Whisky tour in Scotland

in #blog4 years ago (edited)

Whisky tour part one and two

This post is a combination from two earlier posts I did in the time six people looked at my profile ;). So I wanted to share these two informative posts once more with you guys, did a little style editing and rewriting on some parts. So this post is now on the visits from day one and day two of our tour, I am working on chapter three which will cover our final distillery visit from our tour and some more information about our other activities on our great Scottish adventure.

A couple of years ago my father in law took my brother in law and me on a whisky tour through Scotland. We started our trip in Edinburgh, where we went to the whisky experience and had a nice dinner with haggis.
The next day our private chauffeur was waiting outside the hotel to take us to two distilleries, Deanston in Doune and Tullibardine in Blackfort, that day. Traveling only over small country roads to see as much of the scenery as possible and hear ass much great stories from our chauffeur. That night we stayed in a hotel situated in an old watermill in Perth, but first had a quick stop at the local pub for a nice pint to wash down all the whisky.
The next morning after a good Scottish breakfast it was back in the car to go to the The Glenturret Distillery (the famous grouse experience) in The Hosh. From there it was by country roads and more great stories from our chauffeur back to the airport. It was a great trip with nice sightseeing and a lot of great whisky tastings.
We will come back to Scotland for sure.

In this article I will zoom in on our tour at Deanston distillery in Doune, and in the process tell you more about the process of whisky making.


IMG_20140201_125458.JPG


Deanston is situated in an old cotton mill, chosen for its location on the banks of the River Teith. Due to its location and the innovative thinking the distillery is completely self-sufficient in its power needs. It was a green plant long before it was an public issue. And off course the water is used for making the whisky.


[IMG_2014![IMG_20140201_132129.JPG](https://steemitimages.com/DQmWYwCk5GxEKFC23U15dxhFZ5aAVUGqYzfoTt3mVUCVtsA/IMG_201400201_132129.JPG)


This was the first fact our lovely guide provided us with.


IMG_20140201_132221.JPG


Next ingredient to make whisky, malted barley. Meaning the barley is soaked then heated so they sprout, when they sprout the heat is slowly raised to stop the process and we have malted barley.


IMG_20140201_132502.JPG


It’s a real lowtech business


IMG_20140201_132801.JPG


The malted barley is then milled into grist.


IMG_20140201_132828.JPG


IMG_20140201_132807.JPG


The grist than goes into a mash tun where it is mixed with hot water, this is done to extract the sugar from the grist.


IMG_20140201_132927.JPG


IMG_20140201_133308.JPG


This sweet liquid is called wort witch will slowly drain trough the perforated copper floor for fermentation in the wash back. The sugar and yeast do their work and turn into alcohol, the product know is called wash. This process takes on average 100 hours.


IMG_20140201_133713.JPG


IMG_20140201_133653.JPG


IMG_20140201_133658.JPG


As we continue the process line the wash is transferred to the wash stills and heated by large copper coils to encourage evaporation. The vapours rise up and condense, they move to the spirit stills for another round of distillation.


IMG_20140201_134217.JPG


IMG_20140201_134221.JPG


IMG_20140201_134230.JPG


The new make as it is now called is transferred into the number one spirit vat where it is reduced with water from the river Teith to 63.5%. The new make is then transferred into wooden casks.


IMG_20140201_134611.JPG


IMG_20140201_134839.JPG


IMG_20140201_134915.JPG


The casks are then stored for three years and one day to mature into Scots whisky.


IMG_20140201_135031.JPG


IMG_20140201_135722.JPG


Next stop on our tour, the tasting room where our lovely guide poured us some very nice Deanston single malt whisky’s with some more interesting backstories about the distillery and it surroundings.


IMG_20140201_135941.JPG


IMG_20140201_135948.JPG


To top off the visit we had a lovely lunch in the restaurant at the visit centre where we got a surprise glass of whisky from our guide in a glass we could keep.


IMG_20140201_144635.JPG


If you are in the neighbourhood give Deanston a visit, if not for the tour then to grab a nice bottle of whisky.


More information about Deanston distillery on their website.
More information about the making off whisky. Also used for fact checking by me for this post.


And on we go to the next chapter and visit of that first day on this great expirience in beautiful scotland.

