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Corsair Small Batch Triple Smoke Single Malt

Another gem from Corsair

0 887

@jerryclydeReview by @jerryclyde

13th Sep 2014

0

Corsair Small Batch Triple Smoke Single Malt
  • Nose
    ~
  • Taste
    ~
  • Finish
    ~
  • Balance
    ~
  • Overall
    87

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Distribution of ratings for this: brand user

This is an "American malt whiskey distilled from cherry, beechwood, and peat smoked barley." It is another of those new, innovative releases from Corsair Artisan Distillery in Nashville, TN (they also have facilities in Bowling Green, KY). According to Derek Bell, Head Distiller, three batches of malted barley are each individually smoked using three smoke sources: peat, cherry and beechwood, and are then put through the mashing and distillation processes. The resulting product is quite nice.

Bottle: Batch no. 97, Bottle 555

Color: Medium amber (but hazy)

Nose: Wood smoke, peat and stone fruit. Vanilla. It reminds me of a chipotle-apricot jam I once made. Fruit notes begin to take prominence over the smoke the longer you spend nosing this whiskey.

Palate: A somewhat light body with a nice buttery mouth feel. Initially sweet with a few spices buzzing around mid-palate. The peat smoke comes through on the palate more than the wood smoke. Drying wood tannins and vanilla arrive late.

Finish: Not overly long but those fruit-smoke notes hold on for a while.

Notes: I know that the small artisan distillers have to keep the bottom line in sight, but I sure wish that this could have been bottled at a higher proof (maybe 45%?). 40% thins out what could have been an amazing whiskey.

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8 comments

@Ol_Jas
Ol_Jas commented

Your concluding remark sums it up for me too, except I must have been much more bothered by its thinness. I don't have my notes handy, but I recall thinking "smoky water" and pegging it around 70. It might be greta with less dilution.

Since you mentioned the three-way smoking process: Do we know when they combine the spirits? It sounds like it's three separate spirits coming off the still—do they mature them separately and then blend them for bottling? Or do they mature together? If it's the former, I wonder if they have any plan to release single components, like just the cherry-smoked whisky.

9 years ago 0

@Nock
Nock commented

I agree that 40% was the wrong choice. Red Dog Wine and Spirits in Franklin, TN acquired their own barrel and are selling it at barrel proof! I picked up a bottle at 67% ABV . . . which is a huge improvement. It is still buttery and light on the palate, but it is so much better on the finish.

9 years ago 0

@Victor
Victor commented

@Nock, 67% ABV...NOW you're talking!

9 years ago 0

@jerryclyde
jerryclyde commented

OLJas: To be honest, I haven't a clue if the three differently smoked grains are distilled separately or as a combined mash bill. I've read and re-read the whiskey's description and it seems to suggest that the grains are mashed, distilled and barreled as one.

This is a different approach than Forty Creek Distillers, a great little Canadian distillery, takes. Their Barrel Select is a combination of barley, corn and rye, each of which are distilled and barreled separately, aged (how long?)separately, and then combined for bottling.

9 years ago 0

@Ol_Jas
Ol_Jas commented

This is part of what I love about whisky: There are so many potential twists and turns between the raw materials and your glass.

9 years ago 0

@Victor
Victor commented

Why don't you just ask Corsair's Master Distiller Connosr member @darekbell?

American distillers almost never blend whiskeys from different grains separately distilled. That is just not a typical American whiskey-making process. Americans like to mash and cook the grains together. Blending different whiskies is more of a UK thing. Off the top of my head, Corner Creek bourbon is one whiskey which is reported in some quarters to be made this way. There are currently not many in that category.

9 years ago 0

@Ol_Jas
Ol_Jas commented

Ask and ye shall receive! I just noticed single barrel CASK STRENGTH Triple Smoke at Binny's:

binnys.com/spirits/…

$70

I guess more than one retailer is doing the single cask thing. Fun.

9 years ago 0

@casualtorture
casualtorture commented

@Nock i know this was 2 years ago but i saw this and had to reply. I love Red Dog in Franklin. I used to take a 1.5hr drive to go there since im from Alabama (abc state). My dad worked for Blackstone Brewery in Nashville and I always got a couple bottles of scotch and his beer from there. The guys there are great.

7 years ago 0

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