#45.2 Stepping over the (Highland) line!

Back in the Lowlands

 

TL; DR: After Glengoyne distillery, we headed down back to the Lowlands. First Dumbarton, then Auchentoshan. We had a very in-depth tour, which was great, and we could appreciate every bit of their unique triple distillation process. Worth the money, just a shame the drams were basic. 

(missed Part 1?)

As we came out Glengoyne distillery, we definitely needed some food. Fortunately, we had a couple of sandwiches we got earlier at the Turnip the Beat cafe, quite delicious ones, which we devoured in the Glengoyne visitors parking lot (thus, already in the Lowlands). We soon left though, heading first towards Loch Lomond, and then south. We had a few hours to spare, so we went to Dumbarton, which weโ€™d never visited before.

Dumbarton used to be home to the namesake grain distillery, and (on the same site) the Inverleven single malt distillery. Both distilleries started producing in 1938, Inverleven was then closed in 1991 and Dumbarton in 2002. Today there is a housing development on the site, which kept some of the red brick buildings. Other than that, the only remaining signs of this town whisky history are the massive warehouses on the road to Glasgow. We parked at the bottom of the Dumbarton Rock, a huge volcanic plug with a castle on top of it (you guessed it, the Dumbarton Castle). Unfortunately, the castle was closed due to illness (!!!), so we only took a short stroll in the garden below the rock, near the estuary of the river Leven, and then got a coffee and a light bite in town.

The coffee break was longer than we thought, so we had to sprint to Auchentoshan distillery right away. We got there at the exact minute the tour was starting (although weโ€™d called them to warn we could be late). Our guide was Anya, who started the tour with some history: the distillery was founded in 1817 (licensed in 1823), and the name means the โ€œcorner of the fieldโ€, referring to where the barley was initially harvested. As a matter of fact, there used to be a farm on site since the 1500s.

Moving to production, for the mashing they use 7 tons of barley sourced from the big maltsters (Baird, Simpson and Crisp), which goes into a semi-Lauter mashtun with the usual three waters at increasing temperature. Anya told us theyโ€™d just replaced a manual scale with an electronic one, but apparently the new scale needs recalibrating so often that the time savings are not substantial: not all trials go well, we guess. After mashing, the sugary wort is moved to one of the nine washbacks (four made of Oregon pine, five of stainless steel), for a 70h fermentation.

Semi-Lauter mashtun at work.

One of the peculiarities of Auchentoshan is their triple distillation, a practice that was once common in the Lowlands distilleries, but gradually disappeared. Now other distilleries we visited do some triple distilled runs at times (Benriach, Benromach, Sprinbgank/Hazelburn, Glengyle), but Auchentoshan remained the only one doing it regularly, before the very recent reopening of Rosebank distillery, in Falkirk. The wash still can hold 17,500 litres, the intermediate 8,200 litres and the spirit still 11,500 litres. Anya described the process well, but it was also good to have, right in front of the stills, a scheme describing everything in detail โ€“ it made it more intuitive. Being triple distilled, the spirit has a higher abv than usual: they take a cut between 82.6% and 80%, average 81%.

After the still room, Anya walked us into the warehouse, where she explained the maturation process while letting us look at different cask types. Casking and blending donโ€™t happen on site, but in Springburn, where the other Suntory facilities are located.

Finally, we went back to the distillery for the tasting, in the same tasting room/bar where we had our tasting back in 2021, above the visitor centre entrance and shop. This time the tasting was not so good – we got a dram of the American Oak (40%, non-age statement, apparently mostly 6y, with some 5y, whisky) and of the 12y (40%), that is, the two most basic expressions. The wee mug they gave us to take home, instead of the usual gleincarn, was a very nice touch, though. We get that this was the entry level tour, but it wouldnโ€™t have costed them much to replace the American Oak with another more โ€˜advancedโ€™ expression: in the shop they have both Bartenderโ€™s Malt limited editions, batch 01 (47%) and 2 (50%), the Sauvignon Blanc cask finish (47%), the travel retail range and a couple of distillery exclusive bottlings (see below), so plenty of options (in theory). Fortunately, at the shop they gave us a wee taste of one of the distillery exclusives, a delicious 9y sherry matured whisky, from an Oloroso cask (59.7%).

Two drams and a wee mug.

At first, we were not sure whether it was a good idea to do the basic tour, but in the end Anya was a great host: very clear and precise when describing the production process of this very unique distillery, she really made our day, so we were happy that we’d decided to go for it. As we said, the dram selection could have been better (yes, in this respect we could have opted for a different โ€˜experienceโ€™), but this has nothing to do with the guide.

Stay tuned for more whisky action, some smoky stuff coming soonโ€ฆUntil then, slainte!


Auchentoshan Origin Tour

Price: ยฃ18.00 pp (June 2024)

Duration: 1hr

Tasting: 2 drams, Auchentoshan American Oak (40%) and 12y (40%), plus a complimentary mini-mug

Distillery Exclusives: Auchentoshan hand-bottled  distillery 9y Oloroso cask (59.7%, distilled 22/10/14, bottled 1/6/24, ยฃ90/30 for 70/20cl) and 22y Oloroso cask (56.2%, distilled 15/10/02, ยฃ250 for 70cl)

Target: tourists and casual drinkers

Value for money: good

Highlights: the triple distillation process showcase

Recommended: yes

Link: https://www.auchentoshan.com/


#45.1 Stepping over the (Highland) line!

An old acquaintance, Glengoyne

 

TL; DR: We took advantage of a free weekend to get on the van and go for a night away in the (not so wild) wilderness. The next morning, we visited Glengoyne distillery: a very nice tour, although very basic, which ended in a lovely tasting room with some very tasty drams! 

In recent months we had been quite busy, for various reasons: friends visiting, visiting friends, unfortunately work as wellโ€ฆ so, except for the Spirit of Speyside weekend, weโ€™ve not enjoyed much our van. In early June though, we had a weekend with no commitments, so wedecided to spend a night out, not too far away, in the area between Stirling, Glasgow and the Trossachs. This area sits across the Highland Line (roughly, very roughly following the Highland Boundary Fault), which historically was used to separate the taxing regime of whisky producers in the Lowlands and Highlands: we basically spent the weekend crossing it back and forth!

Weโ€™re not new to the area: back in February, we’d spent a lovely evening in Fintry, together with our friend Justine, having a meal at the Fintry Inn, followed by a few nice drams from the Uncharted Whisky Co independent bottler, which has strong ties with the pub (in our understanding, itโ€™s also their tasting room). This time, we aimed for another pub that welcomes campervans, the Pirn Inn in Balfron. The drive was uneventful, but when we got there, we realised they didnโ€™t have a kitchen: dโ€™oh! So, we had to go find food. First, we tried the Old Mill in Killearn, but it was super-busy (in part because of a beer fair they had on for the weekend). Moving on, second time charme: the Clachan Inn in Drymen. We were lucky: it was very busy, which surprised us, before realising it is on the West Highland Way, already swarmed with hikers this time of the year. They found us a table at the bar to be shared temporarily with a couple waiting for their table at the restaurant: we had a nice chat, and as the man was a dairy farmer, Gianluigi asked some questions about farms management and diseasesโ€ฆprofessional bias. After dinner, we quickly drove back to the Pirn Inn, where we had a last pint and a dram (Bunna 12 never disappoints!), before going to sleep.

An ugly glimpse of a much more beautiful spot.

In the morning, the sky was cloudy. We woke up rested, and we somehow managed to avoid midges invading the van, probably thanks to the previous night breeze. We tried to look for an open cafรจ, but we were unluckyโ€ฆ so after a stop for the loo, we drove towards our first destination: the Devilโ€™s Pulpit. The Carnock Burn goes through a very beautiful gorge, all green and brown. Youโ€™d almost expect to find something like this in a tropical jungle, rather than in the Southern Highlands (or Lowlands?). The parking spot can only take three cars (if well parked), so we left Mr Vantastic at a bigger lay-by at the cross of the A809-B834 roads, from where we had to walk no more than 10-15 minutes to find ourselves at the top of the gorge. It was very nice, although we were slightly upset by the amount of garbage found all over the place: from the lay-by, to the side of the road, and in the gorge itself: how can people be so inconsiderate?

