts. Talisker is the most noticeable whisky in this
blended malt giving it most of the colour, nose and palate. This amber whisky is very maritime in its nose;
the iodine of Talisker does not fool anyone. Hints of caramel, menthol, cooked peaches and
pears are the first impressions. After a while it develops some peat and camphor.
The palate is also Taliskeresque, a salt-water burned toffee first impression is
combine with fresh menthol and bourbon casks. The finish is medium-long.
Warm and
fresh does not really goes together, but Green Label is feeling like this!
Talisker and Caol Ila on the winter side and Cragganmore and Linkwood on the
summer side. I do have to say that I was
expecting more character coming from Caol Ila, peat-wise, but this may be due to the use of sweeter
casks such muscatel casks like in their 1995 Distillers Edition. It is a shame that JW has stopped producing
this whisky; however it as already became a collector’s bottle. Since 2011, it has gained around 20$ in value
in private sales. As for myself, I
bought a whole case just before it
left the market! Hope to sell you a 150$ Green Label Bottle in the near future!
Some thoughts on blends
Some thoughts on blends
By Tommy
Byrne
Many
purists will flay me for this, but I recently had a change in attitude
vis-à-vis blends in general. It is true that the majority of blends are
produced industrially. It is also widely admitted that they generally do not
offer as much complexity as the majority of single malts. Often too expensive,
their prices are mainly based on a rigorous marketing strategy funded by millions of dollars. However, it is not right to say that blends are inferior products
strictly aimed at a market of uninitiated consumers.
All blends
are not intended to be drunk neat in a Glencairn glass. Raising your eyebrows
when spotting someone pouring a J & B, Johnnie Walker Red Label or Ballantine’s
on the rocks and then adding mineral water or cola is foolish, because these
blends are specially designed for mixology. Now, doing the same with a Johnnie
Walker Green Label or a Buchanan's Red Seal is pretty stupid and you may lecture that
person on the do’s and don’ts of whisky etiquette!
How many
times I wish I could have had a simple glass of Jameson’s or Johnnie Walker
Black Label in a tumbler instead of a young Speyside malt with too many hints of green
fruit, such as a Balblair 2000. With the rising popularity of single malts
since the mid-90s, it is important to stress that the majority of whisky
production has declined in quality. Major brands of single malts are over
playing the card of their glorious past in their marketing department, and many
whiskies are no longer quite the same, the Macallan distillery is a perfect example
illustrating this point. This gives blends an advantage with their impressive consistency toward single malts. After all, there is a time for everything. A time to enjoy complex
single malts carefully matured in fine sherry casks, and a time for blends, on those
evenings when you do not want to break your head analyzing the many subtleties
of our drink.
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