While Neil was given some time off
from whisky duties to concentrate on becoming a father for the first time, I
decided to take the Caskstrength Creative office away for a week to somewhere
dry and hot. They say that 'today's rain is tomorrow's whisky', which is great in
the long run, but this current batch of bad weather isn't, in the parlance of
the local hostelry in South London, pissing down, but more like Mother Nature
has decided to change her colostomy bag over London. Very slowly.
And indeed at this time, 'London
Welcomes The World' for the 2012 Olympics. What joy! But also what better time to leave then when
everyone is arriving on our soaked soil (or, defaulting to South London pub
parlance again, to 'sod off from our sodden sod') and to head for somewhere where the
summer has actually arrived and not got lost in the post.
So it was that last week I found
myself in Eastern Spain, somewhere down the coast from Valencia but, thankfully,
not as far as Benidorm. A glorious part of the world, it could not have been
further from the dour English weather, with blue skies, rolling beaches and
warm seas. But the differences don't just stop there...
Spain, and most of Continental Europe,
have somehow developed a much more, erm, adult attitude to the UK when it comes
to the art of imbibing. Drink has become intrinsically woven to the general
pattern and architecture of their cultures, highlighted by the ease of which
one can purchase booze, the mythically low-cost of all types of alcoholic
beverages but also, importantly, balanced out with a fantastic selection of
non-alcoholic drinks such as the excellent San Miguel 0% 'larger', which are
neither bland nor carrying the stigma that these drinks have in the UK, where zero
percent beers will get you the same look as being a man reading Fifty Shades of
Grey on the tube.
But it really is the prices which left
me floored when visiting firstly the local supermarket (70cl's of Beefeater for
basically £9, anyone?) and more specifically the local bodegas. That's right,
in the brilliantly named Vall de Pop, where I was staying, each village seemed
to have its own local source of good red wine priced at around 90c a litre, sherry at around 2 euro a litre
and the local speciality, Moscatel for a wallet-busting 3 euro a litre. Just
don't forget to turn up with an empty bottle, or they'll charge you 90c again
for a nice glass bottle to take it home in...
Now, I love sherry. And I love whisky.
So, going as I was to the home of sherry, it would have been daft of me to take
any along. But I did opt to hit my local whisky shop, The Whisky Exchange, to
pick up a bottle of something for the trip and what better option that a bottle
of Nikka From The Barrel. 50cl of high strength, top notch whisky for somewhere
around £25, which is both perfect for sipping neat after dinner with cigar or,
post beach, to turn in to a refreshing mizuwari or highball.
This malt, some Beefeater for the freezer
compartment (I took hip flask of Noilly Prat along with me- who doesn't want a
mid-afternoon Martini by the pool?) both complimented with a bottle of chilled,
local sherry, provided the perfect drinks cabinet for the duration. Each of
these drinks has their place, their personality and their own flavour profile
for the right time and feeling in the heat of a Spanish afternoon. Pure bliss.
But jump back with me to the England.
Home of such great drinks as cider, real ale and gin; wonderful gifts we have
given to the world. Gin, heavily influenced by the Dutch, we have taken and lovingly refined before sending out such world-famous brands as Gordon's,
Beefeater and Tanqueray for the rest of the planet to enjoy. And real ale: well,
thankfully that doesn't travel. So we keep most of it here to drink ourselves.
Recently, however there have been a
few English companies having a go at replicating foreign spirits. Chase distillery started making a vodka, and
very good it is too. The sparkling wines from producers such as Chapel Down have been well received and then there are the
whisky boys, the leaders being St George's doing malt (peated and unpeated) which have seen some rave
reviews.
But, much like Arsen Wenger, taking a
team from playing mainly the offside rule through an evolution whereby they now
play a silky-smooth passing game, these foreign experiments are not always a success.
For some reason, someone at St
George's distillery in Norfolk has decided to launch what they are calling simply 'St George's
Pedro Ximenez'. Bottled at 19% abv, they
have taken some of the Pedro
Ximenez from the sherry casks they use to mature their single malt whisky,
added some of the said single malt to it and left it in the casks to continue
maturing. According their website "We
believe that the resulting drink is a wonderful fortified wine, that makes a
superb drink for many occasions"
Well,
they're totally wrong:
St George's Distillery - St George's Pedro
Ximenez - 19% abv
Nose: This smells terrible; like a
jacket left on a train by a soon-to-be-dead alcoholic. The whisky is so out of
balance with the sherry tones, it's untrue. The red fruits you would expect are
rotting and the malt element ends up smelling sweaty and farty.
Palate: Good job I have a spittoon ready.
This oily giant hits the mouth with all the gusto of a badly made jam roly poly
covered in the cheapest form of low cocoa dark chocolate. Fatty, oily and thoroughly
unappealing. Why?
Finish: A little bit of red summer
fruits, but it is soon gone and replaced with Potters Cough Remover, self doubt
and disappointment.
Overall: No. Don't even go there. Not
even for £18.
This goes to show that not all
experiments are good and just because it's gone in to a bottle, doesn't make it
drinkable. St George's should stick to making whisky (most of which is
fantastic), which they know they're good at, and stop fannying about with
European crap. Get back to playing long ball and leave the passing game to the
Spanish.