Back to the van, it was time to drive to our next destination: Glengoyne distillery (with a brief stop at the Turnip The Beet for tasty coffee and snacks). Glengoyne is an old acquaintance , as we visited it during the pandemic years (can we say that?) in summer 2021, but at the time we couldnโ€™t tour production because of COVID19 of courseโ€ฆand the waterfall was empty too! Gianluigi had also visited it as part of a networking event after a conference he attended in Glasgow in 2018: too many people, it wasnโ€™t such a memorable experience.

We parked on the south side of the road, which together with their warehouses, is in the Lowlands: the road is the boundary, apparently. Thus, as you can guess, the distillery is in the Highlands. It is owned by Ian McLeodโ€™s Distillers, together with Tamdhu, the newly rebuilt Rosebank, and a the soon to-be-built Laggan Bay, on Islay (in our understanding they also have acquired a single malt distillery in India). As we came out the parking, a hostess pointed us to the check-in for the tour, which started a few minutes earlier in the courtyard. Our tour guide was Diane, โ€œfae Glasgowโ€, and the other two people on the tour were a father-and-son couple from Canada.

In a small exposition room, Diane explained us that the distillery has always been Scottish owned since its foundation and licensing in 1833. It must be one of the few among the old ones, we reckon. Glengoyne means โ€œthe valley of the geeseโ€, and it is located in Dumgoyne (โ€œthe hill of the geeseโ€), hence why you can find this bird on the label.

We quickly moved to production, which is fairly standard. First, Diane showed us a destoner dating back to 1912 and the mill, which we couldnโ€™t take a picture of. The barley varieties they use are mainly Sassy and Lauriet, although one week a year they use Golden Promise, all coming from the East of Scotland.

A shiny mashtun.

The mashtun has a copper lid, and it takes 16,000 litres of water at 63.5ยฐC for the first water, followed by the usual two waters at higher temperatures to maximise the sugar absorption during mashing. Fermentation takes place in one of the six Douglas Fir wood washbacks and lasts about 56 hours, a rather short one. The newmake spirit is obtained after a usual double-distillation process, first in a wash still (16,000 litres), to get to ~20% abv (from their 8-9% wash) and then in one of the two spirit stills (5,000 litres each). Their cut points for the spirit run (what it is going into casks) are generally from 75% to 65%, and the cut is taken only after 3-5 minutes of foreshots.

After production, we visited Warehouse 1, next to the production building (not on the other side of the road): quite small, they mostly made a maturation exhibition out of it, where transparent bottles containing spirit and whisky at different stages of maturation are showed, together with the different types of casks and wood. A very interesting bit for more inexperienced visitors. Diane soon after walked us to the Managerโ€™s Cottage, where there is a very nice and relaxing tasting space, with sofas, comfy chairs and fireplaces (they were off while we were there, otherwise we could have easily taken a nap).

The tasting was ready for us: 3 drams from the core range paired with one chocolate each, from the Highland Chocolatier. First off, the 12y, bottled at 43% and matured in a combination of first-fill European oak (ex-sherry we thinkโ€ฆ20% of the total), first fill American oak ex-bourbon (20%), and not better specified refill casks (60%). Quite nice and bright. The second dram was the 18y, again bottled at 43%, but with a different composition: less refill (50%) and ex-bourbon (15%) casks, and more first-fill European oak casks (35%). This brought definitely more dark-fruity notes and richness, although not as rich and decadent as the last dram. This was a 21y, fully matured in first-fill European oak casks.

Overall the visit was nice, geared towards less whisky knowledgeable visitors though. The best part was the tasting – while we were a bit sceptical because of the low abv, these were delicious and not watery at all. A shame their prices are a bit higher than expected (in particular in the shop, and even taking into account the discount for visitors doing a tour or a tasting), which is probably the main reason we havenโ€™t connected so much with this distillery so far. However, the velvety and soothing quality of these drams was not lost on us, and we think they are perfect to share with family and friends less used to higher strength drams than us. So who knows, maybe one coming in the future?

Stay tuned for the rest of our trip, this time definitely below the Highland line! Until then, slainte!


Glengoyne Collection Tour and Tasting

Price: ยฃ35.00 pp (June 2024, plus ยฃ3.50 booking fee per transaction)

Duration: 1hr 30min

Tasting:3 drams, Glengoyne 12 (43%), Glengoyne 18 (43%) and Glengoyne 21 (43%)

Highlights: the tasting room

Distillery exclusive: Glengoyne Distillery Cask, ex-Port, 14y (56%, distilled 14/04/2010, ยฃ200…!)

Target: the whisky curious

Value for money: good

Recommended: yes

Link: https://www.glengoyne.com/


#44.3 Spirited in Speyside

From Ben Rinnes to Tomintoul

 

TL; DR: Another sunny day in Speyside, so we finally did what weโ€™d wanted to do for a long time: climb Ben Rinnes! In the afternoon we visited Tomintoul, attending a Spirit of Speyside tour and (quite generous) tasting. We were not very familiar with this malt, which turned out to be a very solid and sweet Speysider!

(missed Part 2/Part 1?)

We woke up well rested, under the trees and with birds chirping all around us. We had breakfast in our van: coffee, yogurt, fruits, and we indulged in a couple of cookies as well. Again, it was a magnificent sunny day, so we could go ahead with our plan: go for a walk before starting our whisky activities.

Weโ€™d decided to climb Ben Rinnes, the hill in the middle of Speyside, whose slopes provide water to many distilleries around it. It was not a long walk, less than 8km, but it was quite steep, a 550-metre ascent in total from the parking lot to the top of the hill. We started early, around 8.30am, when not many others were hiking (we only met about 4-5 people while going up). The climb started quite uphill right away, and the ascent was interrupted by a couple of short plateaus, before the last climb of more than 300 metres.

Once on top, though, we got rewarded, as the view is quite amazing. As were going up, on our left, we spotted a distillery very close to the top โ€“ we guessed Benrinnes but we were wrong, it was Allt aโ€™Bhainne. Others could be seen (well, mostly the vapours) once on the top. Our plans to have a snack at the top were ruined by the strong wind, so we quickly started descending back to the parking lot. We bumped into a lot of people, probably because of the time, although the sky was clouded when we got to the van. On the Walk Highlands website the hike (back and forth) was estimated around 3-4 hours, but it took us only 2, so we had some spare time!

Back in the van, we started looking for a place for coffee and a bite, possibly in the direction of our next destination, Tomintoul. We were unlucky at first: some cafes were still closed until summer, some were opening later in the day. We were saved by Bike Glenlivet, a cafรจ inside an outdoor centre, less than 10 minutes past the distillery. There we could enjoy a sandwich and, past midday, a warm soup.

We arrived at Tomintoul distillery a few minutes early, just the time to park, take some photos and check in. The distillery is tucked at the bottom of a woody hill, along the road, with another hill in front of it: we were told later that during the heather flowering season it becomes all purple, which is why purple is one of the flag colours.

The visitor centre actually consists in a room with the shop and a big table for tastings. Fun fact: in the room there is also a giant bottle (over 100 litres!) of Tomintoul 14: the Guinness World Record holder for biggest whisky bottle, in our understanding. The distillery is usually open to public, but their regular tours are on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, making it a bit hard to schedule a visit. This was one of the reasons to visit them during the Spirit of Speyside, the other being that we were not very familiar with their whisky, so an enhanced event could have made us know them betterโ€ฆand it did, indeed!

Teresa losing the ‘who’s the tallest’ contest again.

The tour was hosted by Rob, the distillery manager, and Iain, the master blender who gave us a dram of their 16yr (40%abv), one of their flagship expressions. We always appreciate the tours where they give you a dram at the beginning, well done! The distillery was founded in 1964, so it is โ€œyoungโ€ compared to their peers, and they produce unpeated (marketed as Tomintoul), lightly peated (peated Tomintoul) and heavily peated (Old Ballantruan) single malt. The latter takes name from the spring where they source water. The peated run lasts about 6 weeks per year, much less compared to the 40 weeks of the unpeated one. They use Crisp malt, which is stored in 8 malt bins before processing through a dresser and the classic Porteus mill. The grist is then moved 12.2 tons at a time to the mashtun, with 48,000 litres of water at 65ยฐC, followed by the usual two other waters at increasing temperature, to maximise the sugar intake.

