FROM MOTHBALLS TO MONSTERS
OF PEAT
Almost everybody I told
that Ardbeg was a twice mothballed distillery that was finally bought in 1997 by Glenmorangie (read
LVMH, of which Diageo owns 30%) didn't believe me. History doesn't lie. Scotch simply meant blended Scotch, nothing else, though Blended Malts were much the rage in the 1880s, right up to 1915. That meant a lot, as Blended Scotch- where a grain whisky could be added to a malt whisky- had arrived in 1860 for Distillers and 1863 for Grocers. Ardbeg just did not mix, such was its taste. Production, when attempted, would be for a couple of months a year, just to keep the distillery alive. It was a losing proposition, which is why it was mothballed twice. The good thing though, was that there was a plenitude of old Ardbeg barrels.
Although it has long claimed to be Islay’s smokiest malt (now challenged by Bruichladdich’s Octomore), Ardbeg can also realistically lay claim to be one of the island’s sweetest. It is this combination of rich sooty/tarry smoke with a citric sweet core which gives it its balance.
There have been many ups
and downs on the long road to Ardbeg throughout the years. Ardbeg’s story is
one of irrepressible spirit surviving against the odds, finally emerging as
“unquestionably, one of the greatest distilleries in Scotland.” That could be conceded, as long as the region is Scotland. Given to US-styled self-aggrandizement, some blinkered blokes call it
the greatest distillery on Earth, but then these blokes have no idea that countries like
Japan, India and Taiwan, among many others, make amazing smoked and peated single malts.
A rise in demand for
peated whisky saw production increase in the 1960s and 1970s, with demand
necessitating that the distillery bring in peated malt from Port Ellen from
1974. For aficionados, the end of Ardbeg’s self-sufficiency was the end of an
era – and a style. Seven years later, Ardbeg’s kiln was finally extinguished.
Hiram Walker took full
control in 1979, buying out DCL’s 50% share for £300,000, and everyone else’s
holdings at the same time. By that time, blends were once again on the slide
and, to compensate for the drop in demand for smoky malt, an unpeated make (Kildalton)
began to be produced.
In 1981 the distillery was
mothballed, but started up again in 1989, albeit on an intermittent basis, by
which time it had joined Laphroaig in the Allied Distillers stable.
In 1996, it was silent
once more, but saved a year later by Glenmorangie, which paid £7m for the
distillery and stock – or what there was of it. By this time, Ardbeg had built
its reputation as one of the cult single malts. Glenmorangie’s task therefore was
both to manage expectations, eke out the remaining stock, and start recreating
the brand. In an inspired move they also invested in a visitor centre and café
(for years pretty much the only place to eat in the south of Islay).
The
whiskies of Ardbeg are usually heavily peated malts. Compared to other Islay
malts Ardbeg doesn’t focus on the sea and salt tastes. They rather focus on
aromas of spices, malt or sweet tones like vanilla and chocolate. Their core
range consists of the Ardbeg TEN, Uigeadail and Corryvreckan. The TEN is named
after its age. Uigeadail was named after the Loch Uigeadail a lake. The
Corryvreckan is a famous sea vortex between the Isle of Jura and the Isle of
Scarba.
The stock profile meant
that its first age statement release was a 17-year-old, while it would take
until 2008 for its own Ardbeg 10-year-old to appear. From 2004, however, there
had been incremental releases: ’Very Young’, ‘Still Young’ and ‘Almost There’
showed the work in progress. In 2004, LVMH bought both Glenmorangie and Ardbeg, and prices were ramped up as expected. Ardbeg was to benefit from Glenmorangie's signature cask policy.
The portfolio still
concentrates on no-age-statement releases, some exclusively from (now very
rare) old stock, others from new, some from a mix. Different oaks have also
been used as part of a general improvement in the quality of casks used. The
range has been bolstered in recent years by the addition of core expressions
Ardbeg An Oa (NAS) in 2017 and Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Year Old two years later.
In February 2018, plans
were unveiled to double Ardbeg’s production capacity with the addition of
another pair of stills, to be housed with the existing two in a new still
house. The current stillhouse will be redeployed to house new washbacks.
The production volume of
around 1,000,000 litres is quite large for a two pot still distillery that only
produces single malt whisky. Ardbeg doesn't supply its spirit to the blended
whisky industry, but sometimes a few barrels reach the independent bottlers so
there are numerous independent bottles on the market. The Isle of
Islay has quite a few water sources, so the Ardbeg distillery can get its water
from two main water sources: the Loch Airigh Nam Beist and the Loch Uigeadail.
