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Saturday, 23 April 2022

FREAK ACCIDENT AT ARDBEG

 Ardbeg’s New Committee Scotch Expression ‘Fermutation’ 

THE Result Of A FREAK BUT ‘Happy Accident’

 
                              

The newest expression from Ardbeg is the result of an unplanned experiment that led to the longest fermentation in Ardbeg’s history. In November 2007, The Ardbeg Distillery found that a broken boiler threatened six washbacks full of whisky. The team at Ardbeg tried to revive the boiler, but it was dead.

Dr Bill Lumsden, Ardbeg’s director of distilling and whisky creation, wisely decided to utilise the situation as an opportunity to experiment. He had the washback lids thrown open to expose the contents to the Islay air. And that began a three week-long fermentation, the longest in Ardbeg’s history, which eventually gave rise to a wild and zingy spirit. The wages of sin! With an apt name, Fermutation.

Ardbeg’s director has always wanted to experiment with longer fermentations, so an unintentional boiler breakdown was truly fortuitous. Ardbeg is usually fermented for 72 hours, thus making prolonged fermentation over three weeks unchartered territory. The outcome is a dram that tastes like pure science fiction. Peat and smoke meld beautifully with fresh, floral flavours, while sharp, more malty notes give Ardbeg Fermutation a uniquely zingy profile.

Ardbeg’s distillery management wasn’t so immodest. Sometimes, blind luck is just a part of the way they do things at Ardbeg. But the creation of Fermutation wasn’t simply good fortune. Quick thinking, ingenuity and a little assistance from tiny beings in the atmosphere helped Ardbeg get there. At 13 years old, this is an aged Ardbeg – something fans will be delighted to get their hands on. My previous post on Ardbeg's history stopped at developments in 2021. This post can be read as the continuation of that comprehensive history at this link.  

As a Committee-only bottling, Ardbeg Fermutation is only available to members of The Ardbeg Committee at this time for a suggested price of $199.99. It is easy to join the Committee, routing through the distillery’s website.

Ardbeg Femutation official tasting notes:

Origin: Isle of Islay (Scotland)

Type: Single Malt Scotch Whisky

ABV: 49.4%

Ageing casks: Ex-bourbon casks, both 1st and refill

Chillfiltered: No

Additional colouring: No

Age: 13 Years Old

Color: Pale Straw

Average price: $199.99

Owner: Moet Hennessy

Nose: Fresh, floral, herbal and tart. Hints of mixed herbs and cedar wood. Zesty hints of smoked orange and grapefruit, lots of menthol and peppermint. With water, powerful bursts of diesel oil, tar, fresh paint and aniseed. As this dies down, a memory of freshly cut hay, and the tiniest hint of something savory, like yeast extract or bread dough.

Taste: A lively, vibrant, sharp, ‘zingy’ texture, leading into very firm, distinctive flavours – malty/biscuit tones, powerful aniseed, cardamom, antiseptic lozenge, sweet mint toffee and cigar ash.

Finish: Finally, a lingering, salty, firm aftertaste of mint, tar, oak tannin & leather.

Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 YO Batch 3 

Origin: Isle of Islay (Scotland)

Type: Single Malt Scotch Whisky

ABV: 46.2%

Ageing casks: Ex-American oak and ex-Sherry

Chillfiltered: No

Additional colouring: No

Owner: Moet Hennessy

Average price: € 340.00

Peat is a form of fossil fuel not only burned in hearths across Scotland, but for over two centuries peat has fired the Ardbeg distillery kilns on Islay’s southern coast. And put it on the map as the distillery that produces some of this world’s best whiskies. Consider Traigh Bhan.

Traigh Bhan is Ardbeg’s 19-year old single malt Scotch whisky aged in American oak and Oloroso sherry casks. This permanent expression is produced in a single batch released yearly, and with slight changes to cask selection, each batch reflects notes distinct to its own.

When Ardbeg’s first edition of Traigh Bhan dropped in 2019, fans of the 19 year old Islay malt that was the latest (and oldest) addition to the distillery’s permanent lineup jumped for joy. Now Traigh Bhan has settled into annual batch status, which Ardbeg describes as “rare and ever-changing,” with slight changes to cask selection with each release.

