Wardy
NSC's Benefits Guru
I have to say I have a bottle of Smokehead 18 year in the cupboard. Very nice but expensive. Think the bottle would kill you if you even thought of putting some cola in it.
The Peat is used for the malting process, in the same way it is in many Scotches, and in some Irish, the Peat fire is used to kill the sprouting barley kernels, making them into Malt, this happens before they are mashed for brewing. Peat is never added to the actual concoction. Depending on the 'peatiness' of the peat, the flavour from the smoke is more or less peaty in the final drink.
For a bourbon, it's Woodford Reserve for me, with Knob Creek an able deputy.
I've never been able to get into drinking single malts, but I really want to as I love the idea. I think it's because I got wrecked on whisky once when I was young (Bells I think) and still, nearly 20 years on, don't like the smell. I think I need to push past the initial reaction (the smell!) and actually appreciate the taste - with a decent dram rather than pish like Bells!
How good would the Amex be if there was a Whisky bar on each concourse!
Peatieness tends to occur depending upon the local water, eg in Islay or Skye where the water is 'tainted' with peat naturally. By comparison, the Speyside malts tend to be free of peat because the water is coming down off the granite of the Cairngorm Mountains.
If you like bourbon, i highly recommend Makers Mark - a bit pricier but gorgeous over rocks.
Now that's a recommendation hard to resist! Will check it out when we're there, thanks.If you are going to Edinburgh, take yourself to Cadenhead's shop in Cannongate (bottom of the Royal Mile), I guarantee you there is no better Whisky shop in Edinburgh, possibly Scotland or the world (I don't make idle claims). You'll need to establish your credentials with them, tell them your experience, and then have some tastes of what they suggest. It's impossible to explain what it's all about, you need to go there. Beware though, we've come out of there on more than one occasion, somewhat bawsed, and considerably poorer.
Wouldn't that sting a bit?
Highland Park, little splash of water.
Highland Park, little splash of water.
Malt whisky is too strong to drink out of the barrel, so after the maturation process (normally 10 years or more) it is typically watered down to make it an acceptable 40-45% strength. This is more often than not in a giant bottling warehouse in Glasgow, using plain old water. This is where most malts are bottled, however, a few do bottle their own, and would indeed use their own local water to dilute it to a suitable strength, in these instances the water would have an influence on the flavour, but bear in mind there are few distilleries that do this.
im pretty sure all the single malt distilleries do this themselves using their local water supply, when the spirit is barrelled to mature, before bottling. you wouldnt go to all the trouble of a single malt then ship it down to Glasgow to some factory to bottle it and dilute your fine crafted spirit with water from the Clyde.