Ardbeg
distillery brings out annually on Ardbeg Day a special release with no age
statement (Supernova, Ardbog, Alligator, Dark Cove, Kelpie, Blaaack, et al). These bottles are highly advertised, quite special in taste and price and very limited in quantity. Ardbeg Committee
Members get first choice.
Let's take it one step at
a time:
THE RISE, FALL AND RESURGENCE OF ARDBEG
Ardbeg’s story is
one of irrepressible spirit surviving against the odds, to emerge from the ashes as“the greatest distillery on Earth.”(sic)
1815 – Ardbeg Distillery is
founded. John Macdougall takes out a licence, establishing Ardbeg Distillery as
a legitimate commercial concern. There's more to this story. Whisky was being produced there illegally since 1794!
1838 – A new owner. Thomas
Buchanan, a Glasgow spirit merchant, buys the Distillery for £1,800. John
Macdougall’s son Alexander continues to manage operations.
1853 – Alexander
Macdougall dies. After his death, Ardbeg is co-run by Colin Hay and
Macdougall’s sisters, Margaret and Flora, who may rightfully be Scotland’s
first female distillers.
1887 –Ardbeg starts
producing 250,000 gallons (1.1 million litres) of whisky a year, making it the
most productive distillery on Islay.
1911 – The name ‘Ardbeg’
is registered as a trademark. The distinctive letter ‘A’ is also registered to
protect Ardbeg’s brand and reputation.
1922 – Alexander
MacDougall & Co Ltd buys Ardbeg for £19,000.
1977 – Hiram Walker
acquires Ardbeg.
1981 – Production dwindles
to zero. The distillery closes.
1987 – Allied Lyons
acquires Hiram Walker and therefore Ardbeg. Two years later, small-scale
distilling resumes to satisfy demand for Ardbeg from blenders.
1991 – The distillery
closes down again.
1997 – The Glenmorangie
Company purchases the distillery and the Distillery reopens in 1997. Full-time
production commences, with the first bottlings comprising 17 YO, 1978 Vintage and Ardbeg Provenance.
1998 – Ardbeg is voted
Distillery of the Year. In a remarkable turnaround in only 12 short months the
17 Years Old plus Ardbeg 1975 20 Years Old launches prove Ardbeg’s mettle.
1999 – Production reaches
600,000 litres a year. Investment in new people and new equipment is already
beginning to pay off. PLUS Ardbeg single casks are hand selected and released
in very limited, exclusive bottlings.
2000 – Ardbeg Ten Years Old and Ardbeg
Committee launched. The extraordinary balance of peaty power and floral
sweetness makes it a big hit and the core expression in the Ardbeg range. PLUS
the worldwide Ardbeg Committee is formed to ensure ‘the doors of the Distillery
never close again’.
2003 – Ardbeg Uigeadail is released. It is
named after the Distillery’s water source, meaning ‘dark and mysterious place’.
PLUS the first Glenmorangie Company distillate is released to The Committee
‘for discussion’, a limited bottling of Very Young Ardbeg.
2004 – Very Young Ardbeg is born. The
Committee overwhelmingly approves the distillate, leading to the launch of Very
Young Ardbeg. A 6 YO distilled in 1998 and bottled in 2004, it turned whisky
thinking on its head.
2005 – A Serendipitous
year. Ardbeg is established as part of the House of Glenmorangie within Moet
Hennessy/LVMH. Production reaches 1 million litres. PLUS someone pulls the
wrong lever and mixes Ardbeg with a small quantity of Glen Moray. Disaster is
averted with the unbranded release of Serendipity.
2006 – Young, old and
rare. Ardbeg Still Young is
launched, the next step on ''the peaty path to maturity''. Ardbeg 1965, an extremely limited release of only 261 bottles is
the oldest Ardbeg ever to be released: 'the envy of Islay'. Ardbeg Airigh Nam Beist ("the
Beastie") is released, drawn from rare and restricted whisky stocks, laid
down in 1990.
2007 – Michael Heads
becomes Ardbeg’s 20th Manager and Chairman of the Ardbeg Committee. PLUS: Ardbeg Almost There is bottled – the
third limited release of the 1998 distillate. Ardbeg Mor becomes the biggest launch to date. Mor (Gaelic for 'big and magnificent') is 1,000 sought-after
4.5 litre bottles of cask strength Ten Years Old. Ardbeg Double Barrel unveiled – 250 pairs of the acclaimed Ardbeg
1974 vintage single cask bottlings presented in luxury shotgun cases.