Nicknamed “Ardbeg’s lockdown liquid,” Traigh Bhan 19-Years-Old Batch 3 came to age during the global pandemic when closed distillery doors meant uncertainty for its disgorging and bottling. At last, Head Whisky Creator Dr. Bill Lumsden along with a skeleton distillery team released Traigh Bhan Batch 3 from its casks. As described by Ardbeg, The main difference with Batch 3 is that it has been imbued with an altogether more fragrant, spicy character, says the distillery.

An Ardbeg fan couldn’t be happier with the more fragrant expression of wood smoke, pine tar, mineral salt, and satsuma that this dram delivers. The peat-soot nose is earthy but clean, given the proximity of a nectar sweetness and mineral vein. Notes of lemony furniture polish are also thick on the nose. The deeper it is breathed in, the more the nose opens to the braidings of sweet, salty, smoky, an amalgam of scents fans are quite fond of.

The palate is surprisingly spicy with a bright cayenne or eucalyptus heat. It offers a heavy maritime character, with notes of oyster shells and both lemon and lime adding some sharper citrus elements to the mix. The heat flares back across the palate and quickly overpowers initial notes of toffee, fennel, and citrus peel. As the citrus notes slowly fade, the whisky retreats to a more straightforward, rather ashy quality, stuffed full with briny peat. Added water creates a waxiness that tames the heat and makes possible more enjoyment of the peat and age that Ardbeg has to offer.

Ardbeg ‘Ardcore’: New Punk Rock Limited Edition

Ardbeg Day is held annually on the final Saturday of Islay’s Festival of Music and Malt (Fèis Ìle), and generally it’s a celebration of all things Ardbeg. It’s set for June 4th this year, online and at the Ardbeg Distillery. And to celebrate the upcoming events, Ardbeg launched a new “punk rock” expression, Ardcore.

Origin: Isle of Islay (Scotland)

Type: Single Malt Scotch Whisky

Age: NAS

ABV: 50.1% for Ardbeg Committee Members, 46.0 otherwise.

Ageing casks: Ex-American oak and ex-Sherry

Chillfiltered: No

Additional colouring: No

Owner: Moet Hennessy

Average price: $225.00

According to a spokeperson at Ardbeg Distillery, Ardcore draws inspiration from Islay’s little-known punk past, celebrating the characters of “Punk Ellen,” a nickname for Islay’s main port, Port Ellen, in the 1970s.

Created with Black Malt Barley, Ardcore is a first for Ardbeg. The label adds: Aromas of Dark Chocolate and Brittle Toffee clash. While amped up notes of Aniseed and Charcoal elbow their way to the fore. It’ll Punk-ture your palate and trash your Taste Buds. This is Ardcore.

From a Distillery with more ups and downs that a pogoing punk comes Ardcore. Created with roasted black malt, roasted to the extreme, this spirit is all about what happens up front i.e. centre stage. The malt is what defines its distinctive profile. Described as tasting like ‘biting on a spiky ball’, Ardcore is a dram that wears its heart on its sleeve… its black heart! Bill Lumsden should know; The Glenmorangie Signet (now from its own LMVH stable) was the first ever Super Premium single malt whisky featuring roasted malt!

There are some in the whisky community that seem to get very upset with Ardbeg’s shenanigans. The funny names and brightly coloured labels provoke seemingly endless complaints on social media. The others take a lighter approach and quite like the fun of it all. Whisky is meant to be fun. We don’t actually have to take it so seriously, all the time. I canot agree. This is serious money and folks should give it its due.

Regarding Ardcore, one sometimes wonders what came first, the whisky or the marketing concept? Obviously the spirit was laid down some years back so it’s been in the pipeline for a while but did master blender Bill Lumsden decide the whisky was ready and prompt a mad dash to come up with a marketing concept for it or did the marketing team come up with Ardcore and ask Dr Bill to find something in the warehouse that could fit the brief? Naah. The Signet is a success story. Ole Bill always had it up his sleeve.

Nose: Lots of thick Ardbeg smoke. Coal fires. Soot. A touch of that famous medicinal TCP note that’s unique to Islay. The roasted barley is there too. Spicy and savoury, Ardcore grips the senses with waves of marmite, burnt toast, chicory charcoal and infused coffee grounds making for a mosh pit in the glass. Like a safety pin through the septum, a classic Ardbeg herbal top note is present, while swirling, smoky bonfire and molasses loiter backstage.

