Showing posts with label Clynelish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clynelish. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2011

New Brunswick Spirits Festival 2011










The appreciation of whisky does not have to be a solitary experience with a Glencairn glass or a tumbler at night in your book lined study.  Whisky can be paired with food and enjoyed with a crowd, resulting in a most pleasing experience.  The trick of course is to make the right food pairing.

The 2011 New Brunswick Spirits Festival started for me with a dinner on a Wednesday evening at the Fredericton Delta Hotel.  The hotel chef worked with whisky critic, Martine Nouet, to bring to life the recipes she sent him from Islay (her current home).  It was at times frustrating for the chef who strained to decipher the peculiar recipes supplied by Martine and revised via long distance phone calls in her heavily accented English.  The chef's frustration though was well worth the price of admission.   Read the menu pictured above by clicking on it.  The food and the whisky was fantastic!









Initially, I was thinking to myself that this meal is very expensive and I cannot fully appreciate the whiskies because of the food.  I was getting too caught up in the feeling that I was missing some profound nuance of the whiskies being featured.  I was brought back to earth by an astute observation from a friend (pictured above on the right) who pointed out that a whisky dinner and the festival for that matter are more about mixing with people than the whisky itself.  Of course the whisky is a focal point, but it's not the only one.  Just as people make a workplace great or not, so do people at an event like the N.B. Spirits Festival.  So, should one engage in the cold cost benefit analysis whereby one thinks "for that amount of money I could have had a couple of great bottles added to my collection?"  No!  Banish such thoughts from your malted mind.  Whisky festivals are, first and foremost, about people.









Pictured above were some fellow scotch nuts that I hung out with at the event.  We tried a number of scotch whiskies.  Some great and some not so great.

Highland Park 21 years
A very good malt that was quite powerful.  Wood spice, cardamon, leather and dark cherry.  A little sip goes a very long way.  A finish that went on for minutes.  Wow!  The only aspect of this single malt that none of us enjoyed was the price: $280 a bottle!

The Macallan 18 years Sherry Oak
Some whisky festival participants use the event as an opportunity to try new whiskies that they have never had before.  Me?  Not necessarily so.  I always make an exception for the Macallan 18 years Sherry Oak.  On this evening it was a little underwhelming.  I found it too smooth, and not terribly complex, as it should be given the price point.  Nevertheless, it disappeared from my glass mighty quick.  The Macallan 18 years has lately been less complex than I recall in years passed.  Accordingly, as much as this whisky has a special place in my heart, I am only buying it when on sale at a steep discount.

Ardmore Traditional Cask
Ardmore, as you probably know, is one of the core single malts composing the great economy blended scotch: Teacher's Highland Cream.  I like Teacher's a lot.  Unfortunately, the motley crew I was hanging with were less impressed.  They're just wrong.  In any case, I thought it would be fun to try the single malt, Ardmore, and it did not disappoint.  A malty, chocolate-like whisky that did not let us down.  Maybe a little smoother than expected and not overly complex, but at the price point of $41 I was not complaining.  I would not hesitate to buy this one.  If you like Teacher's, you will love Ardmore.

Oban Distiller's Edition
This malt was good, but the consensus amongst the posse I was riding with was that the standard bottling of Oban was better.  The experience brings to mind the consistent opinion I hold on all 'distiller's edition" regardless of the distillery:  Don't think for a second that a distiller's edition is necessarily better than a standard bottling.  It is just different.  Not better.  Just different.  Try to remember that when you have this or any DE in your hand and weighing the decision of whether or not to plunk down the extra money.  Our observations of a Talisker Distiller's edition were the same too.

Glendronach 15 year old Revival
We tasted a few other whiskies that were not so good, but we were all very impressed and surprised by GlenDronach 15 years.  A concentrated punch of juicy red fruits and berries, sherry, toffee and wood smoke.  We all really liked this one, placing it second to Highland Park 21.  Go buy the GlenDronach 15 if you like a sherried whisky.  Tastes much older than 15 years.  Probably the best whisky of its class and even the 18 year olds this year!  Highly recommended!