2008 – World Whisky of the
Year. Ardbeg Ten Years Old wins
World Whisky of the Year. PLUS: Ardbeg
Renaissance completes the peaty path to maturity. Ardbeg Corryvreckan is released to the Committee. Lightly peated Ardbeg Blasda – Gaelic for 'sweet and
delicious' – is launched.
2009 – World Whisky of the
Year again. Ardbeg Uigeadail scoops
the World Whisky of the Year honour in the 2009 – the second time for Ardbeg.
PLUS: 3,000 bottles of Ardbeg Supernova,
the peatiest Ardbeg ever, are snapped up in record time. Ardbeg Corryvreckan joins the core range on worldwide release.
2010 – Three times a
winner. Ardbeg Supernova is awarded
Scotch Whisky of the Year. Ardbeg
Corryvreckan wins World's Best Single Malt Whisky and Single Malt of the
Year. PLUS Ardbeg Rollercoaster is
released to celebrate the Committee’s 10th anniversary.
2011 – The tale of the
‘Islay-gator. ‘Alligator char’ American Oak casks and a smoky, spicy flavour
ensure Ardbeg Alligator is snapped
up by the Committee.
2012 – Ardbeg Galileo launched. 60,000 bottles
sell out within 48 hours. PLUS we celebrated the first ever Ardbeg Day by
holding not the Olympics, but the ‘Islay-limpics’.
2013 – Ardbeg Ardbog launched. Sold out as of
today.
2014 – Ardbeg Auriverdes launched.
2015 – 200 years of
Ardbeg. Instead of looking backwards for Ardbeg’s bicentenary, they looked 200 years into the future. Ardbeg Perpetuum
launched.
2016 – Ardbeg Dark Cove
recalls smuggling past.
2017– Ardbeg Kelpie set
for Launch on Ardbeg Day.
2017– Ardbeg An Oa: A welcome new addition to the Ultimate range, Ardbeg An Oa is singularly rounded, due in no small part to time spent in the newly established bespoke oak Gathering Vat where whiskies from several cask types familiarise themselves with each other. The result is a dram with smoky power, mellowed by a delectable, smooth sweetness. NAS 46.6% ABV
2018– Ardbeg Grooves is
the year's Ardbeg Day Release.
2019–Ardbeg Drum released on Ardbeg Day, 46% ABV.
2019– Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Years Old: The new Ardbeg Traigh Bhan is the first permanent age statement whisky which has been released by the distillery in 20 years. It is a small batch and will come in annual releases. The expression is named after Traigh Bhan, a beach on Ardbeg’s home island of Islay. 19 Years Old 46.2% ABV.
2020– Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Years Old Batch 2: With a subtle change to the batch recipe, this is a transformational dram. That said, the impossible balance of Batch 1 is still ever-present in Batch 2’s taste profile, as well as the palatable parallels with the place that inspired it – Islay’s Singing Sands. 19 Years Old 46.2% ABV.
2020– Ardbeg Wee Beastie is the latest permanent expression to join the Distillery’s Ultimate Range. At just five years old, Wee Beastie is a feisty young creature with a formidable taste. Out to make the rawest, smokiest Ardbeg ever, the result is Ardbeg Wee Beastie and this tongue-tingling, beautifully smoky dram is the youngest Ardbeg they’ve ever made. And the cheapest! 5 Years Old 46.2% ABV.
2020– Arrrrrrrdbeg! is the Distillery’s first whisky wholly matured in ex-rye casks. Brought out in honour of Distillery Manager Mickey Heads, who is retiring 13 Years as Head Distiller. A blunderbuss of fruity flavours, 51.8% ABV.
2020– Ardbeg Blaaack is the feisty Limited Edition bottled in celebration of the 20th Anniversary of the Ardbeg Committee, founded in the year 2000. For the first time in Ardbeg’s history, they rounded up Pinot Noir casks from the country that lies the furthest distance from Islay – New Zealand. 46% ABV.
2021– Ardbeg 25 Years Old is the newest, oldest whisky to join the core range. This supreme expression proves unequivocally that age cannot tame Ardbeg’s smoky power. Bottled from incredibly rare casks filled during some of the Distillery’s darkest days, this is Ardbeg at its most intricate, balanced and beguiling. Ardbeg 25 Years Old is a single malt that was distilled in the 1990s before being bottled after 25 years of maturation. Although the whisky is part of the brand’s core range, it will be available in limited quantities due to its age, starting January. 46% ABV
2021–Ardbeg Scorch: Released on Ardbeg Day at the Feis Ile to celebrate Ardbeg Day 2021 and Islay’s definitely-real-and-totally-not-made-up flavour breathing dragon, Ardbeg Scorch is a dram with an almost mythical flavour profile.
