Bruichladdich and the 184 proof whiskey

March 2, 2006

TBO News

“LONDON (AP) — A Scottish distillery said Monday it was reviving a centuries-old recipe for whisky so strong that one 17th-century writer feared more than two spoonfuls could be lethal.

Risk-taking whisky connoisseurs will have to wait, however – the spirit will not be ready for at least 10 years.

The Bruichladdich distillery on the Isle of Islay, off Scotland’s west coast, is producing the quadruple-distilled 184-proof – or 92 percent alcohol – spirit “purely for fun,” managing director Mark Reynier said.

Whisky usually is distilled twice and has an alcohol content of between 40 and 63.5 per cent.

Bruichladdich is using a recipe for a spirit known in the Gaelic language as usquebaugh-baul, “perilous water of life.”

In 1695, travel writer Martin Martin described it as powerful enough to affect “all members of the body.”

“Two spoonfuls of this last liquor is a sufficient dose; if any man should exceed this, it would presently stop his breath, and endanger his life,” Martin wrote.

Reynier put Martin’s test to the claim and consumed three spoonfuls.

“I can tell you, I had some and it indeed did take my breath away,” Reynier said.

Bruichladdich, a small privately owned distillery founded in 1881, plans to make about 5,000 bottles of the whisky, which Reynier estimated would sell for about 400 pounds (US$695, euro590) per case of 12 bottles. Although whisky lovers can place their orders now, the actual spirit will not be delivered for about 10 years.

“You get a better drink if you wait because of the basic oxygenation through the oak barrels,” Reynier said.

In the meantime, customers will be able to watch the whisky’s progress on the distillery’s webcams.”

damn


Stoudts Double IPA

March 1, 2006

Well, strangely enough I have another beer review. I guess I’m a little pork deprived right now and I’m in a Jack Daniels rut (not a surprise). Fresh back from another quick business trip to help with a VoIP install at our warehouse in Atlanta I picked up a couple sixers of various beers and another case of Bigfoot Ale (see previous review and explanation on why I have to go to Atlanta to get good beer).

I had never heard of Stoudts Brewery in Adamstown, PA. The sixers were in the “special” section of the beverage mart and I could tell they were something a little different. I grabbed a six of the Double IPA and a sixer of the Fat Dog Stout. I decided to try the Double IPA first. These ales are bottle conditioned and you can see a little sediment in the bottom of the bottle. At a whopping 10% abv and a bitterness rated at 75 IBUs this was going to be a good representative of an IPA (x2) and was going to be right up my alley. I love a good hoppy beer and this does not dissapoint. It is not crushingly bitter, like some IPAs that can almost feel like they are drying out your mouth, but it was very hoppy. It pours a little cloudy and has a nice amber to yellow color with a good aromatic head. Very full bodied, full flavor ale with some nice maltiness that has a nice kick.

Rating: A great IPA with some serious balls