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Irish Whiskey: Ireland’s best-known and most-loved whiskeys
Gary Quinn


This beautifully presented Little Book is an excellent introduction to the world of Irish whiskey. It includes descriptions of more than 100 Irish whiskeys from the whole island of Ireland. Photographs of key locations and products makes this a very attractive gift. A handy 8-page map of all distilleries featured is included. Contains an introduction to Irish whiskey – taste, tradition and identity. Covers the differences between Single Pot Still, Single Malt and Grain – flavour profiles, consistency and colour. Describes current working distilleries and their brands and the story of each major brand and what’s to come. Also features many independent brands. A helpful index is found at the back of the book.













Copyright (#ulink_9d92d4cc-e4f5-5b24-b928-eab244e27219)

HarperCollins Publishers

Westerhill Road

Bishopbriggs

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G64 2QT

First Edition 2020

© HarperCollins Publishers 2020

Text © Gary Quinn 2020

Collins


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Print Edition ISBN 978-0-00-834066-7

eBook Edition © October 2019 ISBN 978-0-00-837821-9

Version: 2019-11-08


Contents

Cover (#u3d2f3abb-ee1e-5ddd-95cf-458ac8c9916d)

Title Page (#u754e7955-958a-5259-8bea-84a3fcb020c2)

Copyright (#ulink_09660698-f2ce-59e3-9c90-be2473dede2a)

What this book covers (#ulink_52b195aa-d23b-522f-9ab5-9931d738173d)

Introduction (#ulink_c33bd273-85ac-510d-bc5f-7c04a777b548)

What is Irish Whiskey? (#ulink_791fb318-249e-5778-a775-b6b016ede399)

Wood, spirit, and maturation (#ulink_8297d825-b1a7-5e84-b1bc-a6a1c1243675)

Location maps (#ulink_ad5f870b-4e2d-597b-ba3e-b3595be6e40a)

Northern Ireland (#ulink_d8921cbc-3977-503b-852d-8498ca8b622d)

West Central Ireland (#ulink_2e96dc9c-6bad-59b6-98eb-af69fa215f39)

Southwestern Ireland (#ulink_3e91a634-e900-5796-ac8f-5718b7d71033)

East Central Ireland (#ulink_84a1d7c4-374e-5724-8a65-e5cfc59af87d)

Southeastern Ireland (#ulink_0bbaed7f-c9fa-57cb-b23c-c8ab8b6546a8)

Irish Whiskey (#ulink_468caf54-8f98-5ab6-8b97-25220fea6a14)

Achill Island Distillery (#ulink_8eab3138-7a34-55cb-94eb-11c26e8f4f20)

Ballykeefe Distillery (#ulink_f2763659-e68c-5e98-a497-d75c8a92d948)

Blackwater Distillery (#ulink_aed26c4c-287a-5c28-aa0a-563af1fe8294)

Boann Distillery (#ulink_6c525a25-f2fb-58c0-b06c-78d044e320fb)

The Whistler: The Blue Note (#ulink_3277af17-0fdd-56d7-aeb3-31ea2c307de6)

The Whistler: 10-year-old (#ulink_469f4d7f-d90f-5087-aa6d-43a617ffde54)

Bushmills Distillery (#ulink_1f6e8574-b334-516b-a5e2-26545a41e0cb)

Bushmills Original (#ulink_5de663b0-2b9b-5e4e-a7bb-e4a68552217c)

Bushmills Red Bush (#ulink_c017bddd-3003-579c-ae49-a381cb4434e2)

Bushmills Black Bush (#ulink_b4e096eb-d0cb-5229-8c13-053bf13da994)

Bushmills 10-year-old Single Malt (#ulink_23306c0f-42e6-5358-b06e-4452160cb634)

Bushmills 16-year-old Single Malt (#ulink_c9dc43bc-8043-5119-9d98-9b2c13309328)

Bushmills 21-year-old Single Malt (#ulink_45882dba-9b9a-5432-9ede-04004380f53d)

Clonakilty Distillery (#ulink_6db2e973-7a9f-567e-a946-76024a57477c)

Clonakilty Single Batch (#ulink_6b23917e-47d5-5dc8-a1c7-9e65f030aa61)

Clonakilty Port Cask (#ulink_eeb242d3-68b3-5c38-8dd4-bb391d3aca85)

Clonakilty Single Grain Bordeaux (#litres_trial_promo)

Connacht Whiskey Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Spade & Bushel 12 (#litres_trial_promo)

Ballyhoo Grain (#litres_trial_promo)

Cooley Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Dingle Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Dingle Single Malt, Batch No. 4 (#litres_trial_promo)

Dingle Single Pot Still, Batch No. 3 (#litres_trial_promo)

The Dublin Liberties Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

The Dubliner range (#litres_trial_promo)

Dublin Liberties Oak Devil (#litres_trial_promo)