Palate: A jaw dropping spicy and fiery mouthfeel leads to an explosion of rich, smoky flavours – cocoa powder, dark chocolate, peanut brittle toffee, smoked lime and a suggestion of soot and bonfire embers all pogo in unison on the palate. A big mouthful with a pleasant oily texture. Brine. The aromas of stony beaches and seashells evaporate off the palate. Thick, almost acrid smoke like sitting too close to a campfire. Amped up aniseed and malty biscuit elbow their way to the fore, punkturing taste buds.

Finish: In an altogether sweeter finish, long, lingering notes of treacle toffee, soot and smoke make for an anarchic, but delicious, aftertaste.

Ardbeg Ardcore Committee Edition became available this May 1st at $149.99. The general release will be available from June 1st at a suggested retail price of $124.99. Is the bottle of whisky “worth” £150? Or even £125? In the grand scheme of things, probably not. It won’t be for everyone but fans of Ardbeg won’t be disappointed.

Ardbeg - Arrrrrrrdbeg 2021 Committee Release Whisky

Origin: Isle of Islay (Scotland)          

Series / Description : Arrrrrrrdbeg 2021 Committee Release

Type: Single Malt Scotch Whisky

ABV: 51.8% Cask Strength

Ageing casks: American Rye

Chillfiltered: No

Additional colouring: No

Owner: Moet Hennessy

Average price: $400.00                        

Ardbeg Arrrrrrrdbeg (with seven ‘r’s) was made available to members of the distillery’s committee in late 2020. It has been created to commemorate a key event in Ardbeg's history, the change at the helm as Distillery Manager and Committee Chairman. It’s been matured in ex-rye casks, which provides an appropriately intense lift to one of the smokiest of Islay scotches.

Tasting notes:

Colour: Pale lemon yellow.

Nose: Aromas of gunpowder, smoked banana and pears drift into some rye bread, sweet vanilla toffee and a gentle aniseed breeze.

Taste: A blunderbuss ignites fruity aromas such as melons and kiwis. A spicy mouthfeel leads into a further burst of fruity flavours such as pear, melon, limes & bananas, followed by aniseed, smoked toffee and sourdough bread. A definitive sweetness comes through this smoke- notes of toffee, honey and sugar syrup are backed up by a suggestion of white chocolate and a pinch of drinking chocolate powder

Finish: Hints of Brazil nuts, sea spray and the gentlest of smoke.

 


Tuesday, 19 April 2022

BEST SINGLE MALT SCOTCH OF 2022

 The International Wines And Spirits Competition: DETERMINING The Best Single Malt Scotch Of 2022


The International Wine and Spirits Competition (IWSC) has just announced the results of the 2022 spirits judging. A total of 85 predominantly UK-based judges evaluated over 4,000 entrants across more than a dozen major spirit categories. The assessment team will now analyse wine and other categories. This process takes seven months to go through. The analyses started on 16 March 2022 with Spirits and will wind up in September, with the Design Awards as well as All Producer trophies. Though the Awards are named “Spirits of 2022,” the assessment is done on products of 2021.

The IWSC is an annual wine and spirits competition. Founded in 1969 by chemist and oenologist Anton Massel as Club Oenologique, this was a competition created to reward excellence in wine and spirit production. On 14 April 1978, Club Oenologique was officially renamed The International Wine & Spirit Competition (IWSC). The dominant spirit in those years and the highest proportion of contenders was Scotch whisky; accordingly the venue was officially shifted to London, UK and the 1978 IWSC Awards and subsequent Banquet took place at the Palace of Westminster.

Since its simple beginning, it has grown to become one of the largest such competition in the world. Spirits are evaluated on a 100-point scale and awards given for Gold Outstanding (98-100 points), Gold (95-97 points), Silver (90-94 points) and Bronze (85-89 points). Over a hundred experts are inducted to assess the thousands of brands across all categories of alcoholic beverages over seven months, usually March to September.

In the Scotch whisky category, traditionally one of the competition’s largest and most competitive segments, a total of thirty eight single malt Scotch whiskies were awarded the coveted Gold Outstanding medal.

The results threw in a lot of surprises, reflecting the growing world of Scotch whisky with age no real bar. The top three Scotch whiskies, each scoring 99 points out of a hundred, were, interestingly, from two of Scotland’s lesser-known distilleries: Tomatin and Deanston.

          
    

Tomatin is a single malt distillery located in the village of Tomatin in the Speyside district of the Scottish Highlands. Tomatin was once the largest Scotch distillery in Scotland, with an annual capacity of around 10 million litres of pure alcohol. It is owned by a Japanese concern.

