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'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.