Monday, 30 November 2020
Octomore X4+10 Whisky Review!
Sunday, 22 November 2020
Machrie Moor Fingal's Cut Sherry Finish Whisky Review!
Sunday, 15 November 2020
Copper Fox Distillery, Part 2: The Malts!
Following on from last week's review of the four Rye spirits in the range from Copper Fox, here's the other half - the Malts!
I covered most of the details on Copper Fox Distillery in the previous write-up (see here), so I won't repeat them all here. In summary, these are American whiskies (not whiskeys) produced in Virginia on the east coast of the United States, and they are distilled from floor-malted grains that are kilned with fruitwood smoke, before being aged in refill ex-bourbon barrels with added wood chips - usually a mix of oak, cherry wood & apple wood. This second part of the two-part write-up will be looking at the four single malt whiskies produced by Copper Fox, all double-distilled in pot stills from locally-sourced 100% floor-malted barley which has been lightly wood-smoked (to 12-18 ppm) using apple wood and cherry wood. The maturation process is similar to the rye whiskies, where they're filled into refill ex-bourbon barrels with added wood chips from a combination of both oak and fruitwoods, before then being finished in more refill ex-bourbon barrels. As with the ryes these are non-chill filtered whiskies, and no e150a colouring is added. The range includes the Original single malt, which is bottled at 48%, the Peachwood single malt, where the barley is smoked using only peach wood and the wood chips added to the maturing casks are a mix of peach wood and oak. Then we have an Apple Brandy Cask finish and a Port-style Wine Cask finish, both bottled at 50%.
Sunday, 8 November 2020
Copper Fox Distillery, Part One: The Ryes!
Copper Fox is a relatively new American distillery and whisky (not whiskey) & spirit brand that is located in the small town of Sperryville, Virginia, around 90-minutes drive from Washington D.C. on the east coast of the United States. Like many of the modern American distilleries, they're doing things differently to the 'old world', but Copper Fox are certainly taking that a step further. When the distillery opened in Sperryville back in 2005 it also brought the first new malting floor and kiln to be built in the United States since the 1930s, and they're used to malt and kiln all of their locally-grown rye and two-row and/or six-row barley. That makes Copper Fox the only American distillery to floor-malt 100% of their own grain! And what happens inside that kiln is probably the biggest deviation from 'the norm' and perhaps the biggest innovation as far as the spirit part of the process is concerned: Copper Fox are smoking their grain with wood from local fruitwood trees! So wood smoked barley and/or rye, mainly using either cherry wood or apple wood, or a combination of both. There are a couple of distilleries doing similar things there, although to my knowledge Copper Fox are the first to use fruit wood trees. But that's certainly not where the deviations end. Copper Fox spirits are double distilled in pot stills, before being filled in to refill ex-bourbon barrels for maturation.
Now that part is fairly standard, but joining the spirit in those less-active refill barrels are wood chips, both from oak and fruitwood, usually charred and of the apple wood or cherry wood varieties. That obviously breaks the Scottish whisky regulations - in fact Compass Box did a similar thing when they first released their Spice Tree blended whisky, which unfortunately resulted in them being threatened with litigation after complaints from larger members of the Scotch Whisky Association. Obviously Copper Fox, being in the U.S and not making Scotch whisky, is not governed by such rules, nor do they need to follow the regulations for bourbon whiskey which require charred virgin oak barrels made from American white oak - although they've recently launched their first bourbon whisky which of course does meet those requirements. Now I must admit that I am normally a little dubious about these 'accelerated maturation' methods, and there have been many, many brands and companies who have tried to cheat the natural process of maturation, and they're usually very secretive about their methods - and most tend to fail altogether. But Copper Fox aren't doing that, they're still ageing in wooden casks, while giving the tired casks a boost with those added wood chips, a practice which is fairly common with many other wood-influenced alcoholic drinks (particularly wine), and they're doing so for lengths of time that would be familiar to Australian whisky drinkers. Those wood chips obviously give faster and more assertive wood influence to the maturing spirit, so these whiskies are not aged for particularly long - but that's also balanced out by the use of refill barrels, also used again for cask finishing in some cases. As an added nice touch, none of Copper Fox's products are chill filtered or have added e150a caramel colouring.
Copper Fox is new to Australia, thanks to new spirits importer and distributor NTD Spirits - the brainchild of husband & wife team Nathan and Thao DeTienne (hence the initials), based in Perth, Western Australia. Nathan & Thao are not exactly strangers to the whisky industry in Australia, and the larger national whisky scene. In fact they're two of the most passionate and dedicated whisky people you could meet, and they've been largely responsible for the thriving and enviable whisky scene over in Perth. From being part of the team behind the Dram Full whisky Facebook group, to organising countless events and tastings - not least of which is one of Australia's greatest annual whisky festivals, Whisky Freedom, which launched back in 2016 and has only grown more impressive and more successful since - as I and many others always knew it would. I've had the pleasure of attending twice, and this is not a show to miss - I just wish Perth was a little closer to Brisbane! To save you the Google search, it's a flight time of around five hours, being on the opposite side of our rather large island. Since they had so much spare time in between doing all of this, and while working, Nathan & Thao decided to take the plunge and launch their own spirits importing & distribution business in 2019. Their impressive portfolio now includes Black Gate Australian whisky & rum, Corowa and Craft Works Australian whiskies, the independent bottlings of Scotch whisky from The Single Cask, and they are WA's sub-distributor for the spirits from Milk & Honey Distillery in Israel and the recently-arrived Black Tot rum. That's a great line-up for such a young operation - and of course Nathan & Thao's reputations and earlier endeavours preceded them - and it's a great testament to, and reward for, their hard work!
Nathan was kind enough to get in touch and send over samples of the complete Copper Fox range, albeit with no obligation or expectation of a review - but I couldn't just sit down and taste nine samples of a new brand for my own selfish enjoyment, could I? So I'm going to do the very unselfish thing - I'm going to write about them at the same time! Since Nathan has been so generous (some might say excessive!) I've decided to split these tastings into two parts, in the interests of palate-preservation and tipsy-ness prevention: four rye whiskies in part one, and then four malt whiskies in part two. I won't be scoring these in my usual method since there are quite a few to review and they're quite different from my usual subject matter, so instead we'll go with a quick-fire review of each, with specific details, tasting notes and thoughts on each before summing up at the end of each post. So let's get into part one of Copper Fox: the Ryes!
Copper Fox Original Rye, NAS, 45%.Nose: Classic dry spicy rye grain, if you've tasted rye bread or other rye whiskies it'll be familiar. Some spearmint, caramel chews, and warming buttery & nutty wood.
Texture: Fresh & balanced, medium weight. Slight heat around the edges. Wood influence is evident but not heavy or overpowering.
Taste: The dry rye spice again, caramel chews and dusty dry spices - wood spice & baking spice. A little menthol and a slight earthy smokiness.
Finish: Medium length. Dry roasted peanuts, a little cooking chocolate and more baking spices before the rye grain comes back to the fore.
Notes: We're off to a very solid start! The rye grain is first & foremost here, as it should be in a rye whisky, and there's a decent dash of character along with it. Not the most complex whisky perhaps, but this is a young, reasonably priced rye that does smell & taste both richer and older than you may expect. Very solid.
Colour: Full amber again.
Colour: Copper.
Overall Notes: Four very solid rye whiskies here from Copper Fox. The port finish, surprisingly, was my least favourite of the bunch, but fans of sweeter wines and wine casks will probably find it more familiar. It also had the least evident rye grain character, which personally is what I look for in any rye whisky/whiskey before anything else. The Original and Sassy have that in spades though, and the added depth from the wood smoke in the Sassy is really quite interesting! As you've already guessed though, the Cognac cask finish is my pick of this bunch. That fantastic richness, without completely overwhelming the rye or the spirit, is really spot on - in my humble opinion.
So, four impressive ryes to ring in Part One of this Copper Fox review! I'm already looking forward to getting in to the malts next week, although I must admit that I'm certainly warming to rye whiskies of late - thanks in part to Belgrove and a couple of others. And these four from Copper Fox certainly do tick that box. I highly recommend trying one, particularly if you're a fan of rye whiskies - these are quite unique and very interesting.
At the time of writing, the Copper Fox range is available in Australia from Perth-based whisky specialists and other online stores such as Copper & Oak, The Spirit Safe and Odd Whisky Coy among a few others, and pricing is quite reasonable at $140-220 AUD depending on the bottling - obviously the port-style & cognac-style finishes at their higher bottling strengths are on the higher side of that scale. For those further afield, Google is your friend!
See you next week for Part two: the Malts!
Sunday, 1 November 2020
Auchentoshan American Oak Whisky Review!
Cheers!