Current production is approximately 2 to 3 million litres of alcohol. Most of the distillery’s production is slated for its own blended whisky brands: the exceptional but under-recognised Antiquary 12, 21 and 35 YOs and Talisman. The company has been shifting its production to single malts and expanding its available range of expressions. Emphasising a higher percentage of first fill ex-Bourbon and ex-Sherry casks has allowed it to produce very flavourful, structured and complex single malts. The Tomatin 1976 is a single cask 36 YO+ whisky, whereas its Legacy is a no age statement (NAS) expression that is matured in a combination of ex-Bourbon and Virgin Oak casks. The amazing fact here is that this is a $40 whisky (~Rs 3,000).

The third top ranked whisky is the Deanston Virgin Oak Single Malt Scotch Whisky, an NAS peated whisky produced at the Deanston distillery recently acquired by Dutch brewer Heineken. The demography of the owners is also changing rapidly. This whisky is also very affordable, at $ 45 (~Rs 3,400).

The Ardbeg 25 YO and Ardbeg Wee Beastie 5 YO were both awarded Gold Outstanding medals. Glendronach, now under Master Distiller Rachel Barrie ex-Bowmore and a distillery whose products have seen an undesirable tripling of prices was a triple winner, with The Glendronach 16 YO Boynsmill, 18 YO Allardice and 21 YO Parliament single malt Scotch whiskies. Among the lesser-known Gold Outstanding medallists was Balblair, a triple winner for its 12 YO, 18 YO and 25 YO. This is another hugely underappreciated distillery with an outstanding portfolio of single malt whiskies. Its sister distillery, Pulteney, which location used to be one of the world’s leading herring ports, and, along with Talisker, is known the “Maritime Malt”, also won for its 18 YO expression.

   

Other notable winners are Highland Park’s 15 YO Viking Heart Single Malt Scotch Whisky and Aberfeldy’s 16 and 21 YO expressions. The Glenmorangie Company won for its Finest Reserve 19 YO Single Malt Scotch Whisky. Laphroiag picked up two Gold Outstanding medals for its 10 YO Sherry Oak Finish and its Select Single Malt Scotch Whisky. Kilchoman was the only other Islay distillery to take a Gold Outstanding medal, for its Machir Bay Scotch Whisky. Glencadam with two, Whyte & Mackay and The Lindores Distilling Company also featured as winners. The latter runs a tagline, "After a break of 523 years, spirit is once again flowing from the copper stills at Lindores Abbey." It is the Abbey which has the earliest record of scotch whisky in its exchequer roll for 1494 for a payment from King James IV to Friar John Cor of the Abbey for about "eight bols of malt." Chivas Brothers’ Royal Salute 21 YO Blended Malt was prominent as a blended malt. Moreover, Chivas has diversified big time into single malt Scotch whisky.

 Loch Lomond, another Scotch whisky distillery with a rapidly rising profile, took a Gold Outstanding medal for the Inchmoan 12 YO and Glengarry 12 YO. The latter is matured in a combination of first fill and refill ex-Bourbon casks as well as re-charred ex-Bourbon casks.

Rounding out the Gold Outstanding medal winners were several expressions from Whyte & Mackay: Co-Op Irresistible 12 YO, Tamnavulin French Cabernet Sauvignon Cask Edition, a retailer branded offering - Sainsbury’s Taste The Difference Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky and Ballantine’s Glenburgie 12 YO Single Malt Scotch Whisky. Most of Glenburgie’s whisky output is slated for Ballantine’s Blended Scotch Whisky, one of the top 5 blended whiskies in the world by volume. The distillery has also been releasing single malt whisky expressions, the Glenburgie 12, 15 and 15 YOs as well as Glentaucher’s 23 YO and the Miltonduff 15 YO. 

Glencadam, oft criticised as inconsistent for a little-known distillery, though still among Scotland’s oldest working distilleries, took three Gold Outstanding medals for its The Rather Dignified 15 YO, Reserva Andalusia Oloroso Sherry Cask Finish and American Oak Reserve Small Batch Malt Scotch Whisky.

