NOTE: This forum is no longer active. This is an archive copy of the forum as it was on 10 March 2018.
Fionnán wrote:I had been hearing a lot last year that the Porterhouse lot intended the new distillery to produce traditional PPS whiskey rather than Single Malts but i just read a business prospectus in which they talked about their intended products as single malts.
http://www.thedinglewhiskeydistillery.i ... ochure.pdf
Have they changed their minds about the direction of the distillery? Do they intend to produce both styles? Any help or clarification would be tremendously appreciated; thanks
A solera that is eight levels deep (if 25 percent is taken out of the oldest row for bottling each year) will produce whiskey that are an average age of 8 years old after 10 years.
Fionnán wrote:However, even this description is pretty oblique. As a whole, it reads: "Irish malt and barley spirit extracts aromas and flavours of Kerry botanicals and flowers in the distillation process itself. The resulting aperitif is a distinctive sipping amber herbal liqueur with some natural Irish honey sweetness. " From the differentiation between 'malt' and 'barley' in the phrase "Irish malt and barley spirit" it looks like the base of this drink is PPS spirit; after that, it describes it as having extracted 'Kerry botanicals and flowers in the distillation process itself" which would mean that, despite the use of the gin industry's favorite word, it's still an uncompounded spirit;
Fionnán wrote:If that's the case, i'd be even more excited to see their results than before; aside from the obvious implication of more whiskeys to choose from, it would be interesting to compare a malt and a PPS born from the same still
JohnM wrote:Fionnán wrote:If that's the case, i'd be even more excited to see their results than before; aside from the obvious implication of more whiskeys to choose from, it would be interesting to compare a malt and a PPS born from the same still
Yeah, I always wonder why Bushmills or Cooley don't try it.
Fionnán wrote:If that's the case, i'd be even more excited to see their results than before; aside from the obvious implication of more whiskeys to choose from, it would be interesting to compare a malt and a PPS born from the same still