I am late to the party, but recently have been doing some
experiments that may help you on your quest.
First,
that malting the barley will probably have a different flavor
profile than adding amylase to unmalted barley. The reason is
that when barley malts it uses proteins to make the rootlet and
acrospire which grows inside the barelycorn. Beer brewers are
particularly keen about this because more protein will make a
cloudier beer. However I can't say for sure if the distilling
process will eliminate the proteins, so I don't know how much
the flavor will change if at all. I'm very curious about this
because I am considering brewing beer that will use malted
barley and unmalted grains.
Second, that some people
claim the water hardness matters but I haven't seen any real
side by side analysis. However, there are pizza makers out there
who swear that the sort of water they use to make the dough
gives the crust the uniqueness they seek. Making dough is
similar to making beer and whiskey so maybe it is so? May also
be poppycock.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York-style_pizza"The flavor of the crust has
sometimes been attributed to the minerals present in the New
York City water used to make the dough.[1] Some out-of-state
pizza makers even transport the water cross-country for the sake
of authenticity."
Finally, to make characters
with an accent on an American keyboard you hold down the Alt key
and type in the numbers correlating the ASCII code. For example
to make é hold the Alt key and type the numbers 0 2 3 3 and the
é will appear. ó is 0243, ö is 0246 (for all you Mötorhead
fans).
I'd love to hear how this turns out.