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The KOTQ

Single Malt Ambassadors

Littlemill

Jun 18

Quietly Littlemill has disappeared from retail shelves. Like an extinct species it’ll never return. It stopped production in 1994 and a fire in the fall of 2004 was the final nail in the coffin. Littlemill was one of the oldest distillery in Scotland–built in 1772. The Lowland region was at one time the biggest Scotch producing region now only Auchentoshan, Bladnoch and Glenkinchie remain open. Littlemill was characteristically light with lavender and lemony notes. A distinctively different whisky which, in part, made it so great IMHO.
Littlemill8
LittlemillFire

Scapa Distillery

Jun 17
Posted by in Homework

The Scapa distillery was founded in 1885 by John Townsend and MacFarlane, distillers from Glasgow, and is settled on the banks of the famous “Scapa Flow”. The distillery had a century of production involving few changes of ownership. During World War I, the distillery barely avoided a fire thanks to the intervention of sailors of the Royal Navy. The distillery was used as an ammunition depot for the British army. It was silent for two years from 1934 and was owned for a time by the Bloch brothers, the owners of Glen Scotia distillery in Campbeltown. In 1954 Hiram Walker bought the distillery and he added amongst other things a Lomond still. Scapa was rebuilt in 1959 with further internal improvements made in 1978.

The water supply carries a considerable amount of peat from the Lingro Burn and local springs, as a result of which the barley it uses is left unpeated. The waterwheel that supplied power to the original distillery is still there but the maltings were taken out of use in the 1960s not long after the rebuilding of the distillery.
The distillery has a single pair of stills, one of them is of the Lomond type, a rare feature. It has a short, stubby top instead of the elongated goose-neck heads customary in Scottish distilleries. An appealing aspect for hard-line traditionalists is that the whisky is made without the usual hi-tech automation. The distillate intended for bottling as a single malt is aged exclusively in ex-Bourbon casks – which is oakwood charred on the inside of the staves. Over the years, most of the distillery output has gone into the Ballentine’s blend.

The distillery was mothballed in 1994. A year ago, in the spring of 2004, owners Allied Distillers committed to reopening the distillery investing £4 million in Scapa and Glendronach distilleries using traditional building skills and techniques in order to retain the unique style of malt produced. Scapa has been fully operational (purportedly) since January 2005 with intermittent production. Further work being phased over a two-year period. Scapa is currently managed by its Orkney neighbor, Highland Park the northern most distillery in Scotland.

The 2 Scapa stills (with the Lommond on the Left)
LomondStill

Views of the beautiful Scapa terroir:
Scapa 2
Scapa3
Scapa4
Scapa1

I don’t know how many of you got this email from Sean Hartif of Sam’s Wine & Spirits but it seems that there are (only) 2,400 bottles of Springbank 21 out there to be had and Sam’s can get us some/one. I know that there are some serious fans of Springbank in the KOTQ – particularly the 21. So…I know the interest level is there but check out the price too! If you are interested please let me know as you can only order by replying to the email that I have in my in-box.

Subject: RARE Springbank 21
Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2005 14:50:57 -0500
From: “Sean Hartig”, seanhartig @samswine.com
To: “Bob McMurray”, robertmcmurray@yahoo.com

Gone for the past 4 years and will probably be gone for another 4 years….. but its here now and that’s what is important.

The Springbank 21 year old @ $499.99 each
Only 2,400 bottles were produced of this legendary dram.

The color is deep amber. Rich , mature and full bodied with hints of sugared almonds and sweet peaches. Both malty and sweet well balanced with milk chocolate , honey , raisins and marzipan notes all initially evident . The finish is both long and satisfying with sweetness coating the palate. The maturity of the 21 year old comes from the high percentage of older casks used.
Springbank 21 year old ABV – 46% , Outturn – 2400 bottles,

Cask types – Re-fill Sherry casks , Cask ages – Casks from 1969 and 1971

BinnysLogo Binny’s is having several scotch tastings hosted by Johnny Walker’s embassador. You get to drink “Johnnie Walker Green Label, Glenkinchie 10yr Old, Cragganmore 12yr Old, Clynelish 14yr Old, Caol Ila 12yr Old, Caol Ila 18yr Old, Talisker 10yr Old, Talisker 18yr Old and a couple of surprises! ” IMHO this is a good opportunity to try JW’s vatted malt if you haven’t already. Plus Coal Ila, Talisker 18. For $15 it’s a good deal. More info is on Binny’s site.

April 6, 2005

Laphroaig is launching a new whisky called Quarter Cask. It’s not out yet and when it is it will only be available in Duty Free shops! The description of the whisky is vague/missing. Does anyone have any info? Whoever is traveling overseas, be on the lookout and pick me up a bottle. Brother Ville? 😉

May 25, 2005

Here’s an update on Quarter Cask: Distilled in casks a quarter the size of a Butt. Makes for more wood contact and more evaporation (by volume). It’s also been aged less than 10 years (not sure how many). Their result is an edgy spirit at 48% alcohol. Here’s their cool site. I want a bottle!
QuarterCask