25 yrs ago I had a conversation with my mentor in this building. |
"Rex, do you have a moment?"
"Sure." He pushed himself away from his expansive desk, and leaned back in his chair, a battered, cracked brown leather number that had seen better days. Being vice-president, he could afford better, but his personal sense of frugality blinded him to such unimportant matters of aesthetics.
"Take a look at this." I handed him a typed letter. He scanned it and looked up with a quizzical expression.
"See here." I pointed out a spelling error. "And here, and that one too. I must bounce back a couple letters a day to Joan."
Joan was a 60ish secretary, with alarmingly unnatural blonde, Marilyn Monroe hair, who transcribed my dictation at a breezy 20 words per minute. She was forgetful at times, failing to photocopy correspondence too.
"Jason, I hear ya." He scratched his balding head and searched for the right words, and then added "but, . . . everyone needs a job."
. . .
Do you climb the corporate ladder with integrity? |
25 years ago, those words went straight over my head. I was fixated on the fact that I had a dud of a secretary. Me, an eager-beaver, know-it-all, newly minted university graduate. What did I know? Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
Over the years, I have dealt with people who take liberties with the truth, twist facts and situations to their own advantage, and generally just plain lie. Sadly, sometimes they have been coworkers, bosses and senior management. Today, at 46 years of age, I can finally look a man in the eye and tell if he has good character. Unfortunately, the last time I encountered moral courage to do the right thing in the workplace was a quarter of a century ago. And this thought brings to mind Highland Park 12 years.
Highland Park 12 years Single Malt Scotch Whisky
Unlike men, whisky cannot lie. If it is thin, weak, unreliable, you will know from the first sip. Cheap, dishonestly young malt and grain whiskies cannot hide their shortcomings behind slick packaging, much like corporate weasels and c-suite yes-men using opaque jargon and jingoism to obfuscate the truth. The listener knows the truth behind words like downsizing, streamlining, change management, finding efficiencies and other corporate Orwellian gobbledygook that always means the same thing: loss of jobs that impacts not just the person in the position, but his/her family. Strangely the suit delivering the message always finds these "efficiencies" in the lower strata of the organization, not at his or higher levels of management.
Unlike men, whisky cannot lie. If it is thin, weak, unreliable, you will know from the first sip. Cheap, dishonestly young malt and grain whiskies cannot hide their shortcomings behind slick packaging, much like corporate weasels and c-suite yes-men using opaque jargon and jingoism to obfuscate the truth. The listener knows the truth behind words like downsizing, streamlining, change management, finding efficiencies and other corporate Orwellian gobbledygook that always means the same thing: loss of jobs that impacts not just the person in the position, but his/her family. Strangely the suit delivering the message always finds these "efficiencies" in the lower strata of the organization, not at his or higher levels of management.
Nose (undiluted)
Fine sherry, Florida oranges, majestic Orcadian peat, subtle wood smoke, and a handful of stones.
Palate (undiluted)
The finest Oloroso sherry, orange rind, raspberries, wild honey, and a thin layer of pomegranate. Underneath all that is heather and subtle Montecristo smoke. Great and a very unique floral complexity for a 12 year old single malt.
Finish (undiluted)
Dry, tingling pomegranate, Australian red licorice and the distinctive heather of this distillery that cannot be replicated by any other distillery.
General Impressions
Highland Park 12 years is a solid drink. A single malt whisky that cannot be ignored. It exemplifies all that great malts aspire to be. For example, a lot of single malts trumpet that they age in Oloroso sherry casks. If there was ever a word consistently over-used in Scotch whisky marketing, it is "Oloroso." Oloroso sherry is a dry sherry. Tends to be very dry and you taste that arid quality on the mid-palate to finish of Highland Park 12.
The Oloroso sherry casks used by Highland Park are exceptional to my mind. They deliver a fantastic sherried Scotch whisky experience that other distilleries can only dream about.
The other feature of Highland Park 12 that I take note of is 'heather.' What is heather?
It is a low lying shrub that grows all over Scotland and typically is mauve, lavender and purple in color. Orkney Islands where the Highland Park Distillery is located has plenty of heather too.
