Monthly Archives: September 2011

Review: Four Roses Limited Edition Small Batch Bourbon 2011 Edition

This year, the “small” batch gets bigger than ever: Four Roses is batching four of its 10 Bourbon recipes into the 2011 Limited Edition Small Batch release.

This year, the annual Limited Edition Small Batch is built out of 13-year OBSK, 13-year OESQ, 12-year OESV, and 11-year OESK. (If none of that means anything to you, read this.) That’s a pretty corn-heavy blend this year (the E is Four Roses’ less rye-centric mashbill, comprising three of the four Bourbons here), and it shows in the finished product.

The nose is hot and fiery: Add water to bring out more of the 2011′s nuance. There you’ll find a distinct cherry character on the nose along with cocoa notes. On the tongue, this cherry aroma comes across more like a cherry wood, with more of a lumberyard character to it. Compared to the 2010 Limited Edition Small Batch and 2009 Mariage (the precursor to Limited Edition Small Batch, renamed because people couldn’t pronounce it, by the way), this is a spicier, more savory batching. The chocolate cherry is distinct and lasting, with a bitter edge that lends a lightly tannic tone to the whiskey.

I’m not sure this is the best expression of Four Roses — perhaps it is overreaching in complexity and coming up just a bit short. Ultimately I think both the 2009 and 2010, and the “non-limited” Small Batch offering, are better expressions.

111.2 proof sample (actual bottling proof may vary). 3,500 bottles produced.

B+ / $90 / fourroses.us

four roses limited edition small batch 2011 Review: Four Roses Limited Edition Small Batch Bourbon 2011 Edition

Recipes: Falling Satellite Cocktails

This weekend a NASA satellite will come crashing to earth… and no one knows where. (The odds of someone, somewhere getting hit by a piece are about 1 in 3,200.) In honor of the event, the Cellar Bar at the Bryant Park Hotel in Manhattan has three cocktails on offer for the rest of the month. Try them in your bomb shelter.

Lonely Satellite (adapted Russian Satellite cocktail)
1 oz. of Raspberry vodka
½ oz. of Raspberry liqueur
1 oz. of Milk
1 oz. of Crème de Cacao
1 oz. of Raspberry Puree

Method: Shake all ingredients well then pour it into glass. Garnish: Raspberry Floating in the middle. Glass: Martini

Duck and Cover
1 ½ oz of Beefeater Gin
1 tsp. of brown sugar
½ oz. fresh lime juice
1 egg white
1 oz of strawberry puree

Method: Shake every ingredient inside the shaker. Then pour the concoction into glass. Garnish: mint leaf floating on top. Glass: Martini

Mir Space Station
2 oz. vodka
1 oz. Crème de Cassis
2 fresh squeezes of lemon juice
1 dash of simple syrup
Top with club soda

Build it. Garnish: Orchid on a rim. Glass: Highball

Review: Samuel Adams Utopias (2011 Release)

Sam Adams is back again with its seasonal release of Utopias, the Guinness recordholder for the strongest commercially available beer. At 27% alcohol, Utopias continues to shock eyeballs and palates, not just with the wild, bold flavor, but with the price tag, too.

I missed the 2009 Utopias, so it’s been a lengthy four years since I last encountered the stuff. As unreliable as memory can be, nothing much seems to have changed: This continues to be a monstrous, malty, highly extracted liquid that has as much to do with beer as sake has to do with wine. Cocoa on the nose reveals a Port- or sherry-like body, with a thick, syrupy character and a punchy, Madeira-like finish. (All of the aforementioned wine casks are used in the making of this beer, by the way.)

Including ingredients that have been aged for up to 18 years, Utopias is a somewhat oxidized bruiser that will remind the drinker of old wine. Uncarbonated, it is served at room temperature and is designed to be sipped… slowly.

