NOTE: This forum is no longer active. This is an archive copy of the forum as it was on 10 March 2018.
JohnM wrote:I'd also like to see them bottle some of the old Powers and Bow Street whiskey they have...
JohnM wrote:I always thought it was allowed and practiced to blend out lower strength "whiskies".
And since ethanol is just a chemical compound, why not just lob some of that in to raise the abv? I'm sure this is not legal, but can't see how it would make much of a difference.
IainB wrote:I really don't think they know what to do with that old stuff. Can't sell it as whiskey on it's own. Probably tastes like liquid wood at this stage.
If they blend it what do you call it? Vatted pot still?? I think also IDL may object to the use of the Powers or Jameson names. I'm not sure a young potstill whiskey from could take much of such a woody spirit being blended.
If I were them I'd sell it back to IDL, rather than dilute their own brands. Maybe the old Lockes casks could be blended with new whiskey from Kilbeggan alright.
IainB wrote:I wasn't really thinking about mixing with grain but that could well be an option. What would they call t I wonder, as in what brand name?
JohnM wrote:IainB wrote:I wasn't really thinking about mixing with grain but that could well be an option. What would they call t I wonder, as in what brand name?
Broxson's Delux
JohnM wrote:
I'm not sure it's all under strength. And some of it is supposed to be overaged, while some other stuff is supposed to be wonderful. They've long since taken it out of the casks, waiting to decide what to do with it. I doubt they'll do this, but what about mixing it with older Cooley malt or Cooley grain? They could then put a reasonable age statement on it. Of course, older Cooley malt is probably a bit too valuable to experiment with.
I'd love to see the grain option, with just a little bit of it, for the craic.
TheWhiskeyBro wrote:As far as I know there is a company in Scotland who can filter under proof whiskey to bring it back up to legal strength. Technically I'm sure it is possible, the more water you remove the higher the strength. The difficulty I imagine is that some of the minute flavour chemicals are water soluble, so the technical magic is how to you remove some water without losing some key flavour characteristics?
Any ideas?
Time for a technical question section in the forum, methinks!
IainB wrote:I know that in Kentucky the strength of maturing bourbon can go up rather than down as water can be lost faster than alcohol. This does not seem to be a universal phenomenon though, and can very from warehouse to warehouse and even within a warehouse. Not sure how this helps - maybe Cooley should recask the whiskey and send it to Kentucky.
IainB wrote:Also I think if you mature it off the island of Ireland it would probably cease to qualify as Irish whiskey anyway.