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Ardbeg Day 2017

Ardbeg Day - Kelpie launched and underwayArdbeg Kelpie launched and underway on Ardbeg Day!

New York City provided the atmosphere via a Hudson River Cruise, while Ardbeg provided the memories

Even by Islay standards this new single malt scotch from Ardbeg has a distinctly maritime charter, with a leafy green spine of peat that is downright, well, kelpy! So they named it for the mythic water spirits called kelpies, which have beguiled and bewitched many a mortal in that part of the world since Pictsh times.

The wider release version of Ardbeg Kelpie made quite a splash, when introduced to the crowd after two hours of a breakfast buffet, raw bar, and the open spirits bar featuring core expressions, Corryvreckan and Uigeadail, along with the classic 10 year-old age statement expression.

This included trying them in new and novel ways, like this outrageously spicy/smokey potion I dubbed the “Bloody Skeery.” Skeeries being the wee rocky islets dotting the Scottish seacoasts, including the ones making up the protected nature reserve directly in front of the Ardbeg distillery.

Ardbeg Day - I dubbed this the bloody skeeryArdbeg Day - Who says you can't get a free brunch?Ardbeg Day - Ladies love their Ardbeg

A Most Wonderful Host

Ardbeg put on this cruise, and similar events in other cities, for their Ardbeg Committee members, an organization that is free to join, just as the entire event was free for any Committee member lucky enough to sign on for the 4 hour cruise.

Just when we began to wonder if we might not see any Kelpie, one actually came on board in the form of a giant pile of seaweed with enormous red lobster claws, similar to the ones that served up earlier in the day.

Ardbeg Day Kelpie SightingBut the real starfish of the day was the new Kelpie expression itself, which contains Ardbeg matured in virgin oak casks from the Black Sea region of Southern Russia and then vatted with more typical Ardbeg aged in bourbon barrel casks.

As expected, this 46% is a tamer spirit compared to the cask-strength special committee release. But really, it is the very same whisky.

There is the big leafy green nose awash with maritime accents and fresh sage, between the balanced bookends of oak and smoke, and considerably creamy vanilla custard, while being a leaner Ardbeg than the others that tasted during the cocktail hours before the official Kelpie launch. It is not as oily or weighty as the core expressions, but so full of ever-changing flavor.

And like the special edition, which was bottled at 57.1%, a dash or splash of water spreads it out, while releasing even more flavors including the same lovely baking spices of clove and nutmeg, along with freshening up the smoke and maritime notes of seafood and kelp.

It does not pack they same wallop, but provides a calmer yet still very delicious single malt experience. As one venerable malt man with many years in the industry put it, “I could see this being my peaty whisky for the entire summer !”

May there be that much of Kelpie in its wider release to go around, and last that long.

Ardbeg Day - Having a Triple

Read our in-depth review of Ardbeg Kelpie HERE

Apparently Kelpieitis IS contagious!!

Ardbeg Day - Kelpieitis appears to be contageous

 

World Whisky Day

One of the Men of Malt sent these photos from London, just in time for World Whisky Day

I found myself humming, “Oh, if I were a rich man…”

World Whisky Day 3

World Whisky Day 2

World Whisky Day 1

These were taken at http://hedonism.co.uk

If only…

Now, what shall I have later this evening to celebrate World Whisky Day?

Last night, in the 85 degree heat, it was Bank Note blended Scotch whisky and soda. Actually, it was plain seltzer which has no added mineralization. Since most club soda in the USA is now made with potassium rather than sodium, it does not taste nearly as good for whisky and soda, to my palate anyway.

But tonight? After the weather changed to chilly and wet? Hmmm. Recently arrived acquisitions worthy of a World Whisky Day celebration include:

Longrow Peated (no age statement)

Glenfarclas 12 (not yet opened)

1998 Ben Nevis 15 Year Old Fresh Sherry Butt #596 Cask Strength (K & L Wines Exclusive)

Ardbeg home blending of 10 yo, Corryvreken, and Uuigeadail (Thanks Tony!)

Springbank 12 Cask Strength

Mortlach 18 (so really, really very good compared to the Mortlach Old and Rare, but still really, really overpriced.)

Or I may finally open my last bottle Mortlach 16 yo Flora and Fauna, which may just be my all-time favorite whisky, as if there could be only one.

Choices, choices

 

Ardbeg Kelpie Committee Release Review

Casks of virgin Black Sea oak from the Republic of Adygea have a powerful influence on this tumultuous free-spirited Kelpie, Ardbeg’s latest Committee Release for 2017.

Region: Islay      Style: Maritime – Peaty – Herbal     Class: Premium No Age Statement

Strength: 57.1%

Virtually unattainable, an upcoming version of Ardbeg Kelpie bottled at 46% is scheduled for wider but limited release in mid-May.

Ardbeg Kelpie Committee Release Review
With a portion matured in virgin European oak from near the Black Sea, Ardbeg Kelpie is aptly named for a mythic shapeshifting aquatic nature spirit, as its unbridled flavors gallop along, ever changing around a golden heart swathed in seaweed.

“But that sinewy tendril of seaweed winding its way through the palate acts like savory herbs for the tasty elements of raw cacao, roasted coffee, maple sugars, buttery scallops, a dab of vanilla bean to go with the coconut, and a ghostly memory of smoked fish. And that scrumptious nutmeg continues to surface, along with other spices bobbing up from the deeper riptides of this compelling dram with the deceptively serene looks of a burnished sauternes lake.”

Tasting Notes and Full Review Here

Diageo in the No-Age-Statement Era

Diageo in the No-Age-Statement Era of Malt Whisky

     What the New Mortloch Says

About Diageo’s Direction

Or

The Promise and Pitfalls of No-Age-Statement Mentality

As the largest Scotch malt whisky entity, Diageo has thrown its weight further into the no-age-statement arena with the launching of the new Mortlach Rare and Old.

(see our review HERE)

The rebranding of this classic, but obscure single malt has bellwether implications for the entire industry, as it moves away from traditional age statements, even as retail prices soar. And Diageo’s leadership role is once again on trial.

Read the Full Article

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