I took Utopias to a party filled with liquor nerds, and the most common response was “Interesting… different.” The bottle alone inspires myriad discussions. I’ve yet to meet anyone who’s fallen in love with Utopias, but everyone, like me, feels rewarded by the experience. If that sounds like a copout, that’s because it is. Four years on, I still don’t really know what to make of Utopias. But I know we occupy a richer world because it exists.

B / $150 / samueladams.com

Utopias 8x10 no logo Review: Samuel Adams Utopias (2011 Release)

Tasting Emanuel Andren Chocolate Truffles

We don’t review much high-end chocolate here at Drinkhacker. Or rather, some (namely myself) would say we don’t review enough.

While you’ve probably not heard the name, Emanuel Andrén is hardly a new brand.  Founded in a small town in Sweden in 1868, this family business is devoted to producing ultra-luxe confections, which it promptly makes very hard to get. (In the U.S., the only way to get one — unless you get one in your Grammy Awards goodie bag — is to order them online.)

Andrén stopped by the other day to give me a guided tour of his works of edible art, all handmade, hand-painted, and largely created with herbs, spices, and other ingredients from Andrén’s own backyard. At present, 20 varieties are available, in a variety of gift box assortments.

Andren tasted me on seven of the truffles, starting with the traditional — Champagne and Strawberries — and moving to the unexpected and delightful Elderberry, one of my favorite sweet truffles in his collection. Things took a turn for the unusual with a line of truffles that combine chocolates with cheese: The Strong Cheese and Cloudberry truffle puts together Vasterbotten cheese with the Nordic favorite berry, served here in marmalade form, though I enjoyed more fully the Monte Enebro truffle, which included raspberry, red pepper, spices, and a little Tabasco — a really complex and fun treat.

Andrén saved the best for last, with a pair of spirits-oriented truffles that included a Calvados offering (gushing with apple brandy) and the enigmatic and incredibly popular Zino Platinum Cigar truffle, made with dark rum, salt, dark chocolate, and the essence of a Davidoff Zino Platinum stogie. I can still feel that tobacco heat in the back of my throat, days later.

Incredibly fun stuff. While the $29-per-piece price tag may be stifling, some of these — especially that Cigar truffle — would make for perfect gifts… if you can avoid eating them yourself.

emanuelandren.com

Review: Bacardi Oakheart Spiced Rum

It’s a little hard to believe, but the top-selling rum company on earth — in fact, one of the top-selling spirits brands in the world — did not, until now, have a spiced rum under its umbrella. That is finally changing, as Bacardi this month has launched Oakheart, its own “smooth spiced rum.”

The emphasis is on smooth, to be sure: This rum (distilled in Puerto Rico, aged in American white oak) is on the mild side as spiced rums go, a muted spirit heavy on caramel and vanilla and pretty easy on the spice. Very light touch of cinnamon, but it’s almost passable as a moderately (and unspiced) aged rum. The finish is quite sweet and short, and while this is obviously a spirit designed for mixing with Coke (and to be a “well” spiced rum, based on its price), it’s so easygoing that it’s sippable straight. Aside from its sheer innocuousness, I can’t find else much to complain about here.

70 proof.

B+ / $13 / bacardi.com

bacardi oakheart spiced rum Review: Bacardi Oakheart Spiced Rum

 

Review: Col. E.H. Taylor Single Barrel Bourbon

Earlier this year our friends at Buffalo Trace released the first in a line of new whiskeys named for pioneering Bourbon-man E.H. Taylor. A second spirit is now ready to join that line: Colonel E.H. Taylor Single Barrel Bourbon.

Aged 11 years 7 months, this is a nicely matured whiskey with plenty of wood going on throughout the spirit. On the nose and on the tongue, it’s a whiskey for the man that respects wood, and a fine Bourbon, of course.

On the palate, alongside that wood, Taylor Single Barrel proves to be a complicated beast. A huge body conceals within orange peel, lots of nuts, charcoal and smoke, and a finish that at least pays homage to traditional Bourbon sweetness. Savory and thick, it’s a bit of a bruiser, so full of flavor that you don’t notice the heat until the finish starts to fade, and it punches you in the stomach.

