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Archive for the ‘Cocktails & Recipes’ Category

Whisky Review: The Black Grouse

Posted by Arctic Wolf on October 7, 2010

The Black Grouse Blended Scotch Whisky is relatively new whisky from the makers of The Famous Grouse.  The company has a history in Scotland reaching back in time to 1896 when Wine Merchants, Matthew Gloag and Son, first blended what they called their ‘Grouse’ Whisky.  Over the next century The Famous Grouse would become one of the most popular brands of whisky in Scotland.

The Black Grouse is an offshoot of its popular cousin, The Famous Grouse, which is a blended whisky containing premium Single malts such as The Macallan and Highland Park. These single malts (as well as others in the blend) are married with a selection of fine grain whiskies in fully seasoned oak casks.  The Black Grouse begins where The Famous Grouse ends, and is the result of a further blending of the Famous Grouse Whisky with Islay Malt Whiskies.  The resulting whisky has a peated flavour profile with a reportedly dark smoky character.

As a side note, The Black Grouse, Tetrao tetrix, is a rare relative of Scotland’s national game bird, the Red Grouse.  When the new blend was launched, The Famous Grouse made a commitment to preserve this rare game bird by donating 50 pence from each bottle sold to the conservation efforts of The Black Grouse habitat.

This information is expanded upon on The Black Grouse Website.

Here is an excerpt from my review:

“…The initial impression in my mouth is of beguiling sweetness coupled with a ribbon of soft smoke and organic peat.  As I noted earlier, the peat and smoke are gentle rather than forceful. The sweetness manifests itself as a honeyed caramel.  The smoke shows evidence of a sherry influence with dried fruit (raisins and prunes) and soft pops of cherries.  The peat seems organic coming across as soft and chewy with a distinctive boggy taste…”

You may read the full review here:

Whisky Review: The Black Grouse

As well  two of my three suggested cocktails for this whisky have been placed in my recipe section, The Rusty Nail and The Black Cove.

Enjoy the review everyone!

Posted in Cocktails & Recipes, Scotch Whisky, Whisk(e)y, Whisk(e)y Review | Tagged: , , , , , | Comments Off on Whisky Review: The Black Grouse

An Evening with Bols

Posted by Arctic Wolf on October 3, 2010

Lucas Bols advertises itself as the oldest distillation company active in the world today. With an origin that traces itself back to 1575, it is hard to argue the claim. After 435 years the company has grown to become one of the leading global concerns in the spirits industry. Bols has a presence in over 110 countries selling liqueurs, vodka, gin, and genever. The wide range of  liqueurs is particularly impressive. With 36 naturally flavoured liqueurs, the company can boast the widest range of liqueur flavours in the world.

Bols flavour Specialist Peter Van't Zelfde

Thus, when I was invited to spend an evening at the Devlin Lounge in Edmonton, to meet Bols Flavour Specialist, Peter Van’t Zelfde, I was delighted by the opportunity. It was an evening designed to bring bartenders, spirits aficionados, (and at least one blogger), together with the person actually responsible for some of the newest and coolest Bols flavours.  I mentioned bartenders first, because the evening was structured particularly to showcase the wide range of cocktails that Bols products can produce.  It is a fact that Lucas Bols boasts the largest database of cocktails in the world on their website.

I met and talked with Peter Van’t Zelfde and learned that all of Bols Liqueurs are made from natural flavours. These flavours have been extracted and/or distilled from natural base ingredients like fresh fruits and spices. Thus Bols Banana is flavoured using real banana flavours extracted from ripe fruit. Bols Cacao White is flavoured with real cacao  flavours distilled from roasted cacao beans.

