January 8, 2013 by: Jack Robertiello from his website Nightclub.com
Serve any Picklebacks lately? The quirky
drink, a double shot ritual of Irish whiskey and pickle brine, exploded in
popularity a couple of years ago, catching the attention of hipster bartenders
and their young customers, adding yet another boost to the rocketing popularity
of Irish whiskey in the U.S.
The Pickleback is just one landmark in the
growing trend to return Irish to its pre-Prohibition standing as the country’s
favorite imported whiskey. Sales continue to surge year over year in the double
digits from a rather small base but now well above 1.5 million cases.
Despite the surge, Irish pales in
comparison, in sales, interest, and, usually, hue, to the better quality
American whiskies – bourbon, rye, Tennessee and, these days, the small world of
micro distillers and their wares, which include unaged white whiskey now even
sold by the major distillers.
The differences are easy enough to tease
out: Most Irish whisky brands are distilled three times (though
double-distilled variants are widely available) resulting in Irish’s reputation
as an easy drinking, light whiskey. Barley is the main ingredient, and while
there are numerous single malts (Tyrconnell, Bushmills, Michael Collins and
Connemara come to mind), the blended whiskies from Jameson, Bushmills and Tullamore
Dew are best known and most popular. The Irish also make something called
pot-still whiskey, a mix of malted and unmalted barely made exclusively in
copper pot stills that is richer and fruitier than most other styles.
They forgot the Scotch (Logo property of The Whiskey Notebook)
Bourbon whiskey, the largest selling of the
American whiskies, must be made with corn making up at least 51 percent of the
grain ingredients (known as the mash bill). Wheat, barley and rye are the other
main grains, the proportions used essential in creating any whiskey’s style –
Maker’s Mark, for instance, is the best known of the so-called wheated whiskies
with a high percentage of wheat in the mix, known for being soft, easy but full
flavored. Jack Daniel’s is the best-selling American whiskey, but it is bourbon
that taken another step: legally, the only requirement is that bourbon made in
Tennessee, but the main two brands – Daniel’s and George Dickel – filter the
spirit through maple charcoal, something known as the Lincoln County process.
Rye, like bourbon, can hail from anywhere
(Kentucky whiskey is another story altogether, but it must be made in the state
that bears its name.) In rye, like in wheated whiskies, the grain that makes up
at least 51 percent of the mash bill takes the name. Many rye whiskies have a
higher rye content, but a simple majority is all that’s required.
That’s what they are – but what’s best in
drinks? Irish has made great strides with the Pickleback and served in ginger
ale, highlighting its lightness and easy drinking. Irish has long been known as
the most mixable of whiskies, though the single malts and pot still variants
can be as complex and robust as any Scotch whisky. Like Irish, bourbon is sweet
on the palate, and creates a deep and mellow base for cocktails. Rye has been
admired and employed for its spicy and even peppery kick, as opposed to the
smoothness of Bourbon and lightness of Irish. Tennessee whiskey can seem to
some like a cross between, with the mellowing nature of the charcoal filtration
also sharing a bit of ashy tang as well.
What any restaurant should carry depends on
the concept; if you sell lots of full flavored beers, your customers would
probably enjoy a broad selection of bourbons. Adding a rye can be difficult
these days as the industry suffers from a supply shortage, but even one shows
how serious an operation is about cocktails. The expanding Irish business is
looking to build distilleries for the first time in modern memory, and new
expressions with a broader flavor palate continue to arrive. They’re only
following the path of their American cousins, who have already proven with
their continuing experimentation that there has never been a better time to be
a whiskey drinker.
I have linked this in my Google+ and The Whiskey Notebook Facebook page,
I have linked this in my Google+ and The Whiskey Notebook Facebook page,
Mr Jack Robertiello is obviously a very misguided passionate American who will obviously claim that American whiskies are better quality than Irish or Scotch but in reality the reverse is really true - not that I do not like US Whiskies, I think the claim made by Mr Robertiello is very presumptuous and completely wrong based on facts.
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