I seriously believe that heather of Orkney does impart unique and rare floral notes that make Highland Park 12 special. The mechanics of exactly how this shrub influences flavor, I will admit is sketchy at best.
". . . water flowing over heather moors picks up floral characteristics along its way to the distillery, and exerts an influence during the steeping or mashing. However, using peat that includes heather, certain types of yeast, a particular distillation method, and oak aging may all impart heather characteristics to whisky."
Those are the words of Ian Wisniewski, a whisky writer, whose above comments appeared on page 32 of Whiskey by Michael Jackson, 2005 edition, published by Dorling Kindersley Limited.
I subscribe to Mr. Wisniewski's explanation. There is a fascinating floral experience going on in Highland Park 12 that I attribute to heather.
Fair Price
At one time Highland Park 12 was cheap. It didn't have the cachet of say Macallan 12 and others. So, the price was actually very good.
Times have changed. HP 12 is now recognized as a great single malt and so I have noticed prices creeping up. I have been told that the higher prices reflect increased demand in India and China. In addition, I think it has become a trendy brand in North America. It is the name dropped most by people who know little about Scotch whisky but want to appear otherwise. In any case, the price for HP 12 is still more than fair, in spite of recent increases.
Conclusion
Back in 2009, I wrote an enthusiastic and maybe a bit over-the-top review of this single malt (click here). I still agree with it. HP 12 has great character! The question is: do you and I?
Cheers!
Jason Debly
© Jason Debly, 2009-2013. All rights reserved except for one photograph. The photograph of the bottle of Highland Park 12 with tumbler was taken by a member on Flickr Gary White who holds all world copyright. The photo is used in this blog with his permission. No reproduction permitted without Mr. White's express written permission. All other photos taken by yours truly.
General Impressions
Highland Park 12 years is a solid drink. A single malt whisky that cannot be ignored. It exemplifies all that great malts aspire to be. For example, a lot of single malts trumpet that they age in Oloroso sherry casks. If there was ever a word consistently over-used in Scotch whisky marketing, it is "Oloroso." Oloroso sherry is a dry sherry. Tends to be very dry and you taste that arid quality on the mid-palate to finish of Highland Park 12.
The Oloroso sherry casks used by Highland Park are exceptional to my mind. They deliver a fantastic sherried Scotch whisky experience that other distilleries can only dream about.
Scottish Heather (Calluna vulgaris) |
It is a low lying shrub that grows all over Scotland and typically is mauve, lavender and purple in color. Orkney Islands where the Highland Park Distillery is located has plenty of heather too.
I seriously believe that heather of Orkney does impart unique and rare floral notes that make Highland Park 12 special. The mechanics of exactly how this shrub influences flavor, I will admit is sketchy at best.
". . . water flowing over heather moors picks up floral characteristics along its way to the distillery, and exerts an influence during the steeping or mashing. However, using peat that includes heather, certain types of yeast, a particular distillation method, and oak aging may all impart heather characteristics to whisky."
Those are the words of Ian Wisniewski, a whisky writer, whose above comments appeared on page 32 of Whiskey by Michael Jackson, 2005 edition, published by Dorling Kindersley Limited.
I subscribe to Mr. Wisniewski's explanation. There is a fascinating floral experience going on in Highland Park 12 that I attribute to heather.
Fair Price
At one time Highland Park 12 was cheap. It didn't have the cachet of say Macallan 12 and others. So, the price was actually very good.
Times have changed. HP 12 is now recognized as a great single malt and so I have noticed prices creeping up. I have been told that the higher prices reflect increased demand in India and China. In addition, I think it has become a trendy brand in North America. It is the name dropped most by people who know little about Scotch whisky but want to appear otherwise. In any case, the price for HP 12 is still more than fair, in spite of recent increases.
Conclusion
Back in 2009, I wrote an enthusiastic and maybe a bit over-the-top review of this single malt (click here). I still agree with it. HP 12 has great character! The question is: do you and I?
Cheers!
Jason Debly
© Jason Debly, 2009-2013. All rights reserved except for one photograph. The photograph of the bottle of Highland Park 12 with tumbler was taken by a member on Flickr Gary White who holds all world copyright. The photo is used in this blog with his permission. No reproduction permitted without Mr. White's express written permission. All other photos taken by yours truly.