this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2023
13 points (100.0% liked)

Whisk(e)y

645 readers
1 users here now

Uisge Beath

All hail the cask

Different Types of Whisk(e)y

Scotch FAQ - Curtesy of Texacer

Whisky Reviewing Guide - Curtesy of Texacer

Liquourverse Good pricing, have not ordered from them yet. Based in the US.

The Whisky Exchange: The classic shop, shipping to the US is difficult.

Whisky Shop USA: Based in California, website is rough but has some hard to find stuff

Wine Searcher: For the really hard to find stuff

Whisky Auctioneer, Whisky Hammer, Unicorn Auctions

Whiskybase: To keep track of your inventory and its value

Seelbachs - Fantastic for hard to find craft distilleries. Free shipping on first order if you sign up for newsletter.

Lueken’s Wine and Spirits - Based in Florida

Marketview Liquor - Based in New York

B-21 - Very cheap shipping within the US ($14 for 6 bottles and no tax!). Based in Florida.

Bourbon Outfitter

Rules

  1. No bigotry - including racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, or xenophobia. Code of Conduct.
  2. Be respectful. Everyone should feel welcome here. Don't berate the newbies to the golden liquid.
  3. No NSFW
  4. No Ads / Spamming.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

From Master of Malt:

“Seaweed & Aeons & Digging & Fire 10 Year Old Whisky hails from an undisclosed Islay distillery, with a quarter of its content having been matured in first-fill oloroso sherry casks. This whisky is known for its succinct name which gives a clear indication of its profile: straightforward, smoky, intricate, subtly sherried, well-balanced, and imbued with coastal characteristics. It is an ideal choice for those who appreciate the unadulterated nature of Islay whisky and prefer minimalist design.”

40% ABV.

Nose: Salty brine, bandaids, dark chocolate, seaweed baking in the sun.

Palate: lemonade, wakame, oyster shells, brine, peat, earthy loam, coffee.

Finish: Surprisingly thick with a strong chili and black pepper burn mixed with light caramel. The finish fades pretty quickly.

Notes: I’ll admit I was skeptical, largely due to the name. It just seems a touch… gimmicky. But it’s surprisingly good. None of the notes seemed out of place, and it definitely fit some of the themes in the name: I got clear notes of seaweed on the nose, and I did detect something in the palate that reminded me of heavy, fertile soil. Oddly enough I didn’t really get much smoke (there was plenty of peat, but I find peat and smoke to be rather distinct from each other), although perhaps the “fire” refers to the spicy burn on the finish? I have no idea what “aeons” would taste like.

I can’t say I’d seek out a bottle of this, but I would be perfectly content to order this at a bar or enjoy a dram if offered by someone who did buy a bottle. I think it is easily on par with other OB Islay 10 year old single malts.

Score: 7.8/10

Scoring guide

0 - Undrinkable

1 - Awful

2 - Bad

3 - Flawed

4 - Below Average

5 - Average / Mediocre

6 - Above Average / Decent

7 - Good; a solid choice

8 - Great; I'd happily drink this any day

9 - Excellent; for truly special occasions

10 - Mythical/perfect

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here