Altogether another great Bourbon in the Taylor lineup, though perhaps not quite the masterpiece that Sour Mash is proving itself to be.

100 proof.

A- / $60 / buffalotrace.com

EH Taylor Single Barrel Bourbon Review: Col. E.H. Taylor Single Barrel Bourbon

Review: Tatratea Liqueurs

Today we have the very good fortune to cover a new liqueur series from Karloff Tatra Distillery in Slovakia, all based on tea.

Not sweet tea, so common in today’s flavored vodka universe, but hot, fermented tea: Brewed, black tea, spiced with herbs, and mixed with alcohol.  Cane sugar is used for sweetening. Then Tatratea goes one step further, releasing the liqueur in five different versions: Each designed for a different audience and with its own spin on the standard recipe — which the company claims includes 200 different ingredients — and bottled at a different proof. The numbers on the bottle tell you how deep you’re going: from 32% alcohol up to a whopping 72%. The bottles, all 700ml, are conversation pieces too: glass, clad in monocolor metallic paint from to to bottom, and etched with the Tatratea design.

While Tatratea is marketed for its versatility — it can be consumed hot, as a iced shot, or poured over ice cream — all of these were tasted using our usual procedure, neat and at room temperature.

Tatratea launches here in October, only at bars, and we were lucky enough to be one of the first media outlets to review the entire lineup. It will arrive at retail (at prices ranging up to $60) in 2012. A 22% version is also due in November.

The five products were tasted in the order they are presented below, at Tatratea’s suggestion.

Tatratea 52% Original – The base version of Tatratea offers a nose of fresh brewed tea and raspberries: The fruit character is distinct and on the palate it’s very long-lived. Sweet but not cloying, it’s a far cry from today’s tea-flavored vodkas, with notes of cinnamon, ginger, and licorice. At 104 proof, it’s quite warming and intense, a complex digestif that I would place somewhere in the world of amari. B+

Tatratea 42% White – Takes the base Tatratea and adds white tea, plus peaches. While very clear and quite engaging on the nose, the peaches are a bit cloying on the tongue. The finish veers more into bitter than I expect Tatratea would like. 84 proof. B

Tatratea 32% Citrus – Designed, according to Tatratea, for “soccer moms and an older crowd,” considering its “paltry” 64 proof makeup. Citrus flavor is the add-on here, and it works, giving a vaguely orange character to the liqueur, though not a distinct single fruit in the way the 42% White version is focused on peaches. Call me the older crowd (or a soccer mom, if you must), but I think this is the most balanced of the Tatrateas I tried. I think the lower alcohol level helps a lot. 64 proof. A-

Tatratea 62% Goral Forest Fruit – Blueberry is the addition to the standard recipe here, plus, of course, another 10% alcohol, bringing this up to 124 proof. This is one of the best expressions going, that blueberry, as with the Citrus version, successfully balancing out the tea flavors. I would not have pegged this at 62% alcohol: It’s much more easygoing than the 52% liqueur. Although this version lacks some of the nuance of other versions of Tatratea, it’s still quite appealing. B+

Tatratea 72% Outlaw – The top of the line — alcohol-wise — is the same composition as the 52% but with more alcohol in it. Lots more. Called “bohemian” style by Tatratea, at 144 proof it goes toe to toe with some of the hottest spirits on earth. This, as they say, will put hair on your chest, but the spirit is quite a bit more complex than you might expect. Lots of cocoa up front, then smokiness on the finish, the ultimate effect being something like burnt cocoa beans. The tea gets a bit lost in the middle, but it’s plenty of fun to search for it… if you’re not too busy acting like an “outlaw,” that is. B+

karloff.sk

tatratea Review: Tatratea Liqueurs

 

Review: The Bitter Truth Pimento Dram Liqueur

What a time it is in which we live. Just a couple of years ago, we had now way to add allspice liqueur — known in the Old Days as Pimento Dram — to a cocktail, leaving hundreds of recipes simply unmakeable, unless you wanted to do something horrible like substitute cinnamon schnapps for the allspice.

