Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Kilchoman "Machir Bay" Islay Single Malt



Kilchoman “Machir Bay” Islay Single Malt

Kilchoman- circa 1995-  are, according to the company literature, the first new distillery founded on Islay in over a century.  They grow a portion of their own barley on-site at Rockside Farm, and as such also append the designation “farmer-distillery” to their label.  They are, in effect, "grower scotch." The Machir Bay is a blend of 3, 4, and 5-year old single-malts, with the 4-year finished in oloroso butts for eight weeks before assemblage… err, blending.  Though young, this whisky has loads of character and flavor; I look very forward to the black-label 5-year.

N:  Mossy, high-toned sugary smoke: lime jolly rancher and cedar ash… The cereal purity of young barley malt is here, like the flesh of an underripe nut and fresh-mown lawn, all swathed in a fine-grained, sexy smoke, a smoke redolent of supple leather and dry, golden, late-summer grass.

P:  Mellow cinnamon stick and apple compote, with a long, broad finish of incense ash and pine needles.  This is clearly a young whisky, but one of great finesse and impeccable balance; it’s exciting to taste a baby Islay of this quality.  The brief few weeks of sherry cask finish that the 4-year saw add a certain pithy sweetness mid-palate that also rings on the finish, where starfruit and driftwood fire echo and fade.

Particularly with our local distilleries releasing 2-year-old homegrown whiskeys for the whopping price of $50/ 375/mL (ahem), this little charmer seems well worth the just-south-of-$60 price tag…  It’s really, really well made, and a wonderful glimpse of a young whisky of great distinction and complexity… It makes you wonder how good their longer-aged bottlings eventually will be!

Monday, February 25, 2013

Tyrconnell Madeira Cask (Irish Single malt)



TYRCONNELL 10-YR MADEIRA CASK

If you’ve read any H&T, you’ll know I loves me some Irish; you’ll also know it’s a category i find to be much undervalued, at least here in the PDX, my bailiwick.  For my birthday, I decided to explore the top shelf… Tyrconnell, a wonderful single-malt distilled at Cooley, comes in three ‘extra-aged’ versions, finished in port, sherry, and madeira casks, respectively.  Having previously tried whisk(e)y finished in the first two media, and a fan of the fortified wine in question that initially seasoned these barrels, I went with the Madeira cask.

N:  Fleshy tropical flavors (papaya, liliko’i) hung on a wide swath of funk, much like the animality underlying the bright citrus of a calamansi; calvados and lemon candies
P:  Chamomile tea, papayas, and white peppercorns; whiskey’s answer to torrontes; cookie dough and fine vanilla bean-infused creme fraiche…

Tropical and dense, almost excessively so; kinda like a version of Slieve Foy on steroids.  This is delicious and interesting, but in the end perhaps a bit overwrought.  It may well be ‘worth’ the $80 price tag, but there are other Irish single malts on which I would probably spend my money next time.  The aforementioned Slieve Foy, weighing in at $30 less, comes immediately to mind…

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Notes, unvarnished

Here are some raw tasting notes, that I will polish a bit and hammer into discrete postings later... Unitl then, my take on these whisk(i)(e)(y)s...



BULLEIT 10-yr

N: Seawater, grape bubble-yum, green coconut flesh, cinnamon, and hot pavement; bananas, spearmint, and lemon candies.  Allspicy rye notes and fresh-turned soil.

P: White peppercorn and juniper, sweet stonefruit vinous notes, calvados, smoky cherryskins and hickory stems; orange pekoe tea and lemon zest.  Big airy rye hit on the foretongue slides into more tropical notes before a crispy, herbal/bitter finish




ARDBEG GALILEO 1999

N: Delicate woodsmoke; glossy 1960s-era paper; Easter lily, juniper, and orange compĂ´te.  Mossy wet sandstone, peppercorn, allspice, and brine.  Fleshy, funky, low-tide undertone. 

P: Cheesy (e.g. Grenouille) Chablislike terroir over roasted Meyer lemons; black, then red, licorice sticks; a gorgeous bloodsmoky hit that lingers in the mouth,  ringing with iron and braised fennel;  sexy and rough in the best way… pistachios, salt, smoke, and blood.  Superlong oceanside incense ash campfire finish, almond-bitter, all ‘round salted butter cookies.  A mouthful of seawater and sex.    Bloody and intimate while somehow maintaining impeccable propriety; titillating w/o being prurient…very long indeed… It is expressive both of its provenance and the brilliance of its home distillery.
    
     Flaunting the trademark savory complexity (read: briny and sexy and hugely compelling) of its house’s higher-end bottlings,  this precocious 12-year old,  finished in Bourbon and Marsala casks, displays fantastic complexity and character… this is fuckin NICE.  Galileo  is well worth the coin.
 




Thursday, January 31, 2013

Michael Collins "Lightly Peated" 10-Year Irish Single Malt



MICHAEL COLLINS 10-YEAR “LIGHTLY PEATED”
SINGLE MALT IRISH WHISKEY

     Cooley are making some fine juice, their recent acquisition by Beam notwithstanding.  This particular whiskey, Michael Collins 10-year, is a delicious, feminine Irish, possessed of all the creamy, floral flavors you’d expect to find, wrapped up with just a hint of peat.  Not as tropical as its cousin Slieve Foy, nor as smoky as Connemara, this single-malt hits a refreshing, luminous sweet spot somewhere in the middle. 

nose:  Soft saddle leather, buttered honey, ripe peach, and golden shiro plum coil around intimate floral notes of lily and rosepetal, with a suggestion of banana.  These high-tone aromas move into freshly turned moss and sweet stones-after-rain, with a nostalgic hint of peat smoke on the very finish.

palate: An initial creaminess, a sweet, heathery hit, flows right into peppery mango candy, balanced on banana pudding & nilla wafers, with a hint of tidal funk midpalate.  Scrumptious, lip-smacking salted dulce de leche and candied lemons coil like a purring cat round a core of fresh chamomile.  The liquid is supple on the tongue, without the slightest bit of heaviness.  On the end, there are slatey blueberry skins and seawater, with just a waft of driftwood-fire smoke.

     All in all, this is a yummy Irish, a definite must-try for any lover of whiskeys from that country.  Dangerously easy to drink, it shows real elegance and structure- it’s refined without pretension, and though not very long, the flavors bring you back for another sip.  A decent value for a single malt at this age, the Michael Collins 10-year is a tasty bottle that makes a nice addition to your Irish section.