NOTE: This forum is no longer active. This is an archive copy of the forum as it was on 10 March 2018.
jcskinner wrote:I just wanted to puncture the idea that whiskey back in the day was all fantastic. It wasn't, and there was perhaps a degree of lashing out any oul stuff at the bottom end of the market. Thankfully today, all the way from the cheapest blends up to the rarest single malts, Irish whiskey is pretty universally a product of genuine quality and taste.
JohnM wrote:I could be wrong, but I think Barry Crockett was particularly referring to much older whiskey, but I agree generally.
DavidH wrote:JohnM wrote:I could be wrong, but I think Barry Crockett was particularly referring to much older whiskey, but I agree generally.
I won't swear to it, but I think he actually compared the new Midleton plant with the ones it replaced, and said you just couldn't get the same quality from the older plants. I was struck by his complete lack of sentimentality, which I ascribed to his conviction of a step up in control and quality.
Besides that, we know generally that a lot more attention is paid these days to wood management from the tree on, the chemistry of the barley grain and so on. Maybe it's not better than the best of the old stuff but it's hitting that level consistently.
jcskinner wrote:It just made me think how lucky we are to live in an era where even the entry-level whiskeys, the youthful whiskeys, the blends, are of a high quality. While no doubt there were decent whiskeys to be had back in the day, I suspect the overall quality in the market has never been as high as now.
JohnM wrote:There was a fellow called Michel Couvreur who produced some whiskies a few years ago. It was his contention that it didn't matter what distillery the spirit came from, it was all about the barrel and maturation. Apologies if I'm misquoting him. Anyway, it seems like nonsense.
I bought a few of his whiskies, for God knows what reason. I kind of liked the bottles...
JohnM wrote:Yeah, that's the one. I have an idea that he matures barrels in a cave or something.
Wood has a huge effect, of course, but it's nonsense to say that the original spirit doesn't matter.
jcskinner wrote:I cracked open a bottle of Tullamore Dew dating from the Late Sixties/Early Seventies the other night. There was very little evaporation from the bottle, and the cork and seal were perfectly sound. It had been clearly well taken care of, not only by me but by others before me.
Anyhow, my point is this: it tasted terrible. It was definitely young and grain-heavy in the blend, and there was a pronounced caramel taste that indicated significant addition of the substance (as the colour also indicated.)
There was a strange mintiness too, that put me in mind of a minty caramel sweet I used to have as a child. All in all, even for a young whiskey, it was pretty rough going.
It just made me think how lucky we are to live in an era where even the entry-level whiskeys, the youthful whiskeys, the blends, are of a high quality. While no doubt there were decent whiskeys to be had back in the day, I suspect the overall quality in the market has never been as high as now.
I don't mean to pick on Tullamore Dew. I've had older Paddy's too, and it wasn't much cop. Although older Powers and Black Bush I've had were good, though interestingly different to the present day variants.
I just wanted to puncture the idea that whiskey back in the day was all fantastic. It wasn't, and there was perhaps a degree of lashing out any oul stuff at the bottom end of the market. Thankfully today, all the way from the cheapest blends up to the rarest single malts, Irish whiskey is pretty universally a product of genuine quality and taste.