Once the wort (clear after the first water, cloudier after the second) is cooled down to 20ยฐC, it is moved to one of the 6 washbacks, where they add solid distillersโ€™ yeast. Fermentation lasts about 60 hours, then the wash is distilled in one of the two wash stills, and then again in one of the spirit stills. Cut points are usually from 72% to 61.8%, and it takes more or less two hours. Originally the distillery had only two stills, the second pair was added in 1974. Rob showed us one of the byproducts of the first distillation, a syrup with almost 0% alcohol, which is sold to farmers.

Tall stills.

Still in the still room (pun sort of intended), Iain joined us again, this time to give us a dram of the 25yr (43%), a very sweet and delicious one! We then visited one of the warehouses, a racked one (the most common from the distilleries built in that era). They can store up to 150,000 casks on site, while the rest is shipped to the main site in the Lowlands. There, Iain demonstrated us the use of a (leaky!) copper dog, although the whisky inside it came from a bottle, not straight from a cask: a single cask from a Bordeaux wine barrique, vintage 2008 (14yr), bottled at 60.7%.

A 25yr dram after visiting the still room. Nice surprise!

We headed back to the visitor centre for the remainder of the tasting: first, a couple of Madeira matured expressions, a 15yr limited release (46%) and a single hogshead from 1998, bottled in 2022 at 24 years of age (50.2%). The next dram was their Cigar Malt, a quite delicious sherry cask matured expression, lightly peated, and very solid despite the 43% strength (a shame it was a bit pricey). We finished with an Old Ballantruan from the core range: the 15yr (the other two are the non-age statement and the 10yr, all bottled at 50%): a sweet and smoky dram. At that point, a group of Spanish who were on the tour (one of them was a London-based employee of Angus-Dundee, the distillery owners) brought out some Jamon Iberico, which paired perfectly with the last two drams!

We left the distillery very happy (not just because of the drams, Gianluigi was dry!), taking one of their bottle with us: as most of their core range is bottled at 40% or 43% and the limited expressions were a bit pricey, the perfect one for was the 14yr: not only unchill-filtered and bottled at 46%, but also from ex-bourbon casks, which in our opinion is the best type of cask to grasp the distillery character.

We arrived at our destination, the Parkmore Cottage and Camping in Dufftown, where our friend Justine (from Kask Whisky) was waiting for us. We had a beer, dinner and a few drams with her, to conclude the day on a high. And what a great day was that, first the climb to Ben Rinnes, and then Tomintoul. With 7 drams their tour was one of the most generous as well (compared to higher priced tours with less than half of the dramsโ€ฆ), giving us a chance to fully appreciate the potential of their very solid and fruity (gentle, as they like saying) whisky.

Stay tuned to know about our day at another Speyside whisky distilleryโ€ฆuntil then, slainte!


Tomintoul Distillery: Behind the Scenes Tour and Tasting

Price: ยฃ70.00 pp (Spirit of Speyside 2024)

Duration: 2hrs (actually, almost 3!)

Tasting: Tomintoul 16yr (40%), Tomintoul 25yr (43%), single cask from a Bordeaux wine barrique (2008, 14yr, 60.7%), Madeira 15yr limited release (46%), Madeira single hogshead (1998, 24 yr, 50.2%), Cigar Malt (43%), 15yr Old Ballantruan (50%)

Target: whisky geeks

Value for money: very good!

Highlights: the tasting (including drams during the tour)

Recommended: yes

Link: https://tours.tomintoulwhisky.com/


#44.2 Spirited in Speyside

A walk to Craigellachie

 

TL; DR: After Kininvie and a very nice walk, it was time for Craigellachie distillery, the โ€˜queen of worm tubsโ€™! Weโ€™d been waiting over 4 years to visit it, we finally made it and it didnโ€™t disappoint. A great tour with very knowledgeable staff, for a very reasonable price (other producers, take note!)

(missed Part 1?)

As the tour at Kininvie came to an end, it was time to move to our next destination for the day. It was a gorgeous day, probably one of the best (if not the best) we had in all our visits in Speyside (so much better than the dreaded August โ€™21, when it was so wet that we couldnโ€™t ignite the self-igniting charcoal to grill). The weather so was nice and warm that we both ended up in short sleeves – perfect for our walk back to Craigellachie along the Old Speyside Railway. We knew the path, itโ€™s where we ran the Dramathon Half Dram (half-marathon) in 2022 (and 2021), and where weโ€™ll hopefully run the Wee Dram (10k) later this year. The walk turned out to be over 6 km, on a peaceful path surrounded by vegetation and buzzing insectsโ€ฆa very refreshing and enjoyable moment, in particular considering the poor spring we had this year (and still having at the time of writing).

We arrived at Craigellachie distillery only a few minutes early, just the time to take a few photos in front of the distillery. In the past two years Teresa visited a couple of distilleries that Gianluigi hasnโ€™t (Liberties in Dublin and Copper Rivet in England), while Gianluigi only visited one that Teresa hasnโ€™t (Glenora in Canada), so we both celebrated our personal 100th distillery in separate occasions (Aberargie for Teresa, Kininvie for Gianluigi). Craigellachie though, was our 100th distillery visit together, yay! Next target: 100th Scottish distillery, which will hopefully happen in 2025โ€ฆmaybe?

The distillery is unmissable, as it is right on the road from Craigellachie to Dufftown. They donโ€™t have a visitor centre, something we learned back in 2019 when we visited a sister distillery, Aberfeldy. They are both owned by Dewarโ€™s/Bacardi, together with Royal Brackla, Aultmore, and Macduff (whisky marketed as Deveron/Glen Deveron). The distillery was built in 1891, during the pre-Pattinson crash whisky boom, and expanded in 1964, while malting stopped in 1968.

Back to today, the tour was given by Stephen, the distillery manager, together with Matthew (brand ambassador) and Gary (cask supply specialist, and โ€œgrainmanโ€), a fun dynamic trio. In the mill room (hosting a classic Porteus installed in 1964), they told us they mostly use Lauriet barley, never peated, with the usual grist split (10% flour, 70% grit and 20% husk). The mashtun is more recent, as it was replaced in 2001. They work 24/7, and they do 20 mashes per week, each one lasting 6h, aiming for a clear wort. They only close for 3 weeks in the summer to clean-up everything. The washbacks are made of Siberian larch, installed in the 60s, and they use Laland as yeast strain (not to be confused with La-la-land), with fermentation lasting about 60h. They used to have direct fire stills, but they were replaced in the 60s with steam coil ones, as many other distilleries.

After the stillroom, they showed us one of their most iconic feature: the worm tub condensers! This is an old way of condensing the spirit, as simple as โ€œa worm in a tubโ€, as they jokingly pointed out. Compared to the more โ€œmodernโ€ tube and shells (well, still over 100-year old), the reduced contact between the copper and the spirit should result in a heavier spirit, loved by many. Craigellachie is one of the best examples of this feature, together with Mortlach, but there are many other distilleries we visited that have worm tubs: Speyburn, Oban, Edradour, Cragganmore, Springbank (which uses a mix, except for Longrow, which is 100% worm tub condenser) and even some newer distilleries, notably Ardnahoe on Islay and Ballindalloch in Speyside. Itโ€™s a very fascinating topic, and if you want to know more there is a recent Aquavitae vPub focusing on this.