Dublin Liberties Copper Alley (#litres_trial_promo)

Dublin Liberties Murder Lane (#litres_trial_promo)

Dublin Liberties Keepers Coin (#litres_trial_promo)

Dublin Liberties King of Hell (#litres_trial_promo)

Great Northern Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Irish Distillers (#litres_trial_promo)

Jameson Irish Whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

Jameson Original (#litres_trial_promo)

Jameson Crested (#litres_trial_promo)

Jameson Caskmates (#litres_trial_promo)

Jameson Black Barrel (#litres_trial_promo)

Jameson Makers Series (#litres_trial_promo)

Jameson 18-year-old Bow St. Edition (#litres_trial_promo)

Powers (#litres_trial_promo)

Powers Gold Label (#litres_trial_promo)

Powers Three Swallows (#litres_trial_promo)

Powers Signature Release (#litres_trial_promo)

Powers John’s Lane (#litres_trial_promo)

Redbreast (#litres_trial_promo)

Redbreast 12 (#litres_trial_promo)

Redbreast Lustau (#litres_trial_promo)

Redbreast 15 (#litres_trial_promo)

Redbreast 21 (#litres_trial_promo)

Method and Madness (#litres_trial_promo)

Method and Madness Single Grain (#litres_trial_promo)

Method and Madness Single Malt (#litres_trial_promo)

Method and Madness Single Pot Still (#litres_trial_promo)

Method and Madness 31-year-old Single Grain (#litres_trial_promo)

Method and Madness Single Pot Still finished in Wild Cherry Wood (#litres_trial_promo)

Method and Madness Single Pot Still finished in Acacia Wood (#litres_trial_promo)

Midleton VR (#litres_trial_promo)

Midleton Vintage Release 2018 (#litres_trial_promo)

Barry Crockett Legacy (#litres_trial_promo)

Midleton VR Dair Ghaelach Grinsell’s Wood (#litres_trial_promo)

The Spot range (#litres_trial_promo)

Green Spot (#litres_trial_promo)

Yellow Spot (#litres_trial_promo)

Red Spot (#litres_trial_promo)

Green Spot: the variations (#litres_trial_promo)

Kilbeggan Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Kilbeggan Irish Whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

Kilbeggan Small Batch Rye (#litres_trial_promo)

Kilbeggan Single Grain (#litres_trial_promo)

Connemara Original Peated Single Malt (#litres_trial_promo)

Connemara 12-year-old Single Malt (#litres_trial_promo)

Tyrconnell Single Malt (#litres_trial_promo)

Tyrconnell Cask Series (#litres_trial_promo)

Tyrconnell 16-year-old Single Malt (#litres_trial_promo)

Killowen Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Lough Measc Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Pearse Lyons Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Pearse Lyons – The Original (#litres_trial_promo)

Pearse Lyons – Distiller’s Choice (#litres_trial_promo)

Pearse Lyons – Cooper’s Select (#litres_trial_promo)

Pearse Lyons – Founder’s Choice (#litres_trial_promo)

Powerscourt Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Fercullen Premium Blend (#litres_trial_promo)

Fercullen 10-year-old Single Grain (#litres_trial_promo)

Fercullen 14-year-old Single Malt (#litres_trial_promo)

Rademon Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Roe & Co Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Roe & Co Blended Whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

Royal Oak Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Slane Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Slane Irish Whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

Teeling Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Teeling Small Batch (#litres_trial_promo)

Teeling Single Grain (#litres_trial_promo)

Teeling Single Malt (#litres_trial_promo)

Teeling Single Pot Still (#litres_trial_promo)

Teeling Revival To Renaissance (#litres_trial_promo)

The Echlinville Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Dunville’s Three Crowns (#litres_trial_promo)

Dunville’s Three Crowns Peated (#litres_trial_promo)

Dunville’s PX ten-/twelve-year-old Single Malt Irish Whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

Dunville’s VR PM eighteen-year-old Rum Finish Irish Whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

The Shed Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Tullamore Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Tullamore D.E.W. Original (#litres_trial_promo)

Tullamore D.E.W. 12-year-old Special Reserve (#litres_trial_promo)

Tullamore D.E.W. 18-year-old Single Malt (#litres_trial_promo)

Tullamore D.E.W. XO Rum Cask Finish (#litres_trial_promo)

Waterford Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

West Cork Distillers (#litres_trial_promo)

West Cork Irish Whiskey – Bourbon cask (#litres_trial_promo)

West Cork Irish Whiskey – Cask Strength (#litres_trial_promo)

West Cork Irish Whiskey – Black Cask (#litres_trial_promo)

West Cork Irish Whiskey – IPA and Stout finish (#litres_trial_promo)

West Cork Irish Whiskey – Glengarriff series (#litres_trial_promo)

Independent brands (#litres_trial_promo)