Ardbeg Uigeadail vs. Corryvreckan
Uigeadail: single malt Scotch, Islay, 54.2%, $85
Corryvreckan: single malt
Scotch, Islay, 57.1%, $95
When the mothballed Ardbeg
distillery was bought and restarted by Glenmorangie in 1997, there were stocks
of whisky from two distinct periods in the warehouses; the early 1970’s through
March of 1981 and mid-1989 through mid-1996. The latter period was limited to
two months of production per year. The new owners would also have the whisky
they began producing themselves from mid 1997 onward as that spirit came of
age. Production methods differed for each of these three periods giving three
distinct styles of Ardbeg that would shape the evolution of the brand’s
offerings for years to come.
The only bottlings put out
by Ardbeg in 1997, 1998 and 1999 were their 17 year old and a series of vintage
releases dated to the mid 1970’s. The 17 year is often said to be made up
solely of distillate from 1980 and 1981, but a quote is attributed to
Glenmoranie’s Dr. Bill Lumsden stating that the 17 year also contained
distillate laid down between 1975 and 1977.
The 17 year old and the
1970’s vintage bottlings continued on until 2004, but they were joined by a new
10 year old offering in 2000. This bottling was the first use of whisky from
the period of limited production between 1989 and 1996.
Another annual release was
started in 2001; Lord of the Isles was a vatting of whiskies from 1976 and
1977. It was part of the lineup until 2007 and much like the 17 year, its label
stayed the same but the whisky grew older with each subsequent bottling. It was deliberately kept in short supply, driving prices through the roof.
The next significant
addition to Ardbeg’s lineup was Uigeadail, which first appeared in 2003. It was
described at younger bourbon barrel aged whisky vatted with much older sherry
cask matured whisky.
Then there was a series of
bottlings which tracked the progress of the whisky that the new owners began
distilling in 1997. First was Very Young in 2004 which was followed by Still
Young in 2006, Almost There in 2007 and finally Renaissance in 2008.
There were two very
limited releases of lightly peated, cask strength Ardbeg Kildalton. The one in
2004 was distilled in 1980 and put into 700 ml bottles. The 2005 release was
distilled in 1981 and only bottled in miniatures.
|
The Airigh Nam Beist |
The next addition to
Ardbeg’s standard lineup was called Airigh Nam Beist. It was bottled for three
years, 2006, 2007 and 2008, but all of them were vintage dated to 1990. Many
people viewed Airigh Nam Beist as a replacement for the iconic 17 year.
At some point in 2008 the
flagship 10 year old was transitioned from distillate produced between 1989 and
1996 to distillate produced from 1997 onward. There was a change in the label
design mid way through 2008 that is generally considered to indicate when the
transition took place, but some people claim to have tasted the change in the
flavor profile several months before the labels were modified.
Another lightly peated
release called Blasda was bottled in 2008, 2009 and 2010. It was non-age
stated, but said to be about 7 years old.
Corryvreckan was the next
addition to the lineup, arriving in 2009. Upon its introduction it was touted
as the replacement for Airigh Nam Beist. This bottling is aged in a combination
of French oak and American oak ex-bourbon barrels. It is non-age stated but
said to be in the 10 to 12 year range (making it all from post-1997
distillate).
There is some conflicting
information about the French oak aged portion of Corryvreckan. It was actually
first seen as an Ardbeg Committee bottling in 2008 using first-fill French oak
casks (either Burgundy or Bordeaux casks, both have been mentioned). Most
reputable sources now state that Corryvreckan uses new French oak rather than
first-fill French oak (along with the bourbon aged component). Was this was a
gradual transition over a few years or a sudden change when it became part of
the regular lineup? The bottle of Corryvreckan 2009 seems to show little if any
wine cask influence. The distillery stated that Corryvreckan was aged in
toasted new French oak.
The limited releases have
continued from Ardbeg as well. There was the more heavily peated (100+ ppm)
Supernova in 2009 and 2010. Also released in 2010 was Rollercoaster; a vatting
of the first ten years (1997-2006) of the new owners’ production. Next, in
2011, was Alligator; a vatting of ex-bourbon barrels and heavily charred, new
American oak barrels. 2012 saw the release of Galileo, which was distilled in
1999 and aged in a combination of bourbon and Marsala casks.
Recent years have also
seen wider releases of the annual festival bottlings from Ardbeg; Ardbeg Day (2012),
Ardbog (2013), Auriverdes (2014), Perpetuum (2015), Dark Cove (2016), Kelpie (2017) and Grooves (2018).
With all of these limited
releases and changes to the core lineup, it can be pretty tough to keep track
of what was bottled when at Ardbeg. And that has led to The Ardbeg Project.
