NOTE: This forum is no longer active. This is an archive copy of the forum as it was on 10 March 2018.

What is Irish Whiskey?

Let's talk whiskey.

What is Irish Whiskey?

Postby jcskinner » Tue Feb 09, 2010 8:55 pm

Arising from a discussion on the malting thread, I thought it useful to open a new discussion on what might be called first principles.

What do we mean when we say Irish whiskey?

There's a legal definition, (maybe more than one?) but I'd like to go beyond that to see what people themselves expect from something that calls itself 'Irish whiskey'.

  • It should be made in Ireland, obviously. But what does that mean? Distilled on the island? Bottled here? Conceived of here, distilled in Taiwan, bottled in China and sold in the US? Where's the defining line?
  • Should it be made entirely from Irish barley? Irish malt? Or a majority proportion? If so, how much? Is entirely foreign barley ok?
  • What about using other grains in the mash? What about a mash with no barley at all?
  • What about using foreign water?
  • Must it be aged here? All of its life before bottling? Or just a minimum period of time?
  • What about the stills? Must they be in Ireland? Are there limits on what types of still to use? Or what types of distillation to do?
  • What about the wood? That's historically been imported. But should there be limitations on what type of wood to use, or where it should come from? Or how it should previously have been used?
  • Are there traditional methods that must be adhered to? What sort of innovation is welcome and what would be beyond the pale?
I've gone on a bit, but really I'm just asking what people understand by the phrase 'Irish whiskey' and what they would like that to mean going forward.

I'm really interested in what people have to say on this topic, because in a way that will define what Irish whiskey fans expect Irish whiskey to be.
jcskinner
Bourbon Barrel
 
Posts: 462
Joined: Sun Mar 29, 2009 2:19 pm

Re: What is Irish Whiskey?

Postby DavidH » Thu Feb 11, 2010 1:50 am

The Scotch Whisky Association recently pronounced that Scottish single malts must be bottled in Scotland. That surprised me, in these environmentally aware times. Instead of bulk shipping the product, they are wasting fuel on transporting glass and empty space around the world.

So, that's one rule I don't want to see here. Other than that, I want the Irish contribution to the product to be as high as possible. I want whiskey to be a flagship product for Irish excellence. There should be no ambiguity about where it was made, from start to finish.

I also want consumers around the world to know that Irish whiskey contains no additives (not necessarily true at the moment; I have nothing particular against caramel but it's frustrating we can't make this simple claim) and is honestly aged in oak barrels (unlike the ambiguity in the wine industry, where oak chips might have been used, say).

Straightforward, pure, top quality, Irish.
Website: Liquid Irish
Twitter: @LiquidIrish
User avatar
DavidH
Fully mature Cask
 
Posts: 1280
Joined: Tue Mar 17, 2009 7:49 pm
Location: Dublin

Re: What is Irish Whiskey?

Postby Mothrae » Fri Feb 19, 2010 9:00 pm

The final proof should be taste.

With variants, of course, every distilled beverage has variations, but you expect certain whiskeys to taste a certain way as you pour that first dram.

Legal issues and traditions aside, I want the taste I expect.
Gleanntan ni Chelleigh

Tonight's forecast - DARK - followed by scattered light in the morning.
Mothrae
Quarter Cask
 
Posts: 72
Joined: Fri Feb 19, 2010 8:24 pm
Location: NE Pennsylvania USA

Re: What is Irish Whiskey?

Postby Michael Foggarty » Tue Feb 23, 2010 3:06 am

DavidH wrote:The Scotch Whisky Association recently pronounced that Scottish single malts must be bottled in Scotland. That surprised me, in these environmentally aware times. Instead of bulk shipping the product, they are wasting fuel on transporting glass and empty space around the world.



Im all for this, it safe guards jobs, Scottish jobs or in our case Irish jobs on these shores. Diogio already put a knive into the heart of Scottish bottling in Ayrshire last year, no more please!

also want consumers around the world to know that Irish whiskey contains no additives (not necessarily true at the moment; I have nothing particular against caramel but it's frustrating we can't make this simple claim) and is honestly aged in oak barrels (unlike the ambiguity in the wine industry, where oak chips might have been used, say).


The caramel factor doesnt really bother me, what does is the people who believe they can tell the difference with a whiskey with no caramel and one with caramel (J Murray excluded, i know he can tell) time to bring in the cobalt blue glasses for tastings i think
Michael Foggarty
Rundlet Cask
 
Posts: 168
Joined: Sun Mar 22, 2009 8:26 pm

Re: What is Irish Whiskey?

Postby jcskinner » Tue Feb 23, 2010 12:13 pm

I agree.
I've seen professional tasters mistake a lager for a stout (and vice versa) when served in the opaque glasses.
Too much is decided visually sometimes.
jcskinner
Bourbon Barrel
 
Posts: 462
Joined: Sun Mar 29, 2009 2:19 pm

Re: What is Irish Whiskey?

Postby jcskinner » Fri Mar 12, 2010 3:11 pm

John Hansell has taken up this debate on his very excellent blog:

http://www.whatdoesjohnknow.com/2010/03 ... h-whiskey/
jcskinner
Bourbon Barrel
 
Posts: 462
Joined: Sun Mar 29, 2009 2:19 pm


Return to Whiskey