After the production, it was time for the tasting, which was held in a shed, previously a space for in-house cooperage. The line-up was quite comprehensive, considering we only paid 20 quid (!!!) for the whole thing. We started with the distillery flagship, the Craigellachie 13 (46% abv), matured in a combination of ex-bourbon and ex-sherry casks: having tried it years ago, weโ€™d forgotten how good it is! We then tried a more recent bottling, again 13 years old (46%), but finished in Bas-Armagnac casks, less sherry influence, brighter and super fruity. Then, a treat, the 19yr (again 46%), very well balanced and delicious, matured in ex-bourbon casks, and finished in 1st fill both ex-bourbon and ex-sherry casks. Finally, they also let us try their Spirit of Speyside 2024 exclusive: cask strength (54.9%), vintage 2005 (so 18-19yr), finished for over 3 years in red wine casks. The jump in ABV was there, but also in flavour compared to the other (still very tasty) drams.

As the tasting ended, we went to the office/pop-up shop to pick up a โ€œsouvenirโ€, and we slowly walked back towards the van, not before stopping at the Craigellachie Hotel. Unfortunately, the whisky bar was busy with a tasting, so we just had a half-pint at the bar downstairs, before finally heading to the van where we had dinner and spent the night.

What a day, Kininvie first (making 4/6 of the Dufftown distilleries for usโ€ฆ Glendullan and Dufftown, some day we will come!), and then this great tour at the โ€˜queen of worm tubsโ€™ distillery! Also, kudos to Dewarโ€™s: not only the team that took us around was super knowledgeable and very nice, they also gave us a very nice tasting for a very reasonable price, unlike some other producers.

Stay tuned for the rest of our Spirit of Speyside trip, still 3 days (and 3 distilleries) to go! Until then, slainte!


Craigellachie Distillery Tour

Price: ยฃ20.00 pp (Spirit of Speyside 2024)

Duration: 1hr (a bit more actually)

Tasting: 4 drams, Craigellachie 13y (46%), 13y Bas-Armagnac finish (46%), 19y (46%) and Spirit of Speyside 2024 Edition (54.9%)

Target: whisky curious and nerds

Value for money: extremely good!

Highlights: the worm tubs, of course!

Recommended: yes

Link: https://www.dewars.com/


#44.1 Spirited in Speyside

Catching up Kininvie

 

TL; DR: May again, which means Spirit of Speyside again! And again, we tried to bag as many distillery tours as we could. First off, the mysterious Kininvie: hidden behind their stablemate Balvenie, itโ€™s a treasure to be foundโ€ฆand weโ€™ll have a pleasant surprise too! 

In the last couple of years, the Spirit of Speyside has become one of the unmissable events for us. Itโ€™s a festival, but it doesnโ€™t feel like one, probably because of the wide area the events are spread around: the whole of Speyside! There are so many events: fairs, walks, tastings, tours, even runs! Of course, for us it is a good opportunity to visit distilleries that are normally closed to public. In 2023 we managed to visit โ€œa fewโ€, this year we tried to do the same.

This year we made our long weekend a wee bit shorter: from Thursday to Sunday only, skipping the Wednesday and the Monday. It was enough, because, unlike last year, we managed to book all the distilleries we wanted to visit over 4 days! The only ones we decided to pass on were Glen Keith (the event is insanely expensive, like  north of ยฃ250โ€ฆ yes, it included Strathisla, which we visited twice already, but still a brainfart) and Glenglassaugh (the event was pricey, ยฃ200, but included visits at Benriach and Glendronach too, transport and lunchโ€ฆnot a bad deal, but still too much considering all the other visits weโ€™d planned).

The first distillery we hit this year was Kininvie, in Dufftown. It is owned by W. M. Grants, like Glenfiddich and Balvenie. Actually, weโ€™d already visited most of the distillery during our fantastic tour of Balvenie in 2021, with James. Mash-tun and washbacks are indeed in the same building as Balvenieโ€™s ones, and the mill is actually the same! This time though, we will see everything about Kininvie!

Back to the trip, we left early in the morning, as the tour was at 11am (but also to avoid the silly Edinburghโ€™s rush hour trafficโ€ฆsilly because given the size of the city, it shouldnโ€™t be like that). We also left a bit earlier because weโ€™d planned to leave the van in Craigellachie, get the bus to Dufftown, walk back to Craigellachie after the tour. Everything went according to plan, except that the bus from Craigellachie to Dufftown was, like, over 20 minutes late. No problem though, we were still able to get there in time for our tour, and in the meanwhile we had time to chat to our friend Graham Fraser, who was taking the same bus to go to Glenfiddich instead. He is a fellow vPub barfly and also a โ€œdrammer aroundโ€ like us, but more experienced, with over a 100 Scottish distilleries under his belt: impressive!

After checking in at the Balvenie visitor centre, we had a big surprise: Paul (who we met at Linkwood last year) has recently moved to Balvenie and Kininvie as production manager, and would give us the tour! He is a super nice guy, and thanks to his impressive career in whisky, also extremely knowledgeable, so we were super happy about that!

The history of Kininvie is peculiar: it was built in 1990 to supply malt for blends (Grantโ€™s and later Monkey Shoulder), instead of Glenfiddich and Balvenie, kept to be bottled as single malts. They started producing on the 4th of July of the same year, and nowadays the equipment is also used to experiment with barley and yeast strains, including running a rye campaign every year before the silent season: Paul was very excited about the freedom to experiment.

The tour started with a visit of the Balvenie malting floor and kiln, which was under repair waiting for some replacement parts. After a walk in the kiln, we moved to the main production building with mill, mash-tuns and washbacks. On average they do up to 25 mashes per week, using 240 tons of barley. When they donโ€™t experiment, the barley strains used at the moment are Sassie or a mix of Sassie and Diablo, which have mostly replaced Lauriet. The barley is mashed with the usual three waters at increasing temperatures (65, 75 and 85C). Fermentation takes place in one of the 10 wooden washbacks, next door to the Balvenieโ€™s ones. They use Mauri yeast and go for either a short fermentation (60h) to get a cereal-y cloudy wort, or a long one (over 70h) to obtain a lighter and fruitier one: the one we tried was very sweet, and Teresa picked up notes of white chocolate.

Finally, itโ€™s time to visit the still room, located in a hidden (hence the name of the tour) dedicated building behind Balvenie. They have three triples of stills (with enough space for a fourth, in case of expansion), for a total of nine. Each triplet works as a unit, with one big wash still for the first distillation and two smaller spirit stills for the second one. The cut points are very variable depending on what they are producing, but usually the second distillation takes 10 hours: 1.5 to heat up, 4.5 for heads and tails and 3 for the heart run. Once at the spirit safe (the piece of equipment used to control the cut points of the distillation run), we could try some newmake spirit, at a whooping abv of 70%! A very nice touch!

After that, we moved to one of their massive racked warehouses next door, where after a brief, nerdy chat with the warehouse manager George, we tried some drams. Kininvie releases are very rare: the only one weโ€™d tried previously was during an online event in 2020, as part of the Belfast Whisky Week: the KVSM001, a 5yr triple distilled single malt matured in ex-bourbon casks. We had like it back then, so we were now quite excited and curious about the tasting at the distillery. We started with a โ€œsingle distillery blendโ€, KVSB003: a vatting of single malt (matured in European oak casks) and single grain (matured in virgin American oak) produced at the same distillery, 4yr and bottled at 48.2% abv. The second one was a component of this blend, the single grain KVSG002: it is actually a rye whisky (although we think it wouldnโ€™t comply with the American definition of โ€œrye whiskeyโ€ because the rye part was less than 51% of the mashbill, only 1 ton malted rye vs. 8.6 ton malted barley), matured in virgin American oak, distilled in 2015 and bottled in 2019 at 47.8%. These drams were both quite interesting, but we recently find rye whisky a bit too herbaceous, particularly the ones produced in Scotland and Europe. Nonetheless, we were quite excited because the labels on the bottles provided a great deal of information, a real deal for us whisky nerds!

We really appreciate such transparency!
So many details!

We then moved to a single malt, a 23yr distilled in 1991 from a combination of hogshead and sherry butts, bottled at 42.6% (a bit weak to our palate, but nicely tropical and balanced). Finally, the gem was the cask sample: a 10-year single malt from a first refill Sherry butt at 68.4% (the cask filling strength was 70.3% abv!!!): it definitely needed water, but once it opened up it was really fantastic!

About to pour something really delicious.

And with this visit, the Spirit of Speyside festival was officially underway, starting with a bang! Like we noted last year, the staff were so happy to show us around, truly a refreshing experience, and so nice to see Paul in his new role! But it was time to move to our second whisky โ€œadventureโ€ of the day, so we quickly left the distillery on foot.

Stay tuned for more on this. Until then, slainte!


Kininvie Hidden Distillery Tour

Price: ยฃ60.00 pp (Spirit of Speyside 2024)

Duration: 2hr

Tasting: 5 drams, Kininvie single distillery blended KVSB003 (single grain rye whisky and single malt), single grain rye whisky KVSG002, Kininvie 23y Single malt, cask sample (ex-sherry cask, 10y) and newmake spirit (for details see the descriptions above)

Target: whisky nerds

Value for money: good

Highlights: the still room

Recommended: yes

Link: https://tickets.spiritofspeyside.com/sales/events/2024-festival/kininvie-hidden-distillery-tou


#42.3 A weekend on Skye





Raasay, paradise

 

TL; DR: As we woke up on the Saturday we drove to Sconser, to take a ferry to the Isle of Raasay. We visited the distillery, where we had an amazing in-depth 3hr tour and tasting, we hiked and, the next morning, we drove around this truly amazing corner of the world. 

(missed Part 2/Part 1?)

Waking up in a place like Carbost is something else. Despite the many campervans, the morning was very quiet, and the only sounds we could hear were the waves gently crashing on the shore. After packing up the bed and before getting on the move, we walked down to the pier, to get some of the fresh (very fresh!) morning sea breeze. We left Carbost after a short stop at the public toilets in front of Talisker distillery. It didnโ€™t take long to get to Sconser, and as we were slightly early, we had time to fix ourselves a coffee with the Bialettiโ€™s moka (well, still Italians after all) before the ferry to Raasay.

It was the first time on the island for us. Although geographically close to the mainland, Raasay can only be reached from Skye. The crossing was about 20 minutes, and once there we parked at the pier, where there are also public restrooms and a 24h open waiting room. The distillery was only 10-minute walking, so we decided to just walk there and see how the day would pan out. Our plan depended on the weather: if it was nice, we would have spent the night on the island, otherwise we would have taken the last ferry. It was a glorious day, so we ended up taking the ferry the next morning.

The distillery is in Clachan, just outside Inverarish, the main village. On the way there, there is an old market/barn building, now mostly abandoned. It wonโ€™t be the first one we spot, as the current population is only about 190 people (up by 30 with respect to the 161 marked on the Raasay Single Malt bottles). At that cross we turned right, leaving the Raasay House and Hotel on the left: a huge former mansion, now a tourist centre only open in high season. The main distillery building is called the Borodale House, an old Victorian house that used to be a hotel with a pub before it was bought by the company R&B Distillers to build the distillery. Other than distillery and shop, there are also a hotel, a restaurant and a bar serving hot food until mid-afternoon.

Being the off season and a Saturday, not all tour options were available, but we found one that seemed great: the Dunnage Cask Tour, which included a tour of the distillery and the bottling plant and a warehouse tasting. As we checked in at the distillery we had a brief scare: our reservation was lost in translation, apparently someone had forgotten to mark it down. The shop manager was very cool about it though, she said there we just needed to wait a bit, and as an apology she offered us a coffee (nice touch). We waited in the bar, taking advantage of the incredible view of Skye from the big windows on a very sunny day. Gabriel, our guide, arrived about 40 minutes later (directly from home). His family moved to the island when he was a kid, and he and his brothers represent a good percentage of the 30-odd distillery workers. This is his side job, while heโ€™s studying to get a medical degree. Gianluigi wondered how his life would be different if, instead of doing chemical analyses on tomato sauce, he had worked in a distillery as a student job.

Gabriel was extremely knowledgeable, and while we visited the various stages of production in the very contained area, he provided a huge amount of information. Starting with the barley, they get 30-ton a month of it from the Kintyre peninsula, and the two strains they are using are Lauriet and Concerto. For the peated runs, they get 48ppm (part of phenols per million) barley, malted using Highland peat from the north-east of Scotland. As for the milling, their grist composition is slightly different from others, with only 9% of flour, 19% of husks, and 72% of grit. Their water source is a 60m deep borehole located behind the distillery.

Mashing happens in a big 1.1-ton stainless steel closed mashtun with the usual three waters at increasing temperature, and they aim for a cloudy worth. Linked to the 5-day production week, fermentation is between 3 and 5 days. They have six stainless steel washbacks equipped with a cooling jacket, to slow down fermentation and allow the (liquid) yeast to extract โ€œas much flavour as possibleโ€. The two stills (wash-, 5000-litre, and spirit, 3600-litre) are made by Frilli, an Italian firm from Siena (like Teeling in Ireland and Inchdairnie in Fife), and the cut they take from the second distillation is usually between 75% and 65% abv. When they do peated runs, they use the cooling jacket in the lyne arm to increase reflux and get a lightly peated spirit. The peated newmake spirit comes out at about 14ppm, which is then reduced to 7-8ppm during maturation. It was actually very informative to get to know the ppm level on the liquid, especially when many distilleries only refer to the barley specification.

The production area includes a gin still, where they run the sourced neutral grain spirit with the chosen botanicals (which, of course, we donโ€™t remember). After the production tour, we took some stairs outside the building, to get to the bottling plant, on top of the hill behind the distillery. There, Gabriel showed us the manual and automatic bottling machines, but also how lots for different markets get labelled and stored until they get shipped. Back to the main building, Gabriel took us on a jeep and drove to the warehouse.

It was the time for the tasting, but first Gabriel let us take the bungs out of the casksโ€ฆan operation that took us very long, as we are both quite clumsy, but we could finally get a taste of the yummy content. The tasting consisted of six drams, one for each component of the Raasay Single Malt, their main core expression. These whiskies are matured in ex-Rye, ex-Bordeaux red wine, and Chinquapin virgin oak casks, both unpeated and peated. We knew what to expect: during the pandemic we did an online tasting of these six components, although they were not 3-year-old yet, so technically not whisky. This time these are properly whiskies, as the vintage of the cask was 2019 for the unpeated, and 2020 for the peated ones.

We loved the peated chinquapin oak, and the unpeated ex-bordeaux and ex-rye casks – one extra confirmation that, if done properly, young whisky can be delicious too. This range is available to buy at the distillery (when we visited, not the peated ones) bottled in the Na Sia range (Gaelic for โ€œThe sixโ€). While sipping the last dram, Gabriel took us around the warehouse, and we found out that they recently started using re-fill casks (initially they used only first fill).

After the tasting we were definitely ready for some food, which we got back at the distillery while trying a nip of the bottlings available at the shop (Slaintรจ Club bottlings, Year of the Dragon and others, see below in the box).

Left the distillery, it was a very nice evening, so instead of going back to the van we decided to go for a walk to the village and then to the hill behind the distillery, Temptation Hillโ€ฆdespite the cheesy name, it was quite beautiful and very relaxing. Back at the van, we had dinner, but we soon went to bed, after such a great day.

The following morning, we decided to skip the first ferry of the day to drive around the island: we probably drove along all the possible roads, talking advantage of some breath-taking landscapes – from the very north of the Island, along the mighty Callumโ€™s Road, with a very interesting story, to the south and its the old pier (and frankly, quite too many abandoned vehiclesโ€ฆ). We finally took the ferry for Skye around midday, and from there we drove almost non-stop to Leith (well, non-stop because most cafes along the road were closedโ€ฆexpect for the Apiary in Dalwhinnie, where we had some delicious cakes).  

This was one of the best experiences we had in a while, both the distillery visit (thanks Gabriel!) and the scenery. Raasay is truly a paradise that weโ€™d like to explore more, so we really canโ€™t wait to go back for a holidayโ€ฆwell, and maybe a couple of drams too!

Until next time, slainte.