Celtic Cask Series (#litres_trial_promo)

Dick Mack’s Pub (#litres_trial_promo)

Glendalough Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Grace O’Malley Irish Whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

JJ Corry (#litres_trial_promo)

Knappogue Castle (#litres_trial_promo)

Paddy whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

Silkie (#litres_trial_promo)

Sonny Molloy’s (#litres_trial_promo)

The Friend at Hand (#litres_trial_promo)

The Long Hall (#litres_trial_promo)

The Palace Bar (#litres_trial_promo)

Tipperary Boutique Distillery (#litres_trial_promo)

Walsh Whiskey (#litres_trial_promo)

Index (#litres_trial_promo)

Picture Credits (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Author (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Publisher (#litres_trial_promo)


What this book covers (#ulink_14ee69a9-03b3-59f4-97ec-1b7d62407efc)

In this book I have tried to capture the personality of Ireland’s working distilleries and independent brands. In a time of rapid growth for the sector I want to champion Irish whiskey and allow as many people as possible to enjoy the journey it’s on.

The book is as much a travel guide to Ireland’s new distillery network as it is to the whiskeys they produce. In reading it, you should get a picture of the people, the places, and the products they have created. It should give you a comprehensive overview of Irish whiskey and the knowledge to choose a whiskey that matches your own personality and flavour preferences.

The first part of the book provides the story of each of the working distilleries and, where it exists, details their core range. Not all of the working distilleries are selling their own brand yet. Some of the younger distilleries have chosen not to use sourced whiskey from other distilleries, deciding instead to allow their own spirit to mature before putting their name to it.

The second part of the book is designed to celebrate the art of independent blending. Not all Irish whiskey brands have their own distillery, or ever intend to open one. This section introduces you to some of those independent brands who only source whiskey from distilleries to blend a new whiskey and outlines why their independence matters.

Irish whiskey is incredibly good fun and the people who drive it are passionate and full of life. I hope this book helps you meet them and get to enjoy what they make.


Introduction (#ulink_0262822e-ff55-5798-a4f3-7bb69f7fcdee)

If you’re looking for a dramatic pursuit, lose yourself in the story of Irish whiskey. It has all the elements of a great saga: poor beginnings, roaring success, sudden decline, a romantic back story, and back-from-the-brink re-invention – while bursting at the seams with plot twists.

While it’s gratifying to reflect on Irish whiskey’s past, with its sixth-century beginnings, eighteenth-century rapid growth, and nineteenth-century global dominance of the spirits sector, what’s happening now in the twenty-first century is incredibly exciting.

The Irish whiskey industry has suddenly exploded. The number of distilleries now in operation (twenty-six at the time of writing), as well as those planned to open, have taken the country by surprise, re-invigorating an industry that was for so long wrapped up in the fortunes of just a handful of distilleries. In 2010 there were only four whiskey distilleries in operation in Ireland: Midleton Distillery in County Cork, Old Bushmills in County Antrim, Kilbeggan in County Westmeath, and Cooley in County Louth.

These large-scale operations, each today owned by some of the biggest names in the global drinks industry, re-invented, fought for, and protected a category that was long in decline. In some cases, like with Irish Distillers’ re-invention of Jameson, they created global whiskey brands that introduced a whole new generation of drinkers to Irish whiskey. While the latest chapter in the Irish whiskey story is all about the rise of independent craft distilling and bonding, the decades of work still being undertaken by the big distilleries is truly inspiring.

In 2018 Ireland exported 10.7 million cases of whiskey. This is an increase of some four million cases since 2010 and the sector is now said to be the fastest-growing whiskey category in the world. While it is still a long way behind the dominance of Scotch on the international market, the rapid growth in demand from new and old Irish whiskey fans, coupled with the Irish industry’s ability to provide greater product innovation and choice, suggests that the sector’s ambition is not misplaced.

Old whiskey from new distilleries

But we’re not there yet. A lot of the whiskey brands in this book are from distilleries which are very young. They have all distilled their own spirit but many are yet to reach maturation. While you can sell Irish whiskey once it reaches three years old, it’s quite rare to do so. As each of the new distilleries wait for their own spirit to mature, many of them have released brands using sourced whiskey from the existing distilleries. This is not a bad thing. The whiskey that is being used is generally of excellent quality and it creates a challenge for Irish whiskey blenders to use their skills to conjure flavours and combinations that genuinely stand out from the crowd. Their choice of source whiskey in terms of age and type, the barrel it is then extra-matured in, and the additional maturation time, determines the future of a brand. Consequently, the role of the master blender is an incredibly important one.

The whiskey business is also incredibly expensive. It can be many years, even decades, before any profit can be reclaimed. So the opportunity to sell a high-quality brand under the distillery name in advance of their own spirit being ready is crucial. As you visit distilleries, you will find that many also produce their own gin and vodka, creating a surge of popularity in these products that has been very positive. As gin and vodka have a very short production cycle, they help bolster the much slower production cycle of the whiskey. A third category you’ll discover is poitín, a sometimes overlooked traditional distilled spirit that is slowly regaining an appreciation here.

