OF INTERNATIONAL APPEAL BUT OF INDIAN CONCEPT
In the 19th century, the sun never set over the British
Empire, so vast was its spread. Since the only mode of international
cross-continental travel was by sea, the Empire invariably faced logistic and
infrastructural problems as sea routes were subject to unpredictable weather
conditions enroute. While a great many problems could be resolved by local
provisioning, the high and mighty faced problems in supplies which could only
be brought from back home, e.g., wine, alcohol and tobacco.
Herbert Musgrave Phipson (1850 – 1936), was a British
wine merchant and naturalist who lived in Mumbai, India, from 1878 to 1905.
Born in London and educated at Clifton College, Phipson went out to India as a
partner in the firm of J. A. Forbes & Co. Bombay. In 1883, he established
his own company, Phipson & Co. Wine Merchants, on Apollo Road, Bombay (now
Mumbai). The company had outlets all over Asia, in present day Pakistan, India,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Burma, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and
more, which required a lot of shuttling to and fro, but wine and alcohol always
seemed to be in short supply, mainly because of their sourcing problem.
In 1883, Phipson had gone to England to acquire all
necessary ingredients for his business and set up contracts, particularly with
stockists of Red, White and Rose Wines, Port, Sherry, Gin, Brandy and Whisky.
Whisky could only be procured from Scotland. He employed employed Walter S.
Millard (1864–1952), a 19-year old well educated bachelor fairly knowledgeable
about liquor, which could be traced back to his antecedents. Both Millard and
Phipson were pure Britishers, with nary a Scottish connection. Phipson was
still in England when the Bombay Natural History Society was founded on 15
September 1883.
Upon his return to Bombay, he immediately joined BNHS and
in January 1884. Phipson served as the editor of the Journal of the BNHS for
twentytwo years – as the sole editor for seventeen years till 1901 and then
joint editor with W. S. Millard, who succeeded him as Honorary Secretary in
1906.
Meanwhile, Millard’s primary task was to ferret out an
excellent Rare (8 YO) Scotch Whisky that would suit the tropical climate of HM's
Colonies in Asia, particularly Indian and the other Asian countries. While
touring the Speyside Region of Scotch Whisky distillers and blenders, he came
across James MacKinlay, then known as “The Royalty in Scotch Blenders.” It was here, in Leith, Edinburgh, that he first met
MacKinlay’s daughter, Sarah, with whom he fell in love and reached an
understanding, an informal engagement.
MacKinlay’s name and fame had started to circulate, to
peak with his 15-YO blends that he would supply Antarctic explorer Ernest
Shackleton between 1898 and 1907. Three bottles of 15-year bottled-in-1898
Mackinlay's Scotch Whisky were found in 2010 among three crates of Scotch and
two of brandy buried beneath a basic hut Shackleton had used during his
dramatic failed 1907-09 Nimrod excursion to the Antarctic.
The leading Scotch whisky of its time |
This
12 YO premium whisky had beaten Walker's Very Special Old Highland by a
margin of 20 years; Johnnie Walker's 12 YO Black Label hit the market in
that new avatar only in 1909, when a decision was made to simplify the names of
its rather pompous but anachronous brands. It was well appreciated, but found
inferior to Black Dog, even after it undercut the latter's price.
Painstakingly conjured up over a period of twelve
long years, Black Dog Scotch instantly became the favorite of connoisseurs all
over the world after making a dramatic debut as an eight-year old in 1883, and
re-emerging as a different 12 YO Premium blend six years later. Quite a few trials must have taken place to get both grain and single malt whiskies in phase. This was hardly
surprising, considering that Black Dog Scotch was required to be, and indeed was a masterful blend of
fine taste and exquisite artistry.
A newspaper cutting
supposedly bolstering the Millard story. It is an obvious fraud: Sep 17, 1883
was a Tuesday, not Saturday; the word aficionado entered the English dictionary
with a different connotation in the mid-19th century; the spelling of honour is
wrong. I must thank Callum McKean, of the News Reference Team, The British Library, London,
who searched through the British Newspaper Archive, a database of digitised local
and regional newspapers which is especially comprehensive for the late
nineteenth century. He was unable to locate this article. It appeared to him
that this is a modern mock-up image as the typeface, wording and layout of the
newspaper pictured were not consistent with any late nineteenth century
newspapers of which he was aware. (This could perhaps explain the spelling
mistakes, wrong selection of word and why the date and day of publication were
mismatched too). NM.
Phipson's Black Dog has become a collector's item which my coursemates and I possibly drank in our halcyon days-I,for one, certainly did on my commissioning party. I kept my eyes and ears open for any future mention of this brand, and found them stocked by the 12-bottle cases in our Navy's Duty Free stores. Obliging naval coursemates provided me with a bottle or two till stocks ran out.
When the British started to leave India in 1942, Phipson and Co. battled hard to stay on, well beyond 1947 when India gained Independence. Walter Millard died in England in 1952. Carew and Co., a smaller liquor dealer, and Phipson & Co. were partly taken over in 1963-64 and merged with itself by McDowell & Co, owned by United Breweries Group (UB), an Indian alcoholic beverages company. in 2002, the company acquired Phipson Distillery marking the demise of Phipson Black Dog. In 2006, McDowell & Co Limited, Herbertsons Limited, Triumph Distillers and Vintners Private Limited, Baramati Grape Industries India Limited, Shaw Wallace Distilleries Limited and four other companies were merged to form United Spirits Limited, the world's second-largest spirits company by volume. It is now a subsidiary of Diageo, and headquartered in Bangalore. USL exports its products to over 37 countries.
USL also owned Whyte and Mackay and as Phipson Black Dog died with the taking over of the company, it turned to Richard Paterson, Master Blender at W&M to recreate The Black Dog. This acquisition of Scottish major Whyte & Mackay, with one of the largest inventories of aged malts and grain whisky reserves saw USL bolstering Black Dog with better aged variants to prop up premium appeal. USL started premiumising Black Dog. Rather than just placing the product on retail shelves, the company took an account management approach and created a huge buzz around the brand.
Four versions of the Black Dog Scotch Whisky exist today:
Black Dog Black Reserve Scotch Whisky
Black Dog Black Reserve is a rich and rare premium blended Scotch whisky loaded with exceptional characters. It is blended to perfection with a multitude of malt spirits chosen from the various regions of Scotland.
- See more at: http://www.unitedspirits.in/scotch-brands.aspx?id=45&val=fifth#sthash.UktvoMsa.dpