NOTE: This forum is no longer active. This is an archive copy of the forum as it was on 10 March 2018.
waver929 wrote:Whop, just bought a bottle of 15y Old Jameson Pure Pot Still... but sadly not for me! (It was 125€... is this a good price? Whiskyexchange sold it for maybe 300 pounds?!?)
It is a birthday present for a good friend of us an all his friend threw in some money...
IrishWhiskeyChaser wrote:Did you by in privately or from a local off icence
jcskinner wrote:
I also grabbed a Celtic Nations to replace the one the society drank way back in the days of our earliest tastings in Bowes. You don't see many of those around any more (not since the Scotch Whisky Association decided it was naughty to vat Irish malt and Scotch).
jcskinner wrote:I wonder what the SWA would have done had it been Diageo vatting Bush and Talisker, for example?
You may be right in thinking that there was a degree of animus towards Bruichladdich. But I don't really recall the ins and outs of it.
jcskinner wrote:You're quite right.
I don't see why the SWA should get to dictate who does what with their products so long as everything is properly labelled (as opposed to their own arseways labelling system that calls vattings blended malts! )
I suppose they have more sway over an actual distiller like Bruichladdich than they would over Cooley (obviously) or John and Robbo who are merely vatting their own casks. I think there was a good old chat about what actually happened on the Whiskymag forums a good while back.
IainB wrote:Mind you didn't they once have a go at Cooley over a proposal to call a whiskey Glen Mor even though the glen behind the distillery is called just that. Anyway I won't start that rant again.
“We are in a glen, located in Glenville, next to the community of Glenora Falls and our distillery is called Glenora. There are 42 place names on Cape Breton Island that have the word Glen in its name,” said Lauchie MacLean, president of Glenora. “To us it seems pretty cut and dried.”
bredman wrote:I didn't know that. Cooley should have done it, and took on the big monkeys. The whole Glenora debacle is a shining example that every now and then common sense prevails. A choice quote -
bredman wrote:IainB wrote:Mind you didn't they once have a go at Cooley over a proposal to call a whiskey Glen Mor even though the glen behind the distillery is called just that. Anyway I won't start that rant again.
I didn't know that. Cooley should have done it, and took on the big monkeys. The whole Glenora debacle is a shining example that every now and then common sense prevails. A choice quote -“We are in a glen, located in Glenville, next to the community of Glenora Falls and our distillery is called Glenora. There are 42 place names on Cape Breton Island that have the word Glen in its name,” said Lauchie MacLean, president of Glenora. “To us it seems pretty cut and dried.”
Which reminds me, i really must try the Glen Breton.
bredman wrote:Just opened a box containing a Connemara Cask Strength 57.9%. I note the Conny CS from other outlets has a different abv, so i'm pleased to get one of these before they're all gone.
IrishWhiskeyChaser wrote:I've had ones at 59.6, 59.2 and 2 totally different bottlings at 58.9
DavidH wrote:IrishWhiskeyChaser wrote:I've had ones at 59.6, 59.2 and 2 totally different bottlings at 58.9
A little surprising. I recall Noel Sweeney saying they watered Cask Strength down just a tad to hit a consistent ABV. It avoids the hassle of getting new labels approved by Excise.
jcskinner wrote:Bought another bottle of Old Comber 33 yo for me and the oul lad to share.
Can't afford it.
Don't care, though.