Rise of the independents

A strong independent industry is key and it’s that which is the new character in the Irish whiskey story. When the first casks were filled at Dingle Distillery in the winter of 2012, that distillery was leading the way in creating a new generation of whiskey distilleries. In the few short years since then, more than twenty new distilleries have begun production all across Ireland, North and South. This has created not just an industry but an entire movement, stuffed with personality and passion.

In towns, cities, and villages across the island, people from all walks of life suddenly find themselves wrapped up in the complicated business of whiskey. The most exciting part is watching so many young people being trained as coopers, distillers, blenders, and ambassadors – career paths that were rarely heard of ten years ago, owing to the scarcity of demand. The ambition of the industry has created an entirely new set of career opportunities, and not just for Irish people. As you tour the country’s distilleries, expect to hear American, Australian, European, Asian, and, of course, Scottish accents ripple through warehouses and still rooms. People from all over the whiskey world have brought their expertise here and Irish whiskey is all the better for it as it prepares to play a bigger role than ever on the global whiskey stage.


What is Irish Whiskey? (#ulink_80e02c69-b49b-55b8-86eb-1132aa8cf17d)

A Beginner’s Guide

In general, Irish whiskey tends towards smooth, sweet flavours and is often referred to as being easy to drink. Unlike Scotch, it does not usually have a smoky, peated flavour, although it can use peat and still be considered Irish whiskey. There are a small number of popular peated Irish whiskeys on the market, such as Kilbeggan’s Connemara Peated Single Malt.

To be called Irish whiskey, the spirit must be distilled in Ireland, North or South, and the distilled spirit then matured for at least three years in wooden casks. People often add a day to that age reference for dramatic effect but three years is the legal minimum.

Irish whiskey can be double- or triple-distilled. Triple distillation is very common with Irish whiskey but double distillation is just as valid. The third distillation is said to add to the feeling of smoothness in the taste.

There are four types of Irish whiskey: malt whiskey, pot still whiskey, grain whiskey, and blended Irish whiskey.

Single Malt Irish Whiskey

In popular culture, the idea of a single malt is often widely understood to reference a sign of excellence but, in fact, it simply refers to the type of whiskey it is. The single in the name refers to the fact that it is made in a single distillery, while the malt refers to the fact that it contains 100 per cent malt barley, as well as water and yeast. It can be peated or unpeated and has a full and pleasant oily texture with a smooth, sweet, and malty finish. It is distilled in a pot still. Popular examples include Dingle Single Malt, Teeling Single Malt, and Bushmills Single Malt.

Single Pot Still Irish Whiskey

Single pot still whiskey is native to Ireland. It emerged in the late 1700s as a way of avoiding a tax on the use of malt. Pot still whiskey uses a combination of malted and unmalted barley. The unmalted part creates a spicy flavour and a creamy texture that allows it to stand apart from the flavour of single malt whiskey. It is distilled in a pot still. Some of the most popular Irish whiskey brands are single pot still whiskey and include Redbreast, Green Spot, and Powers John’s Lane.

Single Grain Irish Whiskey

Irish grain whiskey must have a malt barley component in its recipe, but only up to a maximum of 30 per cent. The remainder can be a combination of unmalted grains such as maize, wheat, or barley. It is distilled in a column still and can be double- or triple-distilled. Popular examples of Irish grain whiskey include Kilbeggan Single Grain, Powerscourt Distillery’s Fercullen 10-year-old Single Grain, and Teeling’s Single Grain.

Blended Irish Whiskey

Blended Irish whiskey is a combination of two or more of the pot still, malt, and grain whiskeys. Generally, the lighter grain whiskey is combined with the heavier malt or pot still to create a new blend or flavour profile. It can also be a combination of all three styles, although this is rare. Tullamore D.E.W. is a great example of all three styles being combined to create an incredibly popular brand. Bushmills Original is a blend of their triple-distilled malt whiskey and a lighter grain whiskey.

Additives

The colour of Irish whiskey comes from the cask it is matured in. However, in order to allow consistency in the colour of a brand over time, the caramel colouring E150 is permitted. Although named after a flavour (caramel) this is a colouring only and has no flavour. It is the only additive which is permitted.


Wood, spirit, and maturation (#ulink_0b9ea10f-3b6a-5b44-9ed7-348aadb1fb9b)






Maturation warehouses are incredibly special places. Stacked to the ceiling with wooden casks slowly maturing new spirit into whiskey, they release a rich aroma that simply can’t be bottled. This is the fabled angel’s share; that part of the spirit that evaporates through the wood as it matures. The air in these warehouses is heavy with a sweet perfume that escapes through the wood of the cask or barrel as the wood “breathes”. It’s a wonderful alchemy that not only matures the spirit, allowing it to become whiskey, but also creates an incredible range of flavour profiles, depth of colour, and aromas.