Raasay Dunnage Cask Warehouse Tour

Price: ยฃ75.00 pp (February 2024)

Duration: 2-3 hr

Tasting: 6 drams from the cask, 5y cask strength unpeated ex-Rye cask, ex-Bordeaux wine cask and ex-Chinquapin oak (virgin oak), and peated ex-Rye cask, ex-Bordeaux wine cask and ex-Chinquapin oak

Distillery Exclusive: the Na Sia range (see above), Raasay Scottish Whisky Distillery of the year 2022 (4y and 10 months, finished in Quercus humboltii Colombian oak, 50.7%), Tourism Destination of the Year Celebration (4y, finished in ex-Manzanilla casks, 52%)

Target: whisky geeks

Value for money: good

Highlights: everything

Recommended: a bit pricey but totally worth it!

Link: https://raasaydistillery.com/


#42.2 A weekend on Skye


Talisker distillery, second attempt

 

TL; DR: After the visit at Torabhaig, we drove north-west towards Carbost for the second distillery tour of the day, Talisker. A slightly less corporate experience than we expected, in a really beautiful spot. 

(missed Part 1?)

As we came out of Torabhaig distillery, the weather was slightly nicer: still no breaks in the clouds (those will come later), but at least it wasnโ€™t raining anymore. We gave ourselves just the time for couple of pictures, before quickly jumping on Mr. Vantastic and starting to drive north-west, back towards the main road. We did one stop in the very picturesque village of Isleornsay, near the sea, to visit the shop of the Gaelic Whisky company, Prร ban na Linne. It is a small independent bottler, which we learned about when a few years ago a friend gifted us a bottle of Mac Na Mara rum cask finish blended whisky. The Mac Na Mara range also also includes the expressions Classic, Madeira finish and Port finish, all bottled at 40% and non chill-filtered. They also offer another blended scotch, Tรจ Bheag (40%, non chill-filtered and high proportion of malt whisky), and the Poit Dhubh blended malt range (8y, 12y and 21y), all 43% and, again, non chill-filtered. After browsing the shop (where they also sell gin, food, and souvenirs), we took a Poit Dhubh trio miniatures (which we still have to try).

Back on the road, it didnโ€™t take us much to get to our final destination for the day: Carbost, home of Talisker distillery. We had a sound plan: park at the Carbost pier (where we could spend the night at the cost of ยฃ10.00 in the honesty box), visit the distillery and then dinner at the Old Inn.

We knew the road already, as it wasnโ€™t our first time there: weโ€™ve been there when we visited Skye in the summer of 2020, with Gianluigiโ€™s parents, during that short time window where international flights were weirdly allowed without much complication. Back then, we drove to Carbost after a stroll at the Fairy Pools, where we learned that midgies donโ€™t care for long-sleeve t-shirts. By pure coincidence, the night before weโ€™d found out that Talisker was reopening the next day, and that you could book a visit if you โ€œcalled or wrote an emailโ€. We tried to call several times, but in a typical Diageo disorganised shenanigans it turned out they were only replying to emails (with such short notice, we would have bet the other way round to be honest). So no distillery visit then, but we enjoyed anyway the view and the nice afternoon in the village, before driving back to Portree. This time, however, we are ready to rock!

We parked the van at the pier, nor far from another van (and by the time we went to sleep, eight campervans were parked there despite the sign said max 5โ€ฆguess why โ€œcampervanistasโ€ are not very welcome in some places). Next to the distillery we noted a new building, right on the shore: a wooden cottage-ish building, which would have looked more appropriate in a skiing station. Weโ€™ll later find out that it is a fairly new space, part of the visitor centre renovaions, and includes a bar and a pop-up restaurant. After the usual selfies and photos, we checked in at the visitor centre. It is quite spacious and modern, with a round fireplace in the middle of it: again, that makes you feel like in a skiing resort hotel, but itโ€™s cosy, nonetheless. In contrast, the shop area was super bright, almost looking like an airport duty free or a department store.

The guide for the day was Florian, who despite the heavily scripted tour, made lot of efforts to make it personal, with some dad jokes but also some โ€œtell-like-it-isโ€ moments. One we appreciated: โ€œโ€™made by the seaโ€™ is marketing language for โ€˜manufactured in the proximity of the seaโ€™โ€. Kudos. He gathered us around near the entrance when the time came, starting with the usual safety instructions. In spite being only February, the tour looked fully booked, which surprised us. We left the visitor centre to enter the production building. First, a โ€œdemonstrationโ€ room where Florian explained the basics of whisky distillation, showed us some peat, and where we could smell some elements associated with the most typical Talisker aromas: pepper, salt and honeycomb.

Florian also showed us the barley they use, lightly peated, mostly from the Black Isle on the east coast, and malted at Glen Ord maltings. Trucks come in with 30-tonnes of barley (which explains also the terrible state of the tarmac in Carbostโ€ฆalmost Edinburgh-worthy). Once there, the malt gets milled by Milly, a sturdy Porteus machine dating back to 1962.

We moved to the huge mashtun, where barley gets mashed with only two waters (one increasing temperature), similarly to many other Diageo distilleries. This is one of the industry practices to make whisky production more environmentally friendly. We couldnโ€™t visit the fermentation room (where fermentation lasts on average 72 hours but can be anywhere between 65 and 85 hours) because of the carbon dioxide level: first time since we started visiting distilleries, but better safe than sorry we guess. Thus, we moved straight to the very nice stillroom, equipped with two large wash stills for the first distillation, and three smaller spirit stills for the second. The cut they take from the second distillation is from 75% abv to 65%. 

They have some warehousing space on site, but we couldnโ€™t visit it, as a matter of fact Florian told us he hadnโ€™t been in there himselfโ€ฆnot too surprisingly. Anything they produce, though, is put into tankers and shipped to be moved to casks at one of the Diageoโ€™s sites in the Central Belt. We went back to the visitor centre for the tasting, in a purpose built room just behind the bar. We started with the Talisker Storm, one of their non-age statement releases, finished in wine casks: drinkable but not memorable. We then moved on to the Talisker 10, which is a very solid dram in our opinion (some might say that itโ€™s not as good as it was X years ago, but being relatively new in our whisky journey, we have no clueโ€ฆ samples welcome, in case!). We finished with a Distillery Exclusive: this range is quite interesting (not to be confused with the Distillers Edition), as (apparently) distillery staff have some freedom in deciding what to bottle, and it is usually bottled at 48% or above (and whispers says non chill-filteredโ€ฆ). In general, across the distilleries we visited, we had some very good ones (Royal Lochnagar, Lagavulin, Cardhu) and many average ones โ€“ the Talisker DE (batch 02) we tried fell into the latter category.

Before leaving the distillery, we got a couple of drams at the bar, Port Ruighe (finished in port casks) and the Distillers Edition (this one finished in Amoroso Sherry seasoned casks), both quite nice.

After the distillery, we went straight to the Old Inn, a hotel and pub just a few steps away. The pub is very nice and cosy, despite being in a very touristy spot it maintains a โ€œlocal pubโ€ atmosphere. There we met up with Tommy, Gianluigiโ€™s former bandmate who recently moved to Skye, before having dinner and retiring to the campervan after a long, nice day.

Until next time, slainte.


Talisker Distillery Tour

Price: ยฃ20.00 pp (February 2024)

Duration: 1hr 15min

Tasting: 3 drams, Talisker 10 (45.8%), Talisker Storm (wine cask finish, 45.8%) and Talisker Distillery Exclusive (48%)

Distillery Exclusives: Talisker DE (batch 02, NAS, 48%, PX-seasoned ex-bourbon and refill casks, ยฃ105.00), Bottle-your-own (9y, 54.5%, rejuvenated ex-red wine cask -STR?-, ยฃ130.00)

Target: everyone, but mostly tourists

Value for money: good

Highlights: the scenery

Recommended: if you want to tick the box, yes

Link: https://www.malts.com/en-gb/distilleries/talisker


#42.1 A weekend on Skye

From the vPub to Torabhaig

 

TL; DR: For our traditional wee February Highlands escape, this year we picked the isle of Skye. The first distillery we visited was Torabhaig โ€“ a beautiful location and an interesting tour, definitely a great start to the weekend! 