Other Double Gold medalists included William Grant & Sons Ailsa Bay; Glen Moray Elgin Heritage 21 YO Portwood Finish; Ian Macleod Distillers Glengoyne 12 YO; Glen Turner Company Heritage Double Cask; John Dewar & Sons, Royal Brackla 18 YO Sherry Cask Finish Paulo Cortado; and William Grant & Sons, Distillers, The Balvenie 12 YO Sweet Toast of American Oak. Part of the French La Martiniquaise group, Glen Turner also operates the Glen Moray single malt distillery in Elgin, the Starlaw grain distillery in Edinburgh, and the production of the Sir Edward’s blend and Glen Turner vatted and single malts.

Friday, 15 April 2022

INTERNATIONAL WHISKY COMPETITION

 2021 International Whisky Competition

Official Results



The International Whisky Competition is one of the world’s numerous whisky competitions and reaches out to the whisky community on various social media channels. Unique medals are designed to promote each of the winning whiskies. Launched in 2010 for whisky consumers, distillers, and people behind the scene making whiskies, the mission was to create a true competition by offering only 3 medals per category, exactly like any other real competition.

The goal is to bring the best whiskies from around the world to be tasted and rated by a professional tasting panel. Unlike other competitions, since 2015, judges are presented with one whisky at a time, to ensure each whisky gets the proper attention. In-depth notes are taken at every step for review ultimately to be compiled by the tasting panel committee.

Whisky of the Year


Ardbeg Uigeadail (95.9 points)

Master Distiller of the Year

Dr. Bill Lumsden

Glenmorangie & Ardbeg Distillery

Golden Barrel Trophy

Ardbeg Distillery (Scotland)

Distillery of the Year

Kavalan Distillery (Taiwan)

Master Blender of the Year

Stephanie Macleod

John Dewar & Sons

TOP 15 Whiskies of 2021

1.    Ardbeg Uigeadail - 95.9 Pts (Islay, Scotland)

2.    Glenmorangie Vintage 1997 - 95.1 Pts (Highland, Scotland)

3.    Dewar's Double Double 32 Year Old - 95 Pts (Scotland)

4.    Kavalan Artist Series: Paul Chiang Peated Malt Single Cask Strength Single Malt – 94.6 Pts                     (Taiwan)

5.    King Car 40th Anniversary Selected Wine Cask Matured  Single Malt Whisky – 94 Pts  (Taiwan)

6.    Black Bourbon Society's Maker's Mark Private Selection: Recipe 2. – 93.8 Pts (Kentucky, USA)

7.    Kavalan Solist Vinho Barrique Single Cask Strength Single Malt Whisky  93.7 Pts (Taiwan)

8.    Dewar's Double Double 21 Year Old – 93.6 Pts (Scotland)

9.    Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Year Old (Batch 2) - 9.4 Pts (Scotland)

10.  Glenmorangie Signet – 93.1 Pts (Highland, Scotland)

11.  Kavalan Solist (Oloroso) Sherry Single Cask Strength Single Malt Whisky – 93 Pts (Taiwan)

12.  Kilchoman Machir Bay – 92.97 Pts (Islay, Scotland)

13.  Ardbeg An Oa – 92.87 Pts (Islay, Scotland)

14.  Aberlour A'Bundah – 92.73 Pts (Speyside, Scotland)

15.  Glenmorangie Quinta Ruban 14 Year Old – 92.67 Pts (Highland, Scotland)

Note: Whiskies that scored under 85 points are not listed, unless requested by the competing distillery.   

The Golden Barrel Trophy

Designed in Switzerland and unveiled at Diageo Archive, the Golden Barrel Trophy represents the pinnacle of excellence in whisky making, showcasing two lions holding a whisky barrel. It is cast in bronze with 24K golden leaves on each side of the barrel. The Golden Barrel will be kept by the winner of the Whisky of the Year until next year’s competition and the name of each winner will be engraved in its marble base to commemorate the history of each annual Whisky of the Year. This year, Ardbeg Distillery gets to keep it, with their winner Ardbeg Uigeadail. 