Irish whiskey must be matured in wood and in the majority of cases that wood is oak, American Oak to be precise. Since, in the USA, there is a strict policy of using only new, unseasoned oak to make bourbon there is a ready supply of ex-bourbon casks for the Irish whiskey market.

The time spent maturing that bourbon will have stripped some of the minerals from the wood that create flavour, but the bourbon in turn will have passed its own flavour properties back into the wood, and they then get transferred into the new spirit, maturing into Irish whiskey.

Irish whiskey makers also use casks that have previously stored other drinks, such as sherry or port. Each of these will have left their own signature on the wood and this too will be transferred into the new spirit. Throughout this book you will find references to the type of cask the whiskey is matured or “finished” in. Irish whiskey has to mature for at least three years in cask but it is often much longer. Once mature, a whiskey can then be “finished” in another cask or barrel, to impart new flavour profiles. Different wood types can also be introduced at this stage.

The new make spirit that goes into a cask is a clear liquid. Its final identity, once it matures, is determined by the chemical reactions that occur between the wood of the cask and the spirit itself. Once bottled, ageing stops and the whiskey is complete but, until then, it’s a wonderfully slow and exciting part of the whiskey-making process.

Anyone who journeys down the whiskey path is likely to become fascinated by this process, not least because it is an act of trust between the distiller and nature itself. The distiller and blender understand the process, choose the type of wood, and have an expectation of the result, but they can rarely predict the outcome with 100 per cent certainty. They simply have to wait and let the wood do its work.









Location Maps (#ulink_3eb6498d-5983-5f89-b293-503f62dda13f)


Northern Ireland (#ulink_fb42f1ff-39ce-5d48-997e-a37bf2e5fef5)

Numbers in bold indicate the page where the property can be found






The page numbers on this map relate to the printed version of this book; they do not match the pages of your ebook. You can use your ebook reader’s search tool to find a specific word or passage.


West Central Ireland (#ulink_e29267f0-0e64-5f9b-80e4-79633a9b23de)

Numbers in bold indicate the page where the property can be found






The page numbers on this map relate to the printed version of this book; they do not match the pages of your ebook. You can use your ebook reader’s search tool to find a specific word or passage.


Southwestern Ireland (#ulink_05bd3e31-8f2b-5aec-89a9-a1bae7ed623a)

Numbers in bold indicate the page where the property can be found






The page numbers on this map relate to the printed version of this book; they do not match the pages of your ebook. You can use your ebook reader’s search tool to find a specific word or passage.


East Central Ireland (#ulink_fece6067-9981-5fd3-bfd4-3009261ad351)






The page numbers on this map relate to the printed version of this book; they do not match the pages of your ebook. You can use your ebook reader’s search tool to find a specific word or passage.


Southeastern Ireland (#ulink_57264597-a734-5d93-8fc1-80b4c45d571c)

Numbers in bold indicate the page where the property can be found






The page numbers on this map relate to the printed version of this book; they do not match the pages of your ebook. You can use your ebook reader’s search tool to find a specific word or passage.





(#ulink_c743992c-0d2a-5669-ae67-e4491dd6ba9e)


Achill Island Distillery (#ulink_640d9f92-3cc3-5cef-86ca-11dc609d6112)

CONTACT: Drioglann Oilean Acla, Bunnacurry, Achill Island, County Mayo

WEBSITE:irishamericanwhiskeys.com (http://irishamericanwhiskeys.com)

DESCRIPTION: Working distillery

A red carpet and Scottish bagpipes heralded the arrival of two copper stills on Achill Island in September 2018 from Speyside in Scotland, where they were manufactured. Drioglann Oilean Acla, as their new home is officially named in the Irish language, is the first distillery to open on an island here. It also lies within the Gaeltacht, that part of Ireland where Irish is still the first language. Owned by the Irish American Trading Company, the distillery and its visitor centre will form part of the fledgling Gaeltacht Distillery Trail, as well as being a major tourist attraction in its own right.

These days, Achill is often approached along the 42 km greenway, which links the Atlantic island to Westport in County Mayo. The greenway was built along the route of a disused railway line and is a hugely popular cycling and walking trail, which cuts through some of the most dramatic landscape in the country.

The Irish American Trading Company, a family-owned business founded by John McKay in 2014, with offices in Dublin and Boston, invested some €4 million in the project. Its master distiller, David Hynes, is also a director of the Great Northern Distillery. Currently, they use sourced whiskey to produce their two whiskeys, which are already available in twenty-six US States.