In the last few years, we started a new small โ€œtraditionโ€: a trip to the Highlands, visiting some distilleries, in February. This not only comes after the dreaded dry (past years) or half-dry and half-moderated (this year) January, but it is also a great time to go because of the low season, unlike the summer months when a mass of tourists is swarming this beautiful region. Everything is quieter and more relaxed, the way we like it, probably not coincidentally the same way we started to truly enjoy whisky. There are downsides too of course, but weโ€™ll come to these later.

In 2022, we did a daytrip to Pitlochry, to which we attached an in-depth tour at Blair Athol distillery. Last year, we went to the West Highlands, to a spot that has a place in our hearts: the Ardnamurchan peninsula. The trip included a short visit to Tobermory too (weโ€™ll let you guess which distillery we visited). This year, the original choice was Islay, but in addition to the fact that there were no campings open or โ€œofficialโ€ spots to stay with the campervan (speaking of off-season downsides), one of the four distilleries we havenโ€™t visited yet was closed (Caol Ila), so we decided to postpone. The other choice was another banger of a place that has been on our wish list for a long time: Skye! Weโ€™ve been there in the summer 2020, but because it was pandemic time, we couldnโ€™t visit any distillery.

As usual, we planned to leave in the late afternoon evening, so to be ready to get to the first distillery in the late morning the day after. However, a couple of weeks before the trip we had a very pleasant surprise: Roy, from the Aqvavitae YouTube channel, asked us if we could be part of that week vPub. It was a 6 Nations themed blind challenge, where we would sip six drams, one from each nation. It goes without saying, we would participate as the Italy representatives. It was a super fun night, we truly enjoyed the blind tasting, and we found some very interesting new drams (the Armorik 10 in particular, a proper dram). To be able to attend the online event, we booked a B&B near Fort William, as many campsites are closed in February (another downsides of off-season) and the couple that were open had mixed reviews on the WiFi quality, something we couldnโ€™t risk. In the morning, we had a huge breakfast, after which we were ready for a nice day of whisky visits!

The first distillery we hit was Torabhaig, after a spectacular drive on the A87. We arrived there 10-15 minutes in advance, so we could take some pictures (not many, as the weather was quite dire at that point). The distillery is in a very nice spot, very isolated, in the south of the island. The building was completed in January 2017, from restoring the ruins of an 1820s farmstead that in turn used stones from the nearby Caisteal Chamuis. The castle also gives the name to a blended malt sold by the independent distiller Mossburn, owner of the distillery.

The guide for the day was Lesley, who turned out to be very precise and on-point, making the basic tour very enjoyable also for whisky enthusiasts like us (the fancier tours were not available at the time, another off-season downside). Their production capacity is of about half-million litres of alcohol per annum, and their barley intake is about 28 tonnes every 10 days. It comes from Crisp on the Moray coast, and is usually 77ppm.  

After milling, mashing takes place in a copper-closed mashtun, with the usual three waters increasing in temperature. They do up to three mashes/day for a total of 17/week, after which the liquid goes into one of the eight 10,000-litre washbacks (although they fill it up to 8,000), where fermentation lasts about 72 hours. They have one pair of stills (probably the size of the B-listed building wouldnโ€™t allow more), 8,000 and 5,000 litres for respectively the wash and the spirit still. They are called Sir Ian and Lady Noble, from the couple who conceived the distillery project in the first place. From the spirit still they take a cut around 70% abv on average, and a peculiarity is that, similarly to distilleries characterised by a waxy spirit, they mix feints and low wines in the same receiving tank. Very interestingly, for two weeks a year, the two distillers are free to experiment, and these batches will make future releases.

After the production tour (where photos were not allowed), we went to the tasting room โ€“ no warehouse visit as on site they donโ€™t keep many casks because of limited space. We tried the newmake and the Allt Gleann, their second released single malt (ex-bourbon casks, 46%). Their first bottling, released in 2020, disappeared in a typical โ€œpandemic frenzyโ€. Since then, they also released a cask strength version of the Allt Gleann (61.1%, mainly ex-bourbon) and, about a month after we visited, the last of the Legacy Series, the sherried Cnoc Na Moine (46%), which we havenโ€™t tried yet.

After the tour, we went back to the shop to try a tiny sip of the Mossburn 12y, and then we had a coffee and a tasty cake at their cafรจ, before leaving towards our next stop. At the cafรจ they also sell some of their other whiskies by the dram, in particular the Mossburn range. Overall, we really liked the experience (and great value for money) and this distillery, not just because itโ€™s truly beautiful. The whisky still tastes a bit young in general (well, the few we tried at least), but we can see great things coming from them.


Torabhaig Regular Tour

Price: ยฃ12.00 pp (February 2024)

Duration: 1hr

Tasting: newmake and a dram, Torabhaig Allt Gleann (46%, ex-bourbon casks, peated)

Target: everyone

Value for money: very good

Highlights: the building and the scenery

Recommended: yes

Link: https://torabhaig.com/


#41.2 Fife Whisky Festival 2024

Inside the green distillery…Aberargie!

 

TL; DR: After another successful Fife Whisky Festival under our belt, we got to visit a new Fife distillery, Aberargie! Owned by an independent bottler company, Morrison Distillers (Carn Mor, Old Perth and Mac Talla), they have a clear plan for their whisky. They gave us a great tour, and what an amazing tasting! 

(missed Part 1?)

And here we are, after the opening dinner (!), the two Fife Whisky Festival sessions (!!) and the Sunday morning Adelphi masterclass (!!!), it was finally time for the final event: the visit to Aberargie distillery!(!!!!) Compared to other new distilleries, they are quite under the radar, although we were already aware of its existence since our first trip to Lindores in late 2021, as the distillery can be clearly seen from the road to Newburgh. It is owned by the Morrison Distillers group (formerly Morrison & Mackay), which also has connections to other distilleries, in particular Bowmore. Their malt is not on sale yet, so their main business is still that of independent bottlers. They own the Carn Mor brand, for single casks or small batches, Old Perth, a fully sherry-matured blended malt (coming in different configurations) and the recent Mac-Talla, a range of Islay single malts but from undisclosed distilleries (they were very adamant about not saying from which one). 

We were welcomed by Greame, head of production, and Thomas, the brand ambassador who was at the festival the day before. Thomas told us that we were the first visitors ever: what an honour! The site buildings include an office/bottling hall, the production (where we headed) and of course the warehouses. Inside, Maree, brand manager, and David from production were waiting for us in a meeting room. Tasting mats had already been prepared, with four โ€œOld Perthโ€ marked spots, and four โ€œMac-Tallaโ€ ones. Once everyone took their seat, Greame started explaining the history of the company, which used to focus on fruit liqueurs, and talked about their connections to Bowmore, Auchentoshan and Glen Garioch. The distillery started operating in 2017, and barley is sourced from their own surrounding farm. Itโ€™s a farm-to-bottle site, except for malting that is done at Simpson. During this chat, we started with the tasting: first, an 8y cask sample destined to become part of a bottling from the Old Perth range, fully matured in ex-Oloroso casks, and reduced to 48% abv. The second dram was from the same (undisclosed) distillery, same age, same abv, but distilled in a different way (apparently this distillery has both stainless steel and copper condensers) and fully matured in an ex-PX cask. The third sample was the Old Perth 12y (46%, chill-filtered, natural colour), one of the three core range expressions (the others being the Original, NAS, and the cask strength). 

At this point, the group was split in two for the tour of the distillery. We were in the second group, with David and Thomas. As usual, we started with barley storage and milling; the mill is a modern one, near the two malt bins with a capacity of 28 tons, and it can process batches of 2 tons. Almost all the whisky they produced so far is unpeated, and they almost uniquely used Golden Promise barley. They aim for 9 mashes per week in their semi-Leuter mashtun, collecting the sugars through the usual 3 waters at increasing temperatures. They recently increased the number of washbacks, from 6 to 9, all stainless steel, where fermentation takes from 3 to 6 days and it is ignited by 20 kg of dried yeast. They have two stills, a 10,000-litre wash still and a 7,500-litre spirit still, both using steam coils as heat source. They collect the heart of the distillation from 74% to 60.5%abv, one of the largest cuts we heard of. Because they do a 5-week production, their capacity is currently around 250,000 litres of alcohol per annum.

