DRIFT Travel magazine

WHISKEY TRAIL

Liquid tourism in the U.K.

- BY: PETER MANDEL

Whiskey has its own liquid poetry. Sip it and you talk, or sing. My Scottish cousins can be almost eloquent about the drink itself. It is, they say, an education. As richly cultural as wine. This started me thinking. If wine has terroir - the special traditions, soils, sunny hillsides that end up affecting its taste on your tongue, what about alcohol that’s distilled from grain? Would it matter if it came from sacks of barley that had matured in Indiana? Or did Scotland and Ireland (supposedly the birthplace of the drink, with records dating back to 1405) have something no one else could claim?

I began to map out a trip to those distillery-dotted countries to try and find out. But since I am a whiskey amateur, not an aficionado, I’d want to get a fullfledge­d vacation out of my route. It wouldn’t be a string of cellar tastings. I wanted plates of potatoes and meat pies in pubs, philosophi­cal walks by the sea, and whatever local quirks I could find.

Landing in Dublin, I am met by morning, and by rain. I head directly to the first distillery on my list. This one belongs to Jameson and it’s a replica of how its Bow Street warehouse might have looked when Irish whiskey was made back in the 1780s, when the company was founded.

Unlike scotches, which are double distilled, Irish whiskies are distilled three times for smoothness and I’m especially eager to see what Jameson has to show visitors since it’s currently North America’s most requested brand. One of the things it has are mannequins like you might see in a museum. Replica workers stack up barrels. Realistic cats glare at tourists, guarding the grain.

One of the best parts for me is learning a little about the label’s master barrel-makers, or coopers. I pore over a list of cooper nicknames. ‘Duck-egg’ Byrne was an admired craftsman here. ‘Snowball’ Mills another. Not to mention the legendary ‘Nizzler’ Brannigan. None of them seem to be on duty at the moment. But, well, I can tell. These are men I would have liked to drink with.

I catch a bus the next morning for County Cork to check out Jameson’s Midleton distillery, about 160 miles southwest. It’s been drizzling throughout the night and there’s so much green in the landscape that even tree-

trunks seem tinged with it. This could be moss, I think. Or it could be jet lag.

By the time we arrive, I’m more than ready for a dram. It turns out I am not disappoint­ed. Along with other samples, I enjoy some sips of 12-year-old Midleton Distillery Reserve which eases down as if it were a rare and gentle sherry. According to the guide who’s pouring, Irish whiskey is not just a popular drink at the moment. “It’s on fire. It’s a lighter taste,” he tells us, than scotches. “Easier drinking. A gateway, you might say, for the ladies.”

On to Kilbeggan in County Westmeath which, I’ve read, dates back to the mid-1700s. It’s one of two distilleri­es in Ireland that bill themselves as the ‘oldest in the world.’ Here I find some tastes of the history I’ve been craving. There’s a water wheel from the 19th century that creaks and splashes as it turns, and I’m delighted that a good chunk of the original machinery is still in place.

I get to talking with a shy-looking person who is listening intently throughout my tour. Turns out he is a spy: Willie Mccarter, the distillery’s executive director. “Do you live anywhere near Boston?” he asks. When I say yes, his face spreads out into a Santa Claus smile. “I miss it,” he tells me wistfully. “I was at MIT years ago. Spent much of my time there at a pub called The Plough & Stars.”

Rememberin­g pints of my own at The Plough, I do a tour and tasting at the last Irish distillery on my list, Bushmills, which has a list of regulation­s for us lucky visitors: no mobile phones, no pictures and no food allowed. But, should we require them, ‘ear protectors are available on request.’ Bushmills, we discover, scoffs at Kilbeggan’s lineage, bragging that its own roots go back even farther, to 1608.

I don’t have hopes of sorting this battle out, and back on the road, I check out signs for a tuber-themed amusement park called ‘ Taytoland’ (might be fun if I had more time) and try some Rowntree’s Randoms candy to clear my palate.

For my scotch whiskey tastings, I head for Islay (pronounced ‘Eye-lah’), the southernmo­st island in Scotland’s Inner Hebrides, which is only about 25 miles north of the Irish coast. Sometimes called The Queen of the Hebrides, Islay is known for its strong peaty flavors. Scotches distilled here tend to be single malts, as opposed to the blends I’ve mostly encountere­d in Ireland.

Instead of flying or boarding a ferry, I chip in for a share of a charter boat with some other Americans I’ve met.

What we get is something called the Kintyre Express - a ‘Storm Force’ - brand rigid inflatable speedboat. In minutes, we are shooting spray and ricochetin­g off the tops of whitecaps. This may be the Irish Sea, but in the glinting sunlight, it says Scotland, Scotland, Scotland: It is as blue as a loch.

My first Scottish distillery feels more convoluted than what I’ve seen so far. A study in shiny brass and scoured copper, Laphroaig is almost steampunk with its valves and pipes and dials. If Willie Wonka owned a distillery instead of a chocolate factory this would be it.

My tastes here are on the strong side. I feel like I’m swallowing liquid oysters that have been smoked over an open fire. But the label’s freshly whitewashe­d buildings and waterfront views make me linger long into the evening before heading to town.

Islay is a place of gorse and green. Bumps and ripples of land are neatly carpeted, and along the island’s sandy edge, flocks of sheep and clumps of cattle come very close to the sea. At the Bowmore distillery, the tour guide lets us climb up to the kiln that’s used for drying barley and pad around on the beach-like dunes of grain. One ingenious man flops down to wave his arms and make a barley angel - something everyone has to try.

The Ardbeg distillery in the village of Port Ellen is even more of a surprise. There’s a SPECIAL — TODAY ONLY! at the on-site café: ‘ The Islay Lamb and Haggis Burger.’ It’s topped with cheddar and, according to the sign, with an ‘Ardbeg-infused 10-year-old special sauce.’

Just as I’m thinking of ordering one, my tour group is joined by Hamish Torrie, one of the company’s top managers. He’s sporting a pair of pea-green tartan slacks and is eager to tell us about a test tube full of Ardbeg that at this very moment, is being ‘aged in space.’ Say what?

“It’s an experiment, you see,” explains Torrie. “A bit of whiskey, a sliver of barrel-wood. Shot that off to the Internatio­nal Space Station.”

“But why?” inserts a visitor.

“Science!” says Torrie. “We wanted to see how Ardbeg ages in zero gravity.”

“What will happen?” interrupts someone else. “To be honest,” says Torrie. “We have absolutely no idea.”

I’m down to my trip’s last dregs. One more tasting to do — at Lagavulin — and it is a good one. Maybe it is the coziness of carpet, the plates of marmalade and jam, a pre-drink bite of a scone. But the whiskies here turn out to be my favorites of all, including a 16-year-old single malt that seems a perfect blend of Irish easiness and Scottish strength of character: something distinctiv­e in the nose and, slowly, sunset-to-gloaming, sliding down.

As we tourists complete our work with rows of glasses, we’re told to blurt out impression­s of what is on the tongue.

“Berries!” says a man.

“I rather think it’s raisins,” corrects his friend.

I’d like to shout my own impression­s, but it would not go well. I realize that my tastes are strange. They’re mixed up with the names of coopers. With a mill wheel. With grain angels. And with nighttime rain.

“Ireland!” I might yell.

Everyone would turn. And I would have to try, with my final sips, to explain.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States