Nick
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ayewhisky.bsky.social
Nick
@ayewhisky.bsky.social
180 followers 180 following 92 posts
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Reposted by Nick
'Now we’re seeing basic Irish whiskey being offered in bulk by SCIVs. It has never had much investment value and now that there are ten times as many distilleries in Ireland it's hardly likely to improve' wisgy.co.uk/f/the-misinf...
The Misinformations of Whisky Cask Investment
The Secret Whisky Cask Broker
wisgy.co.uk
Reposted by Nick
Fionnán O'Connor's phd thesis is available now online and is packed with incredible information about the last few centuries of Irish whiskey - arrow.tudublin.ie/tfschcafdoc/7/
Still With Us: Formative Imperatives in the History of Material Irish Whiskey, c. 1324-1980
Whiskey is regularly discussed as a drink entwined with Irish history and society. That history, however, has usually been read as the immaterial social history of a single material commodity. It does not consider the varied, often dissimilar beverages that have been consumed as ‘whiskey’ or as ‘uisce beatha’. Even within the more recent history of the Irish whiskey industry, most of the grain recipes of Ireland’s closed distilleries have largely passed out of trade memory. This thesis examines the evolution from c.1324 to 1980 of amorphous whiskeys, indebted to their historical moments and materially responsive to their agricultural, societal, legislative, and technological surroundings. Lastly, it proposes that lost materials and practices from the past may be drawn upon to drive innovation in contemporary Irish distilling and it investigates the use of historical Irish pot still whiskey mash bills in a contemporary distillery setting. Using an historiographical approach, the research drew upon distillery day books, excise reports, government sessions, trade paraphernalia, private letters and other period sources, examined against an integrated literature review. The research unearthed diverse recipes and processes, stretching from Irish distilling’s first extant records up to the Irish pot still whiskeys of the very recent past. The subject is discussed across five chapters. The first chapter investigates the origins and early development of Irish distilling and its first attested beverages. The second chapter explores the overlapping development of Ireland’s commercial distilling industry and of material ‘whiskey’ as a product. The third chapter examines the divergence between the material beverages of the licit, industrialised whiskey industry and the illicit poitín distillers of the nineteenth century. The fourth chapter examines the evolution of ‘Irish pure pot still whiskey’ as a material beverage identity among nineteenth and twentieth-century Irish distillers. This chapter also explores the various grain recipes, or ‘mash bills’, employed to make Irish ‘pure pot still whiskey’ and compares them against the processes and materials of their column still competitors. The final chapter discusses the relevance of these old pot still mash bills to contemporary Irish distilling innovation and recent legislation. It outlines a practical experiment undertaken with Boann Distillery in Drogheda to investigate the use of lost Irish pot still mash bills in a contemporary distillery. Combining historical survey with practical experiment, this thesis both offers a significantly expanded history of Irish distilling and examines how that material heritage might inform the modern beverage’s organoleptic possibilities. It
arrow.tudublin.ie
I accept it’s the business model. That’s what they do - get freebies and post glowing, weapons grade pish about whatever brand or release or distillery has paid them. Nothing original, just the party line that’s fed to them.
A lot of them have backed themselves into a corner of needing content at all costs. They’re all bought and paid for.
Yep. Those who went are unscrupulous. Cursory research would have shown them the same info Claire was diligent enough to check.

When the arse really falls out of CI, those same attendees will be pretending to champion all the folk who have been scammed & robbed. Faux shock whilst sipping their HP.
Reposted by Nick
As an American whiskey writer who’s gone on weird press trips/to OTT events, some of the details in here are all too familiar. Others made my eyes pop. Kudos to Claire for recognizing in advance what a shitshow this was bound to be and declining to be part of it.
Hello BlueSky... I kind of forgot about you today. Anyway, have a read, share etc before the attention gets too much and I take it down....

clairevokins.substack.com/p/when-saltb...
When Saltburn comes to Edinburgh...
..
clairevokins.substack.com
It’s unarguable that folk are being scammed by Cask Investment firms. It’s the shit side of whisky that no one involved in the industry - as a hobby or a career - should have anything to do with. You can’t plead ignorance - its in the news, Panorama exposes etc. The folk who went should be ashamed.
Hello BlueSky... I kind of forgot about you today. Anyway, have a read, share etc before the attention gets too much and I take it down....

clairevokins.substack.com/p/when-saltb...
When Saltburn comes to Edinburgh...
..
clairevokins.substack.com
Reposted by Nick
Scotch whisky cask investment for the general public is a cancer on our industry. Don't trust any 'investment' firms that offers 'opportunities' to the general public.

If you want to see why, have a look at this interview I just published on @forbes.com!

www.forbes.com/sites/felipe...
Meet A Whisky Bandit Hunter From The BBC: Interview With Laurence Cook
An investigative producer behind a groundbreaking BBC series covering whisky cask investment fraud reveals how deep the problem is for the industry.
www.forbes.com
I see Lowland and immediately just think of Bladnoch 😂
“From just….£8000”

As out of touch as you could possibly get.
Or shift dead stock by having halfwitted, happy-clappy influencers promote their shite brand before the Cask Investment market dies a delicious death…
Hope yer well, Mick! I’ve been incommunicado for a wee whole. Will give you a shout on DMs!
Sounds like some sort of fever dream. All that’s wrong with the whisky world between cask investment and certain influencers.
Reposted by Nick
Hello BlueSky... I kind of forgot about you today. Anyway, have a read, share etc before the attention gets too much and I take it down....

clairevokins.substack.com/p/when-saltb...
When Saltburn comes to Edinburgh...
..
clairevokins.substack.com
Reposted by Nick
Oddity bottling from ADR.

Relying on the strong sherry shoulders of Glenallachie to rescue a cask of Craigellachie.
Good point, and even the 16 isn’t too badly priced at £70ish even if it’s not for me.

Then you get to the 18 - £170 and the 22 - £250. Bonkers pricing.
We could all save 1700 quid and just buy their 28 YO for 800 🥴
W&McK trying to push them down the Dalmore Hotel Whisky route.

No idea who they’re targeting with those releases other than folk with lots of money and zero sense.
Not many distilleries are as out of touch with their pricing as the folks at Fettercairn.
3 damning reviews in 3 days 👀

Imagine if he’d just wait too, Bunna have recently started their own cask programme.
Reposted by Nick
'Whisky&Co sold casks of whisky as investments, claiming that they would be stored at HMRC-approved distilleries in Scotland. In fact, the casks held Irish whiskey, stored in Ireland, where HMRC has no jurisdiction.'

www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/expert...
TONY HETHERINGTON: I warned whisky firm would cause a hangover
I bought bonds in Linc Drinks Ltd and casks of whisky from Whisky&Co Ltd, both promoted by the same sales firm. However, Whisky&Co has gone into liquidation.
www.thisismoney.co.uk