DavidH wrote:
IrishWhiskeyChaser wrote:I still feel we
really can't be sure that Cooley have a better quality
grain whiskey
Let's just say it may be "different". As you
say, we can't compare. It's not neutral, tasteless spirit
that these distilleries are producing, is my point, so there
is a good chance they don't taste the same. And therefore
they are not interchangeable as far as Bushmills is
concerned. But that's just speculation on my part. Perhaps
maturation is more important.
I think that logically both of these things have to be
true. There must be a belief, at official levels at least, that
distillation to 94.8% or less leaves some character in the
whiskey, and logically if the ingredients and stills are
different then the character will be too. Of course it may not
be terribly obvious. I have only tasted one new make grain and
it was certainly less interesting flavour-wise than new make
malts, (which are quite distinctive), but it did have a taste,
which apparently 100% ethanol does not (never tried that). It
certainly wouldn't surprise me to find that there is sufficient
difference in grains to make the end product discernably
different if you are really looking looking for those
differences. We did a big tasting of Scottish grains and there
seemed to me to be some distillery characteristics, although
there is no doubt that grain whiskies are very similar indeed.
The question we were not able to answer was how were the
distillery characteristics arrived at. The comment from
Bushmills that they bought the raw spirit in bulk and matured it
to their own specification is very important in this I think.
I
guess that there is little doubt that most of a whiskey's
flavour is coming from the cask and this is more true of grain
than malt. Grain certainly seems to need a lot more time in cask
to become a well rounded drink in its own right. Ok, so there
may be an issue with the quality of casks that grain is put
into, but I have yet to taste a really good young grain, whereas
young malts can often be excellent (there also a sample size
bias there too, but I think the results have convinced me at
least). But it may be the quality of the casks that are at the
heart of the Cooley/Bushmills question.
Bushmills as
a large volume producer with an established customer base and
long tradition may well be continuing the traditional practice
of maturing the grain for the necessary period in well used
(cheap) casks, which offer little to the spirit and leave it
rather raw and, well, spirity. Cooley on the other hand, with a
newer product and a need to establish a customer base, may have
tried harder to get their grain into good casks, giving a better
end result. Of course this is speculation on my part, but the
next time I see Noel Sweeney at a fair its certainly a question
I will ask (unless someone beats me to it).
i'm not
saying that the distillate has nothing to do with the end
character of the different grains, but I do think it is much
more likely that the maturation policy has much more to do with
it.
Sorry if this was a long and rambling post. It is
the morning after Saturday night.
It's better to have drunk it all, than never to have drunk at
all.