From the southern coast of the Isle of Islay comes a whisky that seems
as though it is spun from peat laden silk, the Ardbeg 10 Year Old. This
whisky is beautifully balanced, and among the finest examples of a peated
whisky.
Nose: The gentle aroma of peat is subdued by the tart
aroma of tart waxed green apples and sweet tinned pineapple. The smell of wet
sand and salty wisps of ocean spray meets the nose and carries the character
of the beachside rocks against which it crashes. In the distance is wet tar and
dry grass sweltering on a hot summer day and droplets of betadine staining
clothing red. This seems very much distillate driven with the sweetness of
the distillate counteracting the waves of peat, to provide beautiful balance.
Taste: A soft landing of sweet peat and citrus alongside crushed
pear is soon met with a crashing thump of burnt and dry peat with beachside
mineral qualities and a medicinal sting of menthol and a fluorescein strip.
Within the peat shines a bright distillate that emits a clean and crisp lemon
and tart green apple; a lovely sweetness that counteracts the peat and does
not rely too heavily on the oak influence.
Finish: The finish remains on the palate as the bitterness
of the fluorescein strip and betodine interact with the salty spray of the
ocean and the earthy notes of rocky mineral rich sand. The sweet distillate
balances this bitterness, saltiness and earthiness beautiful, and just for a
moment the taste of a cigar – far too short from over enjoyment – introduces a
flash of tar and ash.
|
hi Angelo, do you plan on reviewing CARDHU 12 single malt?
ReplyDeleteCheers!
Hi Leon,
DeleteThanks for your comment.
Cardhu has had an interesting history and I would like to review the single malt expression (and, if I can, the "pure malt" expression). I am not sure I will be able to review Cardhu any time soon though, because I have a long list of spirits waiting to be reviewed.
Stay tuned, and thanks for reading!
Cheers,
Angelo