I was able to talk with Peter after wards and inspect the real extracted and distilled flavours.  I was allowed to open the small sample containers and smell the actual essences and extracts used to make the wide range of Bols flavours.  Peter told me that all his created flavours are approximations.  Extracted flavours must be produced through an extraction medium.  Bols Banana, for example is extracted in a molasses spirit medium which imparts a light yet noticeable rum flavour into the extract.  Distilled flavours, on the other hand, like the Bols Cacao White, are usually true to the heart of the flavour, but subtleties of flavour at the head and tail of the distillation are lost.  The job of the Bols Flavour Specialist is to capture as much of the flavour essence as he can with as little alteration as possible.  Peter’s job is to literally play with flavour extracts and essences to determine new ways to capture them and of course to create new flavours for the Bols brand.  Recently Peter created the Bols Green Tea liqueur to add yet another flavour to the line-up.

Of course the evening would not have been complete without sampling a few of the Bols flavours and Bols cocktails made by the Devlin Lounge bartenders. Here are a few of the Lucas Bols liqueurs (and recipes) which were served:

Bols Blue (in Electric Lemonade)

Bols Blue is a distinctive blue colour and its flavour is distilled from a blend of herbs, sweet red oranges, bitter Curacao oranges, and the Kinnow oranges.  Blue Bols has a complex, full orange aroma and taste.

15 ml Bols Blue
45 ml Bols Vodka
30ml fresh lemon juice
15 ml rich sugar syrup (2:1)
Ice
Lemon Lime Soda

Mix the first four ingredients over ice
Top with lemon lime soda.
(Served in a short tumbler)

Bols Melon (in Pearl Harbour)

Bols Melon liqueur is light green liqueur flavoured with real melon extracts.  It carried flavours of cantaloupe, honeydew and even a hint of kiwi onto my palate.

30 ml Bols Melon Liqueur
30 ml Vodka
120 mls Fresh Pineapple juice

ice

Shake with ice
Strain and serve in a short tumbler

Bols Banana (in Banana Moo)

Bols Banana is a rich yellow liqueur with the extracted flavour of ripe banana. The flavour is enhanced with vanilla and almond as well as herb and spice extracts.

45ml Bols Banana
45ml Cream

Shake over ice
Strain into a short tumbler with ice

Garnish with a maraschino cherry

Bols Cacao White

In order to achieve a clear colour for Bols Cacao White, the roasted cacao beans  are not percolated (extracted), rather they are distilled. This gives this Cacao White a light aroma and flavour.

I missed the Bols Cacao White cocktail, but I was given a very small plastic cup of the liqueur to sample on its own.  The flavour was reminiscent of sweet European chocolates.

* All Photos courtesy Andrea Cooper, Account Executive. NKPR
* All Bottle shots courtesy Lucas Bols

My thanks to the guys and gals at Beam Global who forwarded the invitation to the event from Lucas Bols to myself.  I shall revisit these Bols flavours in a future posting when I plan to showcase a new cocktail which I have created in honor of the 5th annual Bols Around The World Cocktail Competition. Stay tuned!

Posted in Cocktails & Recipes, Howls | Tagged: , | Comments Off on An Evening with Bols

Review: El Dorado Single Barrel Demerara ICBU Rum

Posted by Arctic Wolf on September 30, 2010

The Uitvlught Sugar Factory was founded in the 18th century on the west bank of the Demerara River.  El Dorado Rums, (produced by Demerara Distillers Ltd in Guyana), have introduced a Single Barrel rum using only distillation and fermentation techniques of the Savalle Still (using the same traditional methods which have been employed for 250 years).  As the barrels from this still were originally marked with an  ICBU marque  to identify the rums from the Uitvlught Sugar Factory, this rum is labeled El Dorado Single Barrel Demerara Rum ICBU.  This bottling is part of a series of Single Barrel offerings available as part of the El DoradoRums Connoisseur’s Range.

I consider this somewhat of an artisan offering which gives the rum aficionado a glimpse into the particular characteristics of Demerara rum from a particular still, in this case the Savalle Still.  Rum from this particular still would normally be blended with many other rums from the other Demerara stills and from other barrels types to construct a quality Demerara blend.  The original distillation techniques of the Savalle Still produces a very particular flavour profile, and this review will be a reflection of that particular characteristic flavour profile which the Savalle Still imparts.