SCOTLAND

Best Single Malt Scotch

1st Place: Ardbeg Uigeadail - 95.9 Pts
2nd Place: Glenmorangie Vintage 1997 - 95.1 Pts
3rd Place: Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Year Old (Batch 2) - 93.4 Pts

Best Single Malt Scotch NAS (No Age Statement)

1st Place: Ardbeg Uigeadail – 95.9 Pts
2nd Place: Glenmorangie Signet – 93.1 Pts
3rd Place: Kilchoman Machir Bay – 92.97 Pts

Best Single Malt Scotch 10 Year Old and Under

1st Place: Ardbeg Wee Beastie – 91.67 Pts
2nd Place: Ardbeg Ten – 91.17 Pts
3rd Place: Glenmorangie The Original – 89.93 Pts

Best Single Malt Scotch 12 Year Old

1st Place: Glenlivet 12 Year Old – 90.93 Pts
2nd Place: Glenmorangie Nectar d'Or 12 Year Old – 90.53 Pts
3rd Place: Aberlour 12 Year Old – 89.47 Pts

Best Single Malt Scotch 13-14 Year Old

1st Place: Glenmorangie Quinta Ruban 14 Year Old – 92.67 Pts
2nd Place: Glenmorangie The Elementa 14 Year Old – 89.77 Pts
3rd Place: The Glenlivet 14 Year Old – 89.07 Pts

Best Single Malt Scotch 15 Year Old

1st Place: Glenmorangie Cadboll Estate Batch No. 2 – 89.67 Pts
2nd Place: The Glenlivet 15 Year Old – 89.5 Pts

Best Single Malt Scotch 16-17 Year Old

1st Place: Aberlour 16 Year Old – 92.33 Pts
2nd Place: Glenmorangie The Tribute 16 Year Old – 92.23 Pts

Best Single Malt Scotch 18 Year Old

1st Place: Glenmorangie 18 Year Old – 92.37 Pts
2nd Place: The Glenlivet 18 Year Old – 92 Pts
3rd Place: Aberlour 18 Year Old – 87.53 Pts

Best Single Malt Scotch 19-25 Year Old

1st Place: Glenmorangie Grand Vintage Malt 1997 – 95.1 Pts
2nd Place: Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Year Old (Batch 2) – 93.4 Pts
3rd Place: Glenmorangie 19 Year Old– 90.97 Pts

Best Islay Single Malt
1st Place: Ardbeg Uigeadail - 95.9 Pts
2nd Place: Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Year Old (Batch 2) – 93.4 Pts
3rd Place: Kilchoman Machir Bay – 92.97 Pts

Best Highland Single Malt

1st Place: Glenmorangie Grand Vintage Malt 1997 – 95.1 Pts
2nd Place: Glenmorangie Signet – 93.1 Pts
3rd Place: Glenmorangie Quinta Ruban 14 Year Old – 92.67 Pts

Best Speyside Single Malt

1st Place: Aberlour A’Bunadh – 92.73 Pts
2nd Place: Aberlour 16 Year Old – 92.33 Pts
3rd Place: The Glenlivet 18 Year Old – 92 Pts

Best Lowland Single Malt

1st : Glasgow 1770 Single Malt Scotch Whisky – Peated – 88.67 Pts

Best Cask Strength Scotch

1st Place: Ardbeg An Oa – 92.87 Pts
2nd Place: Aberlour A’Bunadh – 92.73 Pts
3rd Place: Ardbeg Corryvreckan - 89.67 Pts

Best Peated Scotch

1st Place: Ardbeg Uigeadail – 95.9 Pts
2nd Place: Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Year Old (Batch 2) – 93.4 Pts
3rd Place: Kilchoman Machir Bay – 92.97 Pts

Best Blended Scotch

1st Place: Dewar’s Double Double 32 Year Old – 95 Pts
2nd Place: Dewar’s Double Double 21 Year Old – 93.6 Pts
3rd Place: Dewar’s Double Double 27 Year Old – 92.37 Pts

Best Blended Scotch 10 Year and Under

1st Place: Dewar’s Portuguese Smooth - 8 Year Old– 90.23 Pts
2nd Place: Dewar’s Japanese Smooth - 8 Year Old – 87.97 Pts
3rd Place: Dewar’s Ilegal Smooth - 8 Year Old - 87.6 Pts

Best Blended Scotch 12-15 Year Old

1st Place: Dewar’s 12 Year Old The Ancestor – 89.6 Pts
2nd Place: Dewar’s 15 Year Old The Monarch – 88.2 Pts
3rd Place: Imperial 12 Year Old Blended Scotch – 86.2 Pts

Best Blended Scotch 16-20 Year Old

1st Place: Dewar’s 18 Year Old The Vintage – 90.4 Pts
2nd Place: Chivas 18 Year Old – 88.3 Pts