Whisky tour chapter 2


IMG_20140201_165752.JPG


In this part I will zoom in on our tour at Tullibardine in Blackfort. In the first chapter I already discussed the making of whisky so I will skip that a bit more in this chapter.
Here at Tullibardine they really make the last part of the tour special, the tasting. More about that later on.


IMG_20140201_162054.JPG


Arrived at our second stop of the day, Tullibardine Destillery. Not the nice view as at arriving at Deanston but well it’s all about what’s going on the inside. It’s nice to see the differences in distilleries if you visit more than one. The process is the same with a different recipe and some other tools.
Let’s go have a look inside.


IMG_20140201_170837.JPG


After being greeted by our guide in the visitors centre we started our tour in the storage room where the casks are being prepared for filling. They arrive in parts from Spain or Amerika and have to be reassembled, with risk of losing fingers, at the distillery. And then they wait to be filled.


IMG_20140201_171024.JPG


Barley is being milled.


IMG_20140201_171233.JPG


Mash tun.


IMG_20140201_171429.JPG


Wash back.


IMG_20140201_171621.JPG


More than one wash back for preparing multiple batches.


IMG_20140201_171707.JPG


The yeast is doing it’s magic.


IMG_20140201_171653.JPG


The distillery.


IMG_20140201_172454.JPG


Spirit safe of one of the coils.


IMG_20140201_172553.JPG


Distillation coils.


IMG_20140201_172813.JPG


What a cask is made of.


IMG_20140201_173719.JPG


We weren’t allowed inside “the vault” were some old casks were resting for some more years to become very special editions of Tullibardine Whisky. A small fortune gathering dust for real.
To become Scots Whisky it has to be in a cask for three years and one day, the one day is for the event there is a leap year in the three years. And yes this last part is a law.


IMG_20140201_173742.JPG


It’s quit an old brand Tullibardine which started as a beer brewer in 1488, granted a royal charter by King James IV of Scotland in 1503.


IMG_20140201_174048.JPG


Our tour guide preparing some very nice trays for the final part of the tour, the tasting.


IMG_20140201_174107.JPG


And a very nice tasting it is at Tullibardine, they make it a special experience by joining forces with a very talented local chocolatier. So on our tray we found four very fine Tullibardine whisky’s accompanied with four chocolates witch are created especially for the tastings at Tullibardine. A very fine combination it is to take a nibble from such a fine chocolate with hints of spices, keep it on your palate and have a sip of whisky and let the tastes combine. WOW!

So when you pour yourself a nice glass of Whisky, try some really good chocolate with spices in little nibbles with it. You will be pleasantly surprised I think.


More information about Tullibardine distilliry


Have an amazing day!


Camera: Nikon 1J1
Lenses: Nikor 1 10-30 ND 30-110 VR


Unless stated otherwise all photos used in my posts are taken and owned by myself, if you wish to use any of my images please contact me
A comment or upvote is highly appreciated.

I'm with QURATOR... Are you?

wt9p7tuiz2.gif

Posted using

zsbwxrhug2.jpg

Proud to be

bsch501xzu.png

Sort:  

great story, enjoyed very much.
I especially loved this image:

!BEER and !DERANGED for you.

Thank you so much my friend!


Hey @tijntje, here is a little bit of BEER from @qwerrie for you. Enjoy it!

Learn how to earn FREE BEER each day by staking.

You just received DERANGED @tijntje Keep up the great work. Congrats, you have been gifted 1 DerangedCoin. You can redeem 20 of them for an upvote from the deranged.coin account. Redeem your tokens by sending to deranged.coin through Steem Engine with your post URL in the memo field, view all your tokens at steem-engine.com

Thanks for using eSteem!
Your post has been voted as a part of eSteem encouragement program. Keep up the good work!
Dear reader, Install Android, iOS Mobile app or Windows, Mac, Linux Surfer app, if you haven't already!
Learn more: https://esteem.app
Join our discord: https://discord.me/esteem

tijntje, you've just received an upvote of 60% by artturtle!


Learn how I will upvote each and every one of your posts

Check out today's daily report detailing my current upvote power and how much I'm currently upvoting.

This bot is open source.

Clone it from github
Get help installing and running this bot

I went to Talisker distillery on the isle of Skye last year. Amazing how traditional and respectful for the heritage it all is! fi2ea7.jpg
!trdo

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.27
TRX 0.11
JST 0.030
BTC 70963.77
ETH 3821.66
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.47