Ballykeefe Distillery (#ulink_6f13bcf8-f909-5cfb-a898-3c3af2d49745)

CONTACT: Ballykeefe Distillery, Kyle, Ballykeefe, Cuffsgrange, County Kilkenny, R95 NR50

WEBSITE:ballykeefedistillery.ie (http://ballykeefedistillery.ie)

DESCRIPTION: Working distillery, visitor centre, and farm

There are generations of experience behind the distillery at Ballykeefe in County Kilkenny, which is built on a working beef and tillage farm. Visitors here are likely to meet farmer Morgan Ging and his wife and four children personally, as they run these two perfectly complementary businesses in the heart of rural Ireland. You are also likely to meet their cattle. The farm outhouses were converted to house their three copper stills, which were handmade in Italy by another family business, Barison Industries. The water is their own and the barley is grown on site. Maturing happens here too, in first-fill bourbon barrels, making this one of the most environmentally aware, closed-loop distilleries in the country. They simply do it all themselves.

They’ve already won more than thirteen international awards for their vodka, poitín, and gin, using the spirit they’ve distilled since 2016. Their first whiskey is due for bottling in August 2020 but their most recent sample, tasted after nineteen months in barrel, has fuelled their confidence levels. They use only the highest cut of the distillate, they say, to ensure their whiskey will be extremely smooth, and this early taste is right on target. They have a single malt, a single pot still, and a 100 per cent rye whiskey under way, as well as various blends of this trio.

Bucking the trend of other distilleries, Ballykeefe chose not to launch a sourced-whiskey brand in advance, putting all their stock in their own hard work. Despite their whiskey not being available to taste yet, there’s already a well-worn route to Ballykeefe by whiskey societies and individual whiskey fans. This ambitious family affair is a really positive addition to the Irish whiskey landscape, and well worth experiencing first hand for an alternative take on who is building the category.







Blackwater Distillery (#ulink_7af8ccdf-c978-5c55-b700-96895cdd4152)

CONTACT: Blackwater Distillery, Unit 3, Cappoquin Enterprise Park, Cappoquin, County Waterford

WEBSITE:blackwaterdistillery.ie (http://blackwaterdistillery.ie)

DESCRIPTION: Working distillery

Blackwater Distillery have had tremendous success with their gin products, pouring huge amounts of effort into the creation of a family of gins which is trusted, innovative, and packed with personality. So, becoming the twenty-first Irish whiskey distillery to start operating here, in November 2018, sparked lots of enthusiasm for what they might conjure.

A quick glance at posts on their blog will drop you directly into a refreshing whirl of attitude and opinion on where the future of Irish whiskey is headed. They’ve challenged themselves in this bright new world of Irish whiskey. Experimenting with maturation isn’t enough for these trailblazers to start heralding a revolution, it seems. Instead they want to create real distance between what they are creating and the rest of the field.

The people behind the distillery, founder and former broadcaster Peter Mulryan, Kieran Curtin, and the head distiller, US-born John Wilcox, feel this can only be achieved through provenance. Is their whiskey truly Irish and, if so, what determines that? The barley, the water, the wood? Blackwater will be using block-chain technology on every bottle of their double-distilled whiskey so that the customer can scan and see the full production journey, including their use of Irish grains. They’ll see where exactly they mature their spirit and the kind of wood they’re using. The customer will get complete transparency. That shouldn’t be such a radical idea, they suggest.

They’ve built their business from scratch and appear to have garnered a real sense of who they are and where they want to go in doing so. They’re ambitious for Irish whiskey and that’s just the fuel they need.







Boann Distillery (#ulink_963228d1-8197-5800-aafd-463346e7bf35)

CONTACT: Boann Whiskey Distillery, Platin Road, Drogheda, County Meath

WEBSITE:boanndistillery.ie (http://boanndistillery.ie)

DESCRIPTION: Working distillery and visitor centre. Tours daily.

There aren’t many distilleries in Ireland with a solid marble floor, but that was part of the luxury inheritance Boann received when they took up residence on their site in the Boyne valley, near Drogheda, on Ireland’s east coast. The building that held the site before the stills arrived was a high-end car showroom and the floor laid for its cash-rich customers was too good to lose, they say. But then, the family behind this distillery are no strangers to a high-quality finish. They’ve been involved in the drinks industry in Ireland for decades, running the Gleeson Group before setting up Boann’s parent company Na Cuana, which also has premium cider, cream liqueur, and craft beer brands in its stable.

Their beer brand bookends the distillery, and visitors to the Boann Distillery’s L-shaped building can continue their journey through the Boyne Brewhouse on the same site. Boann is named after an ancient Celtic female god, who is said to have created the nearby Boyne river, which carves out this historically important slice of the Irish landscape.

