Tuesday 31 July 2012

Run Tasting - Black Tot Day - July 31st.

Black Tot day tasting.

On July 31st 1970 the Royal Navy halted the rum ration for the sailors. An institution that had started around 1655 and at one time included a ration of half a pint of rum daily. For this reason July 31st is known as Black Tot Day and lovers of rum celebrate all over the globe by consuming a (responsible) quantity of rum.

The idea behind this tasting was to explore the various island styles that make up a typical Navy rum blend (so focusing on the English speaking islands) plus with a couple of extra nods to the French and Spanish style.

With rum, fermentation is predominantly where you build your flavour and distillation is where you select which bits you keep and which you leave out. I wanted to show different approaches to fermentation i.e. short vs long and also different approaches to distilling i.e. technological advanced, highly scientific approach vs traditional and also huge industrial style column stills, tiny wee column stills and ancient wooden coffey and 200 year pot stills. Included within all that was a few variations on maturation and cask usage.

This particular tasting was to be augmented with a couple of extras. First, if you had a smart-phone you could look at pictures of the different stills and distilleries as I had uploaded some pictures from google images to this blog (see below and sorry that I've not credited the original photographers - if I can find who took them originally I will, promise). And second, I purposely left out Pusser's Blue Label from the tasting selection as I gave people the option that if they bought one across the bar then I would give them a Ron Zacapa 23 for free. Thus fulfilling the part of actually drinking a proper Navy rum on Black Tot day, and also seeing if the audience could then recognise it's component parts that they had drank earlier in the evening. The Zacapa allowed me to talk about Solera ageing and give a nod towards the Spanish style of making rum. Also it was a nice one to end the evening on, especially as the Rhum Agriciole and Guyana and Jamaican Hampden would have been a little bit harder work. One of the Guyana Mezan bottles was sent incorrectly so I had to do one on one night and the other on the second - that's why there are two listed for number 4.

The tasting was king of divided up into drinks pairs with 1 and 2 being the easy drinking, 3 and 4 being slightly more challenging and un-rum like, 5 deeply pungent and 6 going down the Navy route and with 7 to sip a a nice reward.

Good reactions across both nights. Obvs. Zacapa came out as a winner. Everyone liked the Trinidad - but then what's not to dislike? The Foursquare was a love or not that bothered. For those who liked a bit more complexity the Mezan's were winners and for those who were into single malts the Agricole was an eye-opener. I was fairly pleased that people got into these slightly more tricky styles. The Jamaican was a love or hate and no where in between. But I did guarantee that I thought that after the tasting they would forevermore recognise a big estery Jamaican pot-still if ever presented with one.

Here's the list in full. As always some tasting notes and more information on the distilleries to follow sometime in the late future. (If you going to rock up some tasting notes then should at least consider these drinks in some depth and that takes a bit of time.) Still they will get done one day.

1. Plantation - Original Dark - 40% - Trinidad & Tobago (Angostura)
2. Foursquare - Rum 66 - 12 YO - 40% - Barbados (Foursquare)
3. Trois Riveries - Cuvee du Moiln - 3 YO - 40% - Martinique (Trois Riveries)
4. Mezan Guyana 1990 - 20 YO (Single Cask) 40% - Guyana (Versailles Pot Still at Enmore)
4a. Mezan Guyana 1998 - 13 YO (Single Cask) 40% - Guyana (Savalle Column at Uitvlugt)
5. Smith and Cross - Plummer and Wedderburn Pot Still - 57% - (Hampden, Jamaica)
6. Pusser's Blue Label - 54.5% - British Virgin Islands (Admiralty Navy Blend)
7. Ron Zacapa 23 - 40% - Guatemala

Monday 30 July 2012

Pictures for Rum Tasting

Angostura Distillery - Trinidad and Tobago




Big column still




Four Square - Barbados



Pot Still


Column Still


Richard Seale



Hampden - Jamaica


Fermentation


Fernenting Vats



The Pot Still





DDL - Guyana


The stills at DDL



Double Wooden Pot - Port Mourant




EHP Coffey Still


Single Wooden Pot Still - Versailles


French Saville 4 column still




Different marks at DDL





Trois Riveries - Martinique




The old column still.


The mill



Wednesday 11 July 2012

Rum Tasting Event

Rum Tasting event at the Sheaf View in Sheffield Tuesday 10th July 2012

The theme of this evening was to show some of the big names, highly regarded and highly decorated rums. Kind of a "best of". As I had run a rum tasting at that venue a few months previous these rums were to be different from the last one. As it turned out around half of the audience attended the previous event so I was justified in swapping the line up.