Best Blended Scotch 21-24 Year Old

1st Place: Dewar’s Double Double 21 Year Old – 93.6 Pts

Best Blended Scotch 25 Year Old And Over

1st Place: Dewar’s Double Double 32 Year Old – 95 Pts
2nd Place: Dewar’s Double Double 27 Year Old – 92.37 Pts
3rd Place: Dewar’s 25 Year Old The Signature – 90.03 Pts

Best New Scotch Release 2021

1st Place: Ardbeg Scorch 2021 Committee Release – 91.63 Pts
2nd Place: Dewar's Portuguese Smooth - 8 Year Old – 90.23 Pts
3rd Place: Ardbeg Scorch 2021 Limited Edition – 90.13 Pts


USA

Best American Whiskey (All Categories)

1st Place: Black Bourbon Society's Maker's Mark Private Selection: Recipe 2. – 93.8 Pts

2nd Place: Weldon Mills Reserve – 92.1 Pts

3rd Place: Thomas S. Moore Cabernet Sauvignon Finished Kentucky Straight Bourbon – 92.03 Pts

Best Bourbon Whiskey

1st Place: Black Bourbon Society's Maker's

Mark Private Selection: Recipe 2. – 93.8 Pts

2nd Place: Weldon Mills Reserve – 92.1 Pts

3rd Place: Thomas S. Moore Cabernet Sauvignon Finished Kentucky Straight Bourbon – 92.03 Pts

Best Cask Strength Bourbon Whiskey (Full Proof)

1st Place: Weldon Mills Reserve – 92.1 Pts

2nd Place: Old Hamer Cask Strength Bourbon – 92 Pts

3rd Place: 1792 Full Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 90.63 Pts

Best Single Barrel Bourbon Whiskey

1st Place: Old Weller Single Barrel Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 91.17 Pts

2nd Place: John J. Bowman Single Barrel Virginia Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 91.07 Pts

3rd Place: Old Hamer Single Barrel Straight Bourbon Whiskey - 90.63 Pts

Best Bottled in Bond Bourbon Whiskey

1st Place: 1792 Bottled in Bond Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 88.4 Pts

2nd Place: Early Times Bottled in Bond Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey 88.2 Pts

3rd Place: TX Bottled in Bond Single Barrel Texas Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 85.43 Pts

Best American Rye Whiskey

1st Place: Old Overholt 114 Proof Straight Rye – 90 Pts

2nd Place: Old Overholt Straight Rye – 89.47 Pts

3rd Place: Colonel E.H. Taylor Rye Kentucky Straight Whiskey – 88.63 Pts

Best American Single Malt Whiskey

1st Place: Rogue Single Malt Cabernet Finish - 85.1 Pts

Best Micro Distillery Whiskey

(Under 150,000 bottles)

1st Place: Weldon Mills Reserve – 92.1 Pts

2nd Place: Old Hamer Cask Strength Bourbon – 92 Pts

3rd Place: Sisterdale Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 89.6 Pts

US STATES

Best Indiana Whiskey

1st Place: Old Hamer Cask Strength Bourbon – 92 Pts

2nd Place: Remus – 90.8 Pts

3rd Place: Hugh Hamer Double Oaked 103 –90.07 Pts

Best Kentucky Whiskey

1st Place: Black Bourbon Society's Maker's Mark Private Selection: Recipe 2. – 93.8 Pts

2nd Place: Thomas S. Moore Cabernet Sauvignon Finished Kentucky Straight Bourbon – 92.03 Pts

3rd Place: Thomas S. Moore Chardonnay Finished Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 91.83 Pts

Best Tennessee Whiskey

1st Place: Uncle Nearest 1820 Premium Single Barrel Whiskey - US-21 – 91.07 Pts

2nd Place: Uncle Nearest Master Blend Edition – 90.37 Pts

3rd Place: Uncle Nearest 1856 Premium Aged Whiskey – 90.33 Pts

Best Texas Whiskey

1st Place: TX Texas Stright Bourbon Whiskey Finished in Tawny Port Casks – 90.17 Pts

2nd Place: Sisterdale Stright Bourbon Whiskey  – 89.6 Pts

3rd Place: TX Texas Stright Bourbon Whiskey – 88.37 Pts

Best Virginia Whiskey

1st Place: John J. Bowman Single Barrel Virginia Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 91.07 Pts

2nd Place: Bowman Brothers Small Batch Virginia Straight Bourbon Whiskey – 89.2 Pts

