“It smells like a burning hospital!” No one has ever said that about my work. But I am not John Glaser and my work is not
called The Peat Monster. If those were
true, then it would have been a compliment.
The Bald Eagle and I had the opportunity to blend a whisky that impress
the master mind behind Compass Box. We
failed to do so. So did most of the
teams on the evening. The occasion was
an evening tasting whisky, blending whisky and eating good food at Burrata in
Cape Town.
| The Range. Notice great beer tap at the back |
The Great King Street blend is apparently what he wanted to
make when he started, but circumstances and the market prevented him. It is a blend of grain whisky and the lead
single malt being Clynelish. Different
ages, different types of oak blended into loveliness.
The first Compass Box whisky Mr Glaser released was
Hedonism. An all grain rarity then and
it remains an all grain rarity. Made
from grain whiskies of two different distilleries and two age groups of 12-15
and 18-23 years. He used this blend to
explain the lead whisky. He says that
although the younger whiskies made up only 40% of the blend they “speak louder”
than the older ones.
| Range in glasses |
Tasting now returned to the
burning infirmary. The Peat Monster is
60% Laphroaig,
20% Ledaig and 20% Ardmore. The peat
influence is therefore obvious and can be over powering. Very few people are indifferent to the
heavily peated whiskies. Love or hate it
territory this and the crowd was split about half way. The Bald Eagle and I are big fans of peaty
whisky and The Peat Monster in particular.
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| Small, but very good. |
The food was lamb neck and vegetables made in a way that
renders them edible. Dessert was
frangipane , within one letter of the flower, but is in fact “Pastry with a
creamy almond-flavoured filling” To show
the culinary knowledge at our table it was variously described as “A chocolate
brownie type thing” and “sort of
chocolate cakey”. Luckily the chef was
on hand to help us out. It was without
doubt delicious. This was paired with Orangerie. A mix of whisky and orange type, well,
stuff. At whisky tastings this orange liquer catch you by surprise and are normally dismissed out of mouth. Here, paired wioth the frangipane, it worked much better.
Four types of whisky were available for us to blend.
- 14 year old grain
- 10 year old Clynelish in American oak
- Whisky that didn’t quite make it into the Spice Tree from European oak
- Laphroaig as the peated ingredient
- Oh yes, and Cape Town tap water.
We blended these together according to instructions:
A Who is it
for?
B What is
the occasion?
Great fun to decide on the blend, try it, adapt it as it
turned out different to expectations. As
to our own blends? We came fourth. Twenty teams took part. The top three were announced. By deduction we came fourth.