They currently use sourced whiskey as their own spirit matures, but you can expect experimental collaboration with their brewhouse in future releases. Plans to use their Imperial Stout casks in finishing their whiskey are already under way. With a close eye on the environment, the Italian engineers behind their stills have included enhanced reflux control on the neck to give better control over output, they say. Additionally, they reference the use of nanotechnology in the still design, creating the conditions for much greater interaction with the copper.

The location twenty-five minutes from Dublin Airport and just off a motorway exit means that the time-poor whiskey tourist eager to get out of Dublin is going to have Boann Distillery firmly in his or her sights.

They currently source whiskey for their Whistler range and aim to produce a future range of triple-distilled single malt and single pot stills under their own steam.







The Whistler: The Blue Note (#ulink_0f860043-36e1-5c26-b82a-863d8f0065f2)

Boann created the Whistler Collection using sourced whiskey in advance of their distillery opening in 2019. Building on their contacts from their years working in the wine trade, they sourced oloroso sherry casks to age this five-year-old single malt for a further two years. Bottled at 46 per cent and non-chill filtered, it won Gold at the 2017 World Whiskey Awards. Bottled at 46 per cent.







The Whistler: 10-year-old (#ulink_b7faa676-08a5-5df6-ac51-b01331231376)

The 10-year-old Whistler single malt is designed to be an even smoother, more elegant take on Whistler Blue Note. Matured in ex-bourbon casks and finished in oloroso, its sweetness is strengthened by its extra time in cask. Plenty of vanilla notes, fresh summer fruit flavours, and a distinctive finish. Bottled at 46 per cent and non-chill filtered. They also produced a cask-strength version of Whistler bottled at 59 per cent.







Bushmills Distillery (#ulink_bd21bc4a-7441-5651-ae90-63a9d3e1d98d)

CONTACT: Bushmills Distillery, 2 Distillery Road, Bushmills, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, BT57 8XH

WEBSITE:bushmills.com (http://bushmills.com)

EMAIL:visitors.bushmills@bushmills.com (mailto:visitors.bushmills@bushmills.com)

DESCRIPTION: Working distillery, visitor centre, café/bar, and shop

It’s often a surprise to whiskey drinkers to find a village surrounding the famous home of Bushmills whiskey, but the more than eighty listed buildings that shape the centre of this heritage site reflect the long-held position of Bushmills as a place of industry and success.

When water was the most bankable power source around, the mill’s pulling profit from the river Bush made the village a significant commercial success in this quiet corner of north Antrim, and the distillery grew from that. It’s from a tributary of the same river Bush, called St Columb’s Rill, that the Bushmills Distillery still takes its water today, and visitors marvel at how close they can get to a natural water source that is destined to be transformed into the core whiskeys that make up the Bushmills brand. Located just two kilometres from the dramatic Causeway Coast, the distillery receives more than 120,000 visitors a year, making it one of the most popular tourist destinations in the region.

Bushmills has changed hands many times over the centuries before current owners, Mexican liquor brand Jose Cuervos, took up residence. Its previous owner, Diageo, spent a reputed €100 million modernizing and enlarging the distillery before selling it on. Each change of ownership brought with it the promise of a continued future for the brand and the many local people who are involved in its creation. But, regardless of who has been in charge at any given time, the identity of this truly Irish and Northern Irish brand has never quite been weakened, bringing a rich and exciting layer of experience to the Irish whiskey story.







Bushmills Original (#ulink_56c79b9f-64e4-5386-a900-6657c7f64616)

You’ll find Bushmills Original in just about any bar in Ireland, its gold and white label immediately familiar among the ever more crowded shelves of Irish whiskey. It’s a consistent award winner and its marriage of young grain with older, triple-distilled malt gives it a smooth creamy feel that makes it an excellent introduction to the Bushmills stable. Matured in ex-bourbon and sherry casks, you can expect vanilla and light fruit flavours. Bottled at 40 per cent.







Bushmills Red Bush (#ulink_b0334239-c65c-5b47-8473-b16c54b5c876)

Red Bush is a recent arrival at Bushmills, having been introduced as recently as 2017. Originally aimed at the US market, it’s a blend of four-year-old grain whiskey matured in first-fill bourbon casks to capture a stronger bourbon feel. It has a similar vanilla, fruit flavour to the Original, but with a sweeter finish which lingers and dominates this new entry-level whiskey. It has a darker red colour, to match its title identity. Bottled at 40 per cent.







Bushmills Black Bush (#ulink_4ca29f39-1b32-56c3-aa50-9440c45db35e)

Fans of Black Bush are wholly committed to their love of this great malt and grain blend. Known by some in Ireland as “Bushmills Liquor”, ordering a glass of Black Bush in a bar brings with it a hint of class that is often lacking in the identity of other Irish whiskeys. It gets its attractive dark colour from maturing in sherry casks and has a wonderful smoothness that underpins its rich, deep flavour. The blend is majority malt whiskey, aged up to 18 years. Bottled at 40 per cent.