This privately run website attempts to catalogue all official Ardbeg releases by
their corresponding bottle codes and provide additional information when
possible.
In the case of Uigeadail,
the Ardbeg Project is particularly helpful. When it was first bottled in 2003,
the sherry cask component of Uigeadail was distilled in the 1970’s and aged to
about 25 years. There is no information about the age of the bourbon barrel
component of the early bottlings of Uigeadail, other than the generalisation of
it as being “young”. At that time though, most of the limited production from
the 1989-1996 period was probably being used for the 10 year old, so it stands
to reason that the bourbon barrel aged whisky in Uigeadail would have been
distilled after the facility was restarted in mid 1997 and at about 6 years
old.
Of course, with limited
stocks of whisky from the 1970’s which were becoming increasingly more valuable
as time marched on, it was inevitable that the recipe for Uigeadail would
change. The change in recipe was confirmed by an employee at the distillery in
2012.
More detail of Uigeadail’s
changing formula can be found in this 2013 interview with Dr. Bill Lumsden (at
the 23 minute mark), where he states “I’ve tried to gradually drift the recipe
to a more appropriate age profile”. Other blogs state that the most highly
regarded bottlings came from 2003 through 2009, and the most noticeable change
happened across 2010, 2011 and 2012.
It’s said that the sherry
cask component accounts for 35% to 45% of Uigeadail, and that the percentage
hasn’t really changed over the years. Having youthful, bourbon barrel aged
whisky in the mix is part of what makes this bottling what it is, so that
component has remained around the 6 year mark. Remember though, during the 1989-1996
period production was limited and intended for blending, so there was probably
little if any sherry cask whisky from that time available for Uigeadail. The
biggest shift of the sherry cask component to 1997 and newer distillate likely
took place across 2010, 2011 and 2012.
Over the course of 10
years, the sherry matured component of Uigeadail has drifted down in age from
roughly 25 years to around 15 years. Not only that, but it has also
transitioned across three distinct periods of Ardbeg’s history, each with its
own style of distillate.
The Uigeadail Today:
The nose is sharp and
biting. It almost seems astringent at first but shows its true nature upon more
cautious inspection; dense, chewy peat smoke aromas are intertwined with dry,
nutty, oxidised sherry notes. The palate shows incredible depth and complexity.
While the peat smoke is the most obvious element, there’s so much more going on
along with it. There’s a gingerbread-like maltiness, mint and wide range of
spice notes. The sherry fruit character is dark and moderately dry, with a hint
of nuttiness. A touch of brine rounds out the flavor profile. The lengthy
finish evolves without losing balance and maintains a good level of grip even
as it fades.
The Corryvreckan:
There are some nice aromas
on the nose, but a healthy dose of alcohol riding along with them. The peat
smoke is somewhat light and floral in character and is accompanied by some
subtle tree fruit and tropical fruit notes. There is less heat and
aggressiveness on the palate than expected considering its nature on the nose.
Notes of dry spice and leather come to the fore and add complexity to the smoke
of driftwood burning on a beach. A bit of earthiness and a subtle stone fruit
element come into play as well. The finish is long and warming, with a building
spice element and lingering peat notes.
Comparing Uigeadail and
Corryvreckan to the 10 YO, the last-named's peat smoke stands out more on the palate. But then, the other two have wider ranges of
accompanying flavour elements. True, the Corryvreckan stands nicely on its
own, but it simply pales in comparison to the Uigeadail.
The pecking order then:
Ardbeg Provenance
Ardbeg Airigh Nam Beist
Ardbeg Uigeadail
Ardbeg Corryvreckan
Ardbeg Ardbog
Ardbeg Supernova
Ardbeg Kildalton
Ardbeg 10 YO
Having said that, the Ardbeg that gives you best value for money is the Ardbeg Ten. Keep a bottle around as your 'go to' dram.
The Corona pandemic has shaken this industry in much the same fashion as it did the world. Even so, I think that this post has become too long to continue. I have continued the story from where I leave off here; you can go there directly using this link.
NOTE:
About this site
There are a lot of people writing about whisky. There are a few people
that write independent reviews. If you have to believe the first
category, there are only excellent whiskies. That just is not true.
There are a lot of excellent whiskies yes. As there should be because
whisky today is expensive! But there is a lot of indifferent product and
some stuff is just not good enough. There is a clear need for
independent reviewers. I am one of them. I have nothing to do with the
industry. I don't sell anything. I don't have the perfect Palate. My
opinion is as good as yours! I just taste whiskies and tell you what I
think about them. That's all.
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