July Tasting
1. Diplomatico Reserva (Venezuela)
2. Pyrat XO (Anguilla) *Blend
3. Clement VSOP (Martinique)
4. Ron Zacapa 23 (Guatemala)
5. Pussers 15 (British Virgin Isles) *Blend
6. Mezan Jamaican
7. Plantation Panama 2000

El Dorado wasn't included as it featured in the last tasting event (see below). Also I included a Rhum Agricole just to show people that not all rum is sweet toffee, sugar and vanilla. Additionally I wasn't going to show rum that was available behind the bar and so things like Angostora 1919 and the hugely popular Kraken weren't on the list.
On the night the most popular were both the Pyrat XO and Ron Zacapa 23 (which I was very sure of from the start!). Interestingly the Clement was very well received (which I was pleased with) and also the Panama was fairly well liked. The Mezan Jamaican was far too pungent, the Pussers was somewhat lost amongst the line up (which surprised me) and I think the Diplomatico had been forgotten about by the end of the evening.
Given a little bit more money to play with then I'm sure the following would have been given an airing: Flor de Cana, Appleton, Mount Gay. However I'm sure they'll get an outing at future tastings.

As a comparison here is the line-up from the previous event:

March Tasting
I'm not 100% sure that 2-4 are in the correct order but everything else is.

1. New Grove Oak (Mauritius)
2. Plantation Barbados 5YO Single Cask
3. Mezan Trinidad
4. Trois Rivieres 5 YO (Martinique)
5. El Dorado 15 YO (Guyana)
6. Pussers Blue Label (British Virgin Isles) *Blend
7. Smith and Cross Jamaican

From this tasting the very strong Smith and Cross was liked. The overall winner was the Barbados 5YO Single Cask bottled by Plantation and the El Dorado 15 coming a very close second.\

The individual tasting notes for each drink will appear separately in the blog.

Friday 6 July 2012

Laphroiag - Cairdeas Origin

Once a year the lovely isle of Islay has a week long festival celebrating the island, island life and it's distilleries. Accordingly, them distilleries release a special Islay festival whisky to celebrate. Most of it you can only buy from the distillery and then a wee while after they'll release them in the web for their "friends" or "members" to purchase. Although you have to be fairly fast as the 10,000 bottles or so will sell like the proverbial hot cakes. Any unopened bottles are then required to be re-sold on e-bay or other internet auction sites for at least double the money. Fairly simple really.

I managed to crack open a bottle of Laphroaig Cairdeas Origin before it doubled in price or something. Named Origin as it celebrates 18 years of Friends of Laphroaig by vatting together some of the original casks that were used for the very first Cairdeas (so about 17-18 years), alongside some stuff they've been maturing in Quarter Casks (for about 7 years I've been told). No age statement, non-chill filtered and bottled at a very respectable 51.2%.

I've been fond of the previous Cairdeas releases (although I've lost any tasting notes I ever had for them I've still got the odd empty bottle or two) so I was fairly happy to have a nag on this one and this time pay a bit more attention.

The first thing to remember is that Laphroaig only make one type of whisky: and that's Laphroaig. I know that sounds obvs but with a couple of exceptions the new make that rolls off the stills is pretty much consistently the same. So it's really the casks that are going to create the various flavour profiles (which is why you've got Quarter Casks and Triple Woods out there).

So with this in mind it's surprising to note that the traditional peat reek and sharpness that you associate with Laphroiag is tempered surprisingly well. On the nose it takes a distinct back seat with a real sweet citrus and orange aroma screaming out of the blocks first of all that it kind of takes you by surprise a bit. The peat and smoke is there but the iodine and seaweed really are not. There's also a creaminess to it, which after kicking a few ideas around came up with a cross between baked alaska and creme brulee. It's got that hot ice cream thing going on. There's a lot going on with the nose and that kind of transfers to the taste although doesn't live up to the layered and complexity of it. There's toasty and oaky flavours with the peat again taking a supporting role, subdued somewhat but not steam-rollered as it is in the Triple Wood. There's a distinct bitterness in the finish that clings to the sides of the mouth and fades to a burnt plastic, plimsol, rubber, tarpaulin edge I've sometimes found in other Islay malts.

A lovely interesting take on the Laphroaig riff and one that, for me, works a lot better than the Triple Wood gig. Perhaps not the most consistently balanced of any of the expressions but a huge amount of fun and one that I'll have to come back to again to double check my thoughts.

Post photo soon.