Bushmills 10-year-old Single Malt (#ulink_6b6720ba-7a28-5726-89cd-458b12603d90)

Triple-distilled, like all of the Bushmills family, this 100 per cent single malt is matured in bourbon and sherry casks for at least 10 years. It’s a signature product in the Bushmills range and cuts to the heart of what Bushmills is famous for – rich, warm, honeyed, satisfying flavours. Chocolate and vanilla dominate and create a wonderful profile for the first of a trio of superb single malts. Bottled at 40 per cent.







Bushmills 16-year-old Single Malt (#ulink_4de3d1d3-972b-5141-b254-2d8ac3fc90f4)

Complexity of flavour dominates this 16-year-old single malt with a layer of drama that captures all the smoothness of the 10-year-old but is stuffed full of attractive, robust added flavours. Layers of spice, honey and nuts leave a long lingering flavour. The malt is aged in both bourbon and sherry casks for around 15 years and then brought together in a port cask for up to a year, creating sweet, fruity flavours that are elegant and distinguished. Bottled at 40 per cent.







Bushmills 21-year-old Single Malt (#ulink_5fe1ee52-02ce-5e6f-93f2-734f327a3676)

Bushmill’s top-of-the-range does not disappoint. All the rich, warm notes that define its malt heritage, underpinned by fruit, spice, nuts and toffee. It’s warm and inviting and captures a sense of the indulgence that all premium whiskeys aspire to. After 19 years in oloroso sherry and bourbon casks, the two resulting single malts are combined for an additional two years in Madeira. This combination of three woods creates a delicate marriage that is very satisfying. Bottled at 40 per cent.







Clonakilty Distillery (#ulink_4533c5d1-a1c0-5611-84d8-92224baa2c7e)

CONTACT: Clonakilty Distillery, The Waterfront, Clonakilty, West Cork

WEBSITE:clonakiltydistillery.ie (http://clonakiltydistillery.ie)

DESCRIPTION: Working distillery, visitor centre, and shop. Tours daily.

The family-run Clonakilty Distillery is a powerful new engine at the heart of this small County Cork town. This is a place that knows the value of a brand: it’s been the home of the secret-recipe Clonakilty black pudding since the 1880s. The young distillery founded by Michael and Helen Scully is, not surprisingly, ambitious to join its famous older neighbour in the pursuit of perfectly-balanced flavours that take root in the landscape around them.

The distillery’s story emerges at the point where the ocean meets the land surrounding the Galley Head lighthouse, 200 metres above the sea and a short drive from the town. It’s a dramatic location, with the wind and waves of the wild Atlantic testing each generation of the Scully family that has tried to pull a living from the ground here.

The family are eighth-generation farmers, who had attempted to diversify their business a number of times before realizing the value of the barley they were growing from earth seeped in Atlantic sea salt and sand. An idea of a craft whiskey captured their imagination, and grew rapidly into a €10 million waterfront distillery in the town and a bonded warehouse on their land at the coast.

Head distiller Paul Corbett returned to his home county from his role in Teeling Distillery in Dublin to oversee operations, and distilling began in March 2019. As they wait for their own triple-distilled single pot still spirit to mature they have launched the Clonakilty brand using sourced whiskey they have blended and matured.







Clonakilty Single Batch (#ulink_c049aa6d-5ae1-5c24-8278-ee398e90158c)

This award-winning blend is the first whiskey to emerge under the Clonakilty brand and was finished in its Atlantic warehouse on their land on the coast. It’s a blend of eight-year-old grain and ten-year-old malt whiskey, matured in a bourbon cask, giving it that distinctive oakderived vanilla and caramel layer. It has a spicy finish that lingers, with notes of ginger and cumin. It won Double Gold at the San Francisco Spirits Competition in 2019. Bottled at 43.6 per cent.







Clonakilty Port Cask (#ulink_e8e90b71-d187-53f7-8936-2209df29cd11)

The Port Cask version takes the same eight-year-old grain and ten-year-old malt as the Single Batch but is finished in a port cask, giving it a spicy edge and a rich dark red colour. With no artificial colours or flavours, it is already said to be very popular in the German market. It has that Christmas pudding flavour that chocolate lovers enjoy, with lots of dark fruits and warm lingering flavours. Bottled at 43.6 per cent.





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This beautifully presented Little Book is an excellent introduction to the world of Irish whiskey. It includes descriptions of more than 100 Irish whiskeys from the whole island of Ireland. Photographs of key locations and products makes this a very attractive gift. A handy 8-page map of all distilleries featured is included. Contains an introduction to Irish whiskey – taste, tradition and identity. Covers the differences between Single Pot Still, Single Malt and Grain – flavour profiles, consistency and colour. Describes current working distilleries and their brands and the story of each major brand and what’s to come. Also features many independent brands. A helpful index is found at the back of the book.

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