JAPAN

Best Japanese Whisky

1st Place: Matsui Pure Malt Whisky The Kurayoshi 18 Years – 91.77 Pts

2nd Place: Matsui Single Malt Whisky Matsui Mizunara Cask – 91.17 Pts

3rd Place: The Kyoto Bourbon Barrel – 90.7 Pts

Best Japanese Whisky NAS (No Age Statement)

1st Place: Matsui Single Malt Whisky: Matsui Mizunara Cask – 91.17 Pts

2nd Place: The Kyoto Bourbon Barrel – 90.7 Pts

3rd Place: Matsui Blended Whisky The San-in Bourbon Barrel-90.67 Pts

Best Blended Japanese Whisky

1st Place: The Kyoto Bourbon Barrel – 90.7 Pts

2nd Place: Matsui Blended Whisky The San-in Bourbon Barrel-90.67 Pts

3rd Place: Matsui Blended Whisky The Tottori Bourbon Barrel – 89.63 Pts

Best Pure Malt Japanese Whisky

1st Place: Matsui Pure Malt Whisky The Kurayoshi 18 YO – 91.77 Pts

2nd Place: Matsui Pure Malt Whisky The Kurayoshi 12 YO – 90.67 Pts

3rd Place: Matsui Pure Malt Whisky The Kurayoshi Sherry Cask-87.33 Pts

Best Japanese Whisky 12 Year Old

1st Place: Matsui Pure Malt Whisky The Kurayoshi 12 YO– 90.67 Pts

Best Japanese Whisky 18 Year Old

1st Place: Matsui Pure Malt Whisky The Kurayoshi 18 Years – 91.77 Pts

INDIA

Best Indian Whisky

1st Place: Mithuna by Paul John Indian Single Malts – 90.7 Pts

2nd : Paul John Nirvana Unpeated Indian Single Malt Whisky – 89.73 Pts

3rd Place: Paul John P.X. Select Cask Indian Single Malt – 89.1 Pts



Thursday, 7 April 2022

GURGAON LIQUOR CHEAPER THAN DELHI

 DELHI  TO CATCH UP WITH GURGAON IN PRICE PER BOTTLE ?

India holds the dubious distinction of the largest consumer of whisky in the world. Yet it has States that have proclaimed Prohibition and enforce it. The complexities of marketing whisky, or any spirit for that matter, are daunting. They are not helped by the vagaries and vicissitudes of culture-bound States, or so they say. The plethora of executable wine laws in India is applicable not only for importers, producers, distributors, retailers and restaurateurs, all of whom come under the umbrella of licensing, but also the consumer.

Delhi is the 28th most visited city in the world and the first in India, by visitors both foreign and Indian. Tourism is a source of revenue and Excise Revenue is an important source of income for the State. The previous system of excise regime in Delhi was highly cumbersome and the liquor trade is conducted in an archaic manner, with strange laws for distributors and sellers. Just across the border into Haryana, Gurgaon had a thriving liquor industry, with significant income from Excise Duty. The excise revenue generated in Delhi was at sub-optimal level with significant potential for revenue augmentation and also providing a decent standard of customer experience commensurate with the stature of the National Capital.

The known illegal trade across borders was well known to the Excise Dept in Haryana. Excise officials were removed from the border and the massive efflux indirectly promoted. As a direct result, Gurgaon witnessed an explosion in the number of stores selling both Indian and imported liquor under the L-1 classification. L-1 Licences are reserved for bulk sellers. Moreover, buyers had to buy in excess of a certain quota so that the excise revenue could be maximised. Currently, over 60 stores are operating as L-1 merchants. You cannot drive more than one km in Gurgaon in any direction without coming across a bright and glaringly prominent L-1 store.

In October 2021, Delhi announced its new policy for liquor traders. Traders who met stipulated quota in the past in any one of the past two years were sold L-1 licences. A new order in the 2021 policy stipulated that the stores be of national class, if not international. Also, no Maximum Reserve Price was to be quoted on the label, leaving the trader to decide his margins. Once this order was realised, traders in Delhi, who had huge reserves piled up due the pandemic, decided to offer unheard of bonuses, attracting mile-long queues and snaky tailbacks for Kms. The Delhi Govt banned any such discount and imposed a minimum sale price per brand of alcoholic beverages. The watching traders in Gurgaon raised prices overnight, but kept them below Delhi rates.