kallaskander wrote:Hi there,
what do you say to this
http://www.whatdoesjohnknow.com/2010/02 ... and-still/
?
Greetings
kallaskander

butephoto wrote:Does that mean Bruichladdich can make their own blends now?
Nick Brown wrote:Normally grain whisky is made in a Coffey still. But I think it can technically be made on any still; the stipulation is that it isn’t made with 100% malted barley.
kallaskander wrote:So when Loch Lomond wanted a new category for their Coffey still malt and the SWA refused on the ground of that not being a historical whisky category they were outright wrong and I am sure they knew that.
Nick Brown wrote:That's interesting Willie. So why would they want a Lomond still if they can't operate it as a Lomond still?
Nick Brown wrote:The question is whether a whisky made using 100% malted barley using a Coffey still should be a malt or a grain whisky. I suspect that the logical answer is that it should be a malt, but I guess in calling for a new category, Loch Lomond Distillers would have played up the difference between their whisky and a malt whisky - with a result that they shot themselves in the foot. Pure speculation, though.
Mr Tattie Heid wrote:Nick Brown wrote:The question is whether a whisky made using 100% malted barley using a Coffey still should be a malt or a grain whisky. I suspect that the logical answer is that it should be a malt, but I guess in calling for a new category, Loch Lomond Distillers would have played up the difference between their whisky and a malt whisky - with a result that they shot themselves in the foot. Pure speculation, though.
The precedent seems to be that it is grain whisky, and I think that's as it should be--SMSW should only be made in pot stills. But I know that's not how the regs stand.
Nick Brown wrote:That's exactly how the Regs stand.
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