Conclusion
What I took away from the evening is this:  whiskies over 18 years are not necessarily better.  Just different.  Same goes for Distiller's Editions.  Matter of fact, human nature being what it is, we generally prefer familiarity (ie. standard bottlings of say Talisker or Oban) as opposed to exotic distiller's editions.  They tend to be a little out of balance (ie. over-oaked or too much of another taste depending on what the spirit was finished in).  As the Master Blender attempts to make something great, he also runs the risk of over-doing it.  And Finally:  Good friends sharing a dram with you make any bad dram you encounter, not so bad after all!

Cheers!


Jason Debly

Copyright © Jason Debly, 2009-2011. All rights reserved. Any and all use is prohibited without permission.

Friday, January 7, 2011

Review: Clynelish Distiller's Edition 1992













Pictured above is a view of my backyard.  For an idea of what it looks like in late summer/early Fall try my review of Balvenie Doublewood.  Judging from the above photo, I am sure you can surmise that winter has arrived.  She is here, but her arrival is late and sadly she doesn't tend to stay long.

You see, when I was a kid in the mid-1970's, Mistress Winter would arrive with her white legions, frosty gaze, cold air about her and she would stay.  I mean snowbanks were typically five feet high and remained the whole season.  From early November till mid-March she visited.  Rusty, yellow painted front-loaders piled snow high in the center of the court in front of my house, maybe 12 feet high.  After the loader left, I and my friends would dig quite extensive tunnels that would probably have impressed the Vietcong

Those days are gone.  I'm 44 years old, and I can attest to the existence of global warming.  When Winter arrives now, she's a total tease!  In the evening as I look out my window at the blizzard of her arrival, I am fantasizing about my snoblower doin' a number on her, clear that driveway right down to the pavement!  But, damn! I get up in the morning and she's like . . . gone.  She has melted from my driveway, left my life, hell, left me standing there in the morning sun glow of my glistening driveway thinking was last night's winter storm just a dream?

When she is here, we go for long hikes through snow packed trails, snow shoe, ski, toboggan, we do it all.  Afterwards, I like to get inside the house and warm myself with Clynelish Distiller's Edition 1992 by the fire.


Clynelish Distiller's Edition 1992 (special release: Cl-Br: 172-4i)















Nose (undiluted)
Apples, sherry and an elegant perfume of cherries.

Palate (undiluted)
Velvet flavors of high quality sherry heavily blankets the palate like how a snowstorm envelopes a sleeping city at night.  Sweet, very rich cherries and blackberries coat the palate before a slight drying transition to brandy and a little corona cigar smoke.  A slice of dark, rich fruitcake in a tumbler.  Hmm, if there was ever a winter/Christmas dram, this is it.

Finish (undiluted)
Malt and spice adorn a sherried taste with a touch of smoke.















General Impressions
Good stuff!  No obvious flaws.  Initially, kinda sweet though.  So, not something you would want to sip weeknights.  It's quite different from Clynelish 14 years, a stellar single malt, in my ever modest, delicate and restrained opinion. 

I prefer the 14 year old to this Distiller's Edition.  While the DE is very good, it lacks the fragrant and pixie light flavor profile that is truly a delight to experience with the Clynelish 14 year old.  The Distiller's Edition has complexity of flavors, but not to the degree that the 14 owns.  The 14 is lighter and able to be more nuanced.  The DE is just there, like a Mac Truck, big grill and all, demanding you move the hell out of its way, or get run over by its big sherried smoke, malt and fruitcake chassis. 

Price Point
Very expensive.  If it has a flaw, it would be the price.  Damn expensive.  For less money, I could have enjoyed Highland Park 18 or Glenlivet 18 year old, which happen to be two great single malts that I would opt for in any sort of head-to-head Pepsi Challenge with this malt. 

Conclusion
Clynelish Distiller's Edition is a very good single malt with no obvious flaws other than price.  It is smooth, yet textured enough to make the whole tasting experience interesting.  Warming, big too at 46% abv, sherried, but fortunately drying with some smoke on the finish meaning satisfaction if given as a gift to a whisky nut.  The flavor profile is big, so may overwhelm the novice.

My drink is gone, but luckily not my mistress . . .
















. . .but then again, the evening is young!

Cheers!


Jason Debly

Copyright © Jason Debly, 2009-2011. All rights reserved.