The two groups were then reunited in the courtyard, just before getting inside the racked warehouse. There, they have temporary tanks where the spirit (both theirs and the sourced one) is kept before being casked. Itโ€™s quite a big operation, which made sense considering the availability of bottles from their independent bottler side. Still in the warehouse, we could spot a number of distilleriesโ€™ names and different types of casks. We walked a bit more inside, until the point where seven big butts were on display: contrary to most of the current sherry casks, which are seasoned for the whisky industry, these were bodega casks, which were actually used in sherry production for decades. Theyโ€™d originally acquired ten, but only seven survived, and they are used to put to rest the whisky that ends up into the non-aged Old Perth (Original and Cask strength expressions), in a Solera-like system. We had a sample of it (again diluted to 48% abv), and we found it dirty but exquisite. 

After this, we headed back to the meeting room, where food was waiting for us. While we were eating, they started pouring the final four drams. Three of these were from the Mac-Talla range, starting with the Flรนran (53.8%, single cask ex-bourbon), from the Flavourscape collection. This series is a collaboration with artist Marzia Sileno, who created a series of drawings inspired by the whiskies. In this case, the drawing recalls the flowery and light character of the whisky. This was followed by the Mac-Talla Mara, their cask strength expression (58.2%), a vatting of 25% first fill and 75% refill ex-bourbon cask: itโ€™s a very spritely and delicious Isla drams, we both loved it (well, Gianluigi a few days later at homeโ€ฆ). Finally, a novelty: the Mac-Talla Oloroso, a vatting of about 20 caks bottled at 54.8%, that was going to be announced the very next day: a delicious sherried peated malt. The final dram was a real banger: a cask sample of a 1996 Bowmore from a 2nd fill ex-oloroso, at a natural strength of 47.4%. What can we say, we had a very few drams that good so far, an explosion of tropical fruits, surrounded by soft sweet smoke. A gem.

The event ended there, although it lasted almost an hour more than expected – not bad, it was really worth it. We made our way to the office for the pop-up shop theyโ€™d set up for the occasion, to grab some โ€œsouvenirsโ€. This was an amazing event, truly very well planned and definitely for whisky geeks and, by what we could see, organised by whisky geeks. They were extremely generous with the drams, they also provided 30ml samples for the drivers! We will keep our eyes peeled for their release, although itโ€™s not going to be out soon. In the meanwhile, we can enjoy their fantastic whiskies from the Mac Talla and Old Perth ranges, which we got to know quite well during the visit. A visit which, by the way, marked Teresaโ€™s 100th distillery visit!

100 distilleries, yay!

The day ended with us driving back to Cupar to help Justine and Karen clean up the Corn Exchange after the third and final masterclass, and we managed to get some leftover from the Woodrowโ€™s of Edinburgh masterclass (and because weโ€™d run out of sample bottles, we temporarily stored them in coffee cups). What a great weekend, weโ€™re already looking forward to next year. 

Until next time, slainte!



Morrison Distillers

Link: https://www.morrisondistillers.com/

#40 A last stop on the banks of river Ness

Uile Bheist

 

TL; DR: After a long whisky weekend in the Highlands, it was time to get home. However, on the Sunday afternoon, we had time for a last stop at Uile Bheist, in Inverness. Very interesting operation, as itโ€™s both a brewery and a distillery. Too early for the single malt, but we could still sip two of their ales.

Our Highlander trip was about to end: we left Clynelish distillery while our pals were still enjoying the drams provided. It was still a very nice and sunny day, and maybe because it was a Sunday afternoon in early November, the A9 towards Inverness was not very busy and the drive was quiet and relaxing. We were approaching Inverness quite early (and Teresa was recovering from her sickness), so we took a swift decision: make a last stop before getting home. Destination: Uile Bheist distillery, in Inverness, one of the newest kids on the block. 

A key feature is the artwork by the artist Ken Taylor (already famous for the many collaborations with rock bands), picturing creatures from old Scottish tales: we found them very well drawn and captivating. โ€œUilebheistโ€ itself means โ€œmonsterโ€ in Scottish Gaelic. 

The distillery is located on the banks of the river Ness (duh!), and the entrance is in the same building as a hotel called Glen Mhor (but nope, itโ€™s not the site of the former Glen Mohr distillery, actually at opposite site of the river). As a matter of fact, the founders of the distillery (Jon and Victoria Erasmus) opened their hotel in the mid 2000s first, and added a brewery in 2014. The distillery is the most recent part of their business, with the first newmake spirit distilled in April 2023. It is also the first distillery to open in Inverness in 130 years, and the first to produce whisky since Glen Albyn, Glen Mhor and Millburn closed in the mid-1980s. The beer garden is visible from the street, as well as the distillery building just behind, with the two stills making a triumphant appearance behind the glass windows. 

The place is quite dark but cosy, pub-style (a partial excuse for our terrible pictures too) and in line with the artwork. And in fact, because they are a brewery as well, their main room is organised exactly like a pub: a long bar, many malts behind the bartendersโ€™ back, and their beers on tap, named after the creatures: a lager (Uile Bheist), a stout (Dark Horse), a session ale (Highland Storm), an unfiltered (White Witch), and a pale ale (Forest Dweller). We would have never remembered the names, if it wasnโ€™t for the association with the different beer typesโ€ฆClever!

The tour guide for the day was Louis, on training because it was one of his first whisky tours, shadowed by Amy. We entered the production area from a door at the end of the bar, and we climbed the stairs right away. We were soon in the main production room, where all the machinery is: a very modern mill, the mashtun (1.5 tonnes, near the one used for brewing), the washbacks (4 stainless steel), the stills (1000-litre wash still and 500-litre spirit still). The space was completed by a small lounge for visitors. There, they showed us an intuitive schematic of the production plant, including a description of how they get energy –  solar panels and shallow water.

Like many new distilleries, sustainability was in their mind when the plant was designed. Fermentation lasts between 72 and 96 hours, and they take the spirit at around 70% (they didnโ€™t know the precise cuts). The newmake is then transported to their warehouses in Forres to be put into casks. 

Next, we moved to the lower level, mostly dedicated to beer production: 8 fermentation tanks, and the machine to carbonate with nitrogen and fill the kegs (plus a small bottling line). Back to the bar, it was time for a small tasting: their newmake spirit (which is available to buy in half-litre bottles) and a blended malt they produced (quite tasty!). Teresa also sipped half pint of their lager, as well as Gianluigiโ€™s half pint of pale ale. Very tasty. Unfortunately, at the moment they only sell kegs, so we couldnโ€™t buy any of the beers.

Teresa and the kegs.

We have to say, we really liked this operation, the first โ€œbrewstilleryโ€ (as Amy suggested during the tour) we visited. Because we donโ€™t know Inverness very well, we are planning a weekend there in the near future, and we will definitely go back to Uile Bheist to try more of their beers and enjoy the pubโ€™s cozy atmosphere. We are also very curious about their malt, since the newmake spirit was above average compared to others. For that, though, weโ€™ll have to wait a while. 

A surprisingly interesting blended malt.

This was the perfect epilogue for a very nice whisky weekend, although not the luckiest health-wise. For the records, as expected Gianluigi got the same bug as Teresa two days later, and for more than a couple of days he was KO. It wasnโ€™t Covid (got the month before), it probably wasnโ€™t fluโ€ฆA mystery. Unfortunately, this caused us to miss Roy Aqvavitae blind tasting in Glasgow the following weekend too. But thatโ€™s all gone now, while the memory of such a fun weekend with our pals will stay with us for a long time.

Until next time, slainte!


Uile Bheist Discovery Tour

Price: ยฃ35.00 pp (November 2023)

Duration: 1hr+

Tasting: 2 drams (newmake spirit and Colpach Blended Malt, 46%) and 1 half pint of beer

Distillery Exclusive: Colpach blended malt (ยฃ50)

Target: anyone who likes both whisky and beer (or one of the two)

Value for money: ok

Highlights: the location and the pub

Recommended: if you’re visiting Inverness, definitely!

Link: https://www.uilebheist.com/