Here is an excerpt from the review:

“…The oak is strong, but the sweetness of the brown sugar spices balances the sharpness of the oak and citrus zests.  There is no bitter aftertaste to spoil the experience.  As well, flavours of caramel, toffee, and vanilla all lie in moderation under the oak spice as does a slightly charred nuttiness, and flavours of toasted coconut….”

You may read the full review here:

Review: El Dorado Single Barrel Demerara ICBU Rum

as well I came up with a great cocktail called Savalle Row!

Posted in Cocktails & Recipes, Dark Rums, Rum, Rum Reviews | Tagged: , , , , , | Comments Off on Review: El Dorado Single Barrel Demerara ICBU Rum

Review: The Famous Grouse Blended Scotch Whisky

Posted by Arctic Wolf on September 26, 2010

The Famous Grouse Blended Scotch Whisky has a history in Scotland reaching back in time to 1896 when Wine Merchants, Matthew Gloag and Son, first blended their Grouse Whisky. Over the next nine years, the whisky became so popular that Matthew Gloag decided to add the word ‘famous’ to the name in 1905. Over the next century it would become one of the most popular brands of whisky in Scotland.

According to The Famous Grouse Website, the whisky is a blend which contains premium single malts such as The Macallan and Highland Park. These single malts (as well as others in the blend) are married with a selection of fine grain whiskies in fully seasoned oak casks. The resulting blend is a complex whisky full of character and smoothness. This information is expanded upon on the website, where you can also find information regarding the full range of The Famous Grouse brand.

Here is a snippet from my review:

” …The initial nose is sweet and spicy with a hint of boggy peat rising into the breezes. As I allow the glass to decant the nose becomes richer with the aroma of toffee and vanilla entering the fray with mixed scents of citrus peel with a wisp of dry fruit….”

You may read the full review here:

Review: The Famous Grouse Blended Scotch Whisky

Posted in Cocktails & Recipes, Scotch Whisky, Whisk(e)y Review | Tagged: , , , , | Comments Off on Review: The Famous Grouse Blended Scotch Whisky

Review: Captain Morgan’s Original Spiced Rum

Posted by Arctic Wolf on September 19, 2010

It is InternationalTalk Like a Pirate”Day and so I though I would review a couple of rums which embrace the pirate mythology.  I am going to start with Captain Morgan’s Original Spiced Rum.

Admiral Sir Henry Morgan (aka Captain Morgan) was a Welsh ‘privateer’ who attacked and plundered the Caribbean on behalf of, and with the written consent of (in the form of an English Letter of Marque), the Governor of Jamaica, Sir Thomas Modyford. Privateers at that time in history were essentially ‘legal pirates’ who were allowed to attack and loot enemies of the state reaping the rewards from their plunder in lieu of pay. Researching Sir Henry Morgan, I learned he was a skilled naval captain, a ruthless buccaneer, and one of the most successful ‘privateers’ in the history of piracy earning a Knighthood for himself in 1674.

Captain Morgan’s Original Spiced Rum is of course the name of Diageo’s top-selling spiced rum. I am on a bit of a mission to find out if the rum lives up to the man for which it was named. On the surface at least, we have some nice comparisons. Captain Morgan the Privateer was one of the most successful buccaneers in the history of piracy, practically defining the means and methods of a successful pirate campaign. Captain Morgan the Original Spiced Rum is perhaps the most successful Spiced Rum in the entire category and has pretty much set the standard for sales and marketing for all other spiced rums to follow. But what about the rum itself? Is it really as good as the marketing? I put Captain Morgan Spiced Rum through the paces of my review system to find out.

You may read the full review here:

Review: Captain Morgan’s Original Spiced Rum

Posted in Cocktails & Recipes, Flavouerd Rums, Rum, Rum Reviews | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off on Review: Captain Morgan’s Original Spiced Rum