#44.5 Spirited in Speyside

Aucht… Actrh…. Aucr… Auchroisk!

 

TL; DR: Our final day at the Spirit of Speyside started with the Whisky Fair in Dufftown, a mini-whisky festival in the festival. Then we visited Auchroisk with its huge production, filling and cask warehousing facilities. A great visit ending with the usual stingy whisky tasting. 

(missed Part 4/Part 3/Part 2/Part 1?)

We woke up under a grey sky, but the temperature wasn’t too cold. We had a quick breakfast under the trees, before going to take advantage of the toilet in a nearby Tesco Extra (well, that’s the downside of wild camping in villages or towns).

Soon enough, we were driving towards Dufftown, together with Justine (although in separate campervans, our Mr Vantastic and her Post Dram Prat). Once there, we had a second breakfast (or early lunch) in a fairly new cafè, almost in front of the clock tower, called the Cozy Coo: delicious food! Our first event of the day was the Whisky Fair, organised by local people (including our friend Sue from Glenallachie) in the Mortlach Community Hall, basically a whisky festival in the festival, which runs on the Saturday and the Sunday.

This one was delicious!

The ticket included some food and a hot drink (very nice touch), but the money would be donated to the local Whisky Museum. Most of the stands belong to small independent companies, among which Dramfool, Murray McDavid, Lady of the Glen, Moffat distillery (we finally tried their newmake spirit: definitely different from most, way less fruity and way more crème-caramel-like notes), Cabrach distillery (soon to be opened). An exception was Angus Dundee distillers, pouring both Glencadam and Tomintoul – Gianluigi could finally try the Tomintoul 14y we’d bought two days before. We also got a sample of Glencadam 18y to take home, such a delicious dram! Overall, we really enjoyed this event and the relaxed atmosphere, we’ll definitely book again if we go back to the Spirit of Speyside next year.

Wee distilleries at the Whisky Fair…Moffat!

Around 1.30pm (late) we left the fair, and we drove to our next destination: Auchroisk distillery. Google made us go through some backroads but didn’t realise there were some detours due to roadworks, so what was late became very late, and we parked exactly when the tour was supposed to start. Fortunately, a member of staff was waiting for us (and other latecomers), and walked us where the tour was about to start. The tour was given by Debbie, the site manager, and Stephen, an operator, and as a first thing they gave us a vest and a hard-hat: safety first!

Ready? Ready.

The Auchroisk distillery is relatively recent, they started building it in 1972 and the first mash was done in 1974, so ‘just’ 50 years ago! It looks more modern than most distilleries indeed, and the vanilla-coloured building almost gives it a mediterranean/hispanic twist (we realise this might a bit of a stretch…). The name, which means red stream, was taken from the nearby farm, which was bought to get access to the well. The name was (and is) so hard to pronounce that the whisky got called the Singleton, before Diageo decided to reassign this brand to the Dufftown, Glendullan and Glen Ord distilleries. Obscure to many, we knew the distillery from early days thanks to tastings at the Scotch Malt Whisky Society, but we didn’t know it is actually a big one (almost 6 million litre of pure alcohol per annum capacity!).

“Only” 50 years old.

Their weekly barley intake is around 312-330 tons, split in 10 loads, currently mostly Diablo and Lauriet varieties (and another one we couldn’t quite get). Unlike many distilleries, the grist split (grit/husk/flour) they get from the big red mill (not sure if a Porteus, but they didn’t mention it so…) is not the usual 70/20/10, as they aim for a higher share of flour to get more starches. They mash 12.5 tons of grist, initially with 47,000 litres of water at 63.5°C for about 45 minutes. Then, 25,000 litres of wort is pumped out, and the water temperature is increased to absorb more sugars until 78°C for 2.5-3 hours. They have 8 stainless steel washbacks, where the wort is moved while cooled down to 17.5°C through a heat exchanger. Fermentation only lasts 46 hours (probably one of the shortest we heard so far!). The washbacks are quite big, 52,200 litres, and they use 250l of yeast per mash. The wash is then distilled first in one of the four 13,000-litre wash stills, and then in a 7,000-litre spirit still (all heated with steam coils, steam obtained from a biodiesel boiler). The spirit cut from the second distillation is from 75.5% to 65%.

That’s a big still room.

This part is quite similar to many other Diageo distillery. However, on top of such big production site, they also have a filling station facility that served many distilleries located in the North of Scotland (not only Diageo ones). This facility and cask storage (we didn’t quite get the number though) is really huge: a team of 42 people fills about 3,000 cask per day, at a filling strength between 63% and 68% depending on the product destination.

Part of production we don’t see very often.

Debbie opened the doors of a warehouse, and we couldn’t help but notice the number of casks from ghost distilleries that we lost throughout the years: Pittyvaich, Glen Mhor, Lochside, Glenesk, Millburn, Linlithgow, Imperial, Banff, Dallas Dhu, Rosebank, Convalmore, as well as their second ever cask and a 1984 (Gianluigi’s birth year) Cragganmore! We really do hope those malts won’t end up in the Johnnie Walker Blue Ghost shenanigans…but probably we won’t be able to try them anyway.

This is old…said the old lady.
This is old…said the old man.

After this, we were walked to the main offices for the tasting. They offered 3x10ml drams, quite stingy in the face of the 80 quid tour price (unlike last year, this time there was no welcome cocktail). Anyway, we started with the Flora and Fauna Auchroisk 10y: a very delicious single malt, one of the best from that range in our opinion, and solid despite the 43% (mostly from refill ex-bourbon casks). The second dram was a cask sample, 14y from an ex-bourbon cask (51.9%), produced in a period when they were aiming for a “grassy” spirit. Finally, a 20y from the Diageo Special Release 2010 (58.1%), from European oak casks. The middle one was the winner for us, but they were all delicious.

A tasty but stingy tasting.

Again, as last year, Diageo distilleries surprised us for the incredible facilities they have, and for the knowledge and enthusiasm of their staff. And their willingness to show around whisky nerds like us, and the tasty spirit they produce. Such a shame the company doesn’t seem to care much – should we consider ourselves lucky to be able to visit a normally closed distillery for £80? We’ll leave this one with you.

After this, we slowly drove (well, Teresa did…) home, while Gianluigi depleted his stock of gummy candies. Another Spirit of Speyside under our belt, such a great festival! Different to last year, this time we also attended some non-distillery related events, which really improved our enjoyment of the festival overall – we still did a lot of things, but it didn’t feel rushed as last year. We’ll see whether we’re able to come up with an even better plan for next year.

Until next time, slainte!


Auchroisk Tour and Tasting

Price: £80.00 pp (Spirit of Speyside 2024)

Duration: 2hr

Tasting: 3x10ml drams, Auchroisk 10 (43%, Flora and Fauna), cask sample 14y (ex-bourbon cask, 51.9%), 20y from the Diageo Special Release 2010 (European oak casks, 58.1%)

Target: whisky geeks

Value for money: just OK

Highlights: the filling facility and the warehouse

Recommended: yes if you’re a whisky nerd

Link: https://tickets.spiritofspeyside.com/sales/events/2024-festival/auchroisk-distillery-tour


Author: Dramming Around

A pretend-to-be-young Italian couple on a quest to discover whisk(e)y distilleries and their golden nectar