By some stroke of fate, now we have two, and mixologists can actually choose which Pimento Dram they like the best: St. Elizabeth Allspice Dram, or the new Bitter Truth Pimento Dram.

I’m fortunate to have a bottle of the former to which I can compare the new liqueur, and while one wouldn’t think allspice spirits could be that much different, these surprisingly are.

First things first: Both are great spirits, but how you use them will depend on how you like your cocktail.

The big difference is sweetness: St. Elizabeth (45 proof, made in Austria) is clearly sweet; the focus of the spirit is on the herbs — an authentic, hefty apple pie character — but it’s surrounded by sugar (again, like an apple pie). The Bitter Truth’s version (44 proof, made in Germany, an allspice-and-rum concoction) is overwhelmingly spicy: Pungent and thick with raw allspice character. No beating around the bush on this one; it’s like opening a fresh jar of powdered allspice and taking a big whiff, filling the nostrils with the stuff and leaving you with a huge, lasting, and even sneeze-inducing finish.

Which of these allspice liqueurs is for you? St. Elizabeth is the feminine side to The Bitter Truth’s all-man spirit, and while the frugalist in my says you might be able to simply get away with using less of the Bitter Truth version in a recipe and end up with similar results, I expect many will simply pick one based on how powerfully allspicy they want their cocktail to be.

A- / $28 / the-bitter-truth.com

the bitter truth pimento dram Review: The Bitter Truth Pimento Dram Liqueur

 

Review: Masterson’s 10 Year Old Straight Rye Whiskey

100% rye: an oddity. 100% rye from Canada, blended with Colorado-sourced water, and bottled in Sonoma, California — a real oddity.

Technically a Canadian whisky, this big rye is named after Old West lawman William “Bat” Masterson — a man who, somehow, has returned from the grave he entered in 1921 in order to put his signature on these bottles. The distillery, 35 Maple Street, is owned by Sonoma’s famed Sebastiani family. This is their first foray into whiskey.

Wine country royalty and Masterson’s autograph and picture aside, let’s look at what’s inside: As noted, 100% rye, aged for a full decade in cask. 86 proof, perfect for an old rye.

The nose is immediately huge, full of caramel, citrus, and wood notes. On the palate, even bigger: Incredibly sweet, and delightfully spicy: Cinnamon and allspice, fresh orange (not peel), with a tinge of something akin to a Moroccan spice blend lacing things up. The finish brings the essence of raisins and a drying touch, but it’s a little overwhelming in its sweetness. This kind of sugar isn’t something you often see in a rye — particularly a 100% rye — but for the most part it works. I’d love to see just a touch more balance (a la WhistlePig) in the end, but even for a bit of a sugar bomb, it’s awfully well made.

Reviewed: Batch #3, Bottle #779.

A- / $79 / mastersonsrye.com

mastersons rye 10 years old Review: Mastersons 10 Year Old Straight Rye Whiskey

Review: Isle of Skye 12 Years Old Blended Scotch Whisky

Ian MacLeod’s 12-year-old Isle of Skye whiskey — an upscale blended malt whisky — makes the move from Britain to the U.S. this month, following the 8-year-old version that arrived in 2009.

This is an intriguing whisky on its production alone: Using (various) Island and Speyside malts, it is put back into cask after the initial blend is made, a rarity among blended malts, which are typically blended, then go straight into the bottle.

The whisky is a solid one, bold and assertive, with a big mouthfeel you don’t often get with blends. On the dark side in color, it offers clear honey character, caramel and nougat, copious sherry, and wisps of smoky wood beneath. If I didn’t know better I’d say it was a single malt: Rounded and long-lived, a really solid dram.

86 proof.

A- / $39 / isleofskyewhisky.com
isle of skye 12 years old blended scotch Review: Isle of Skye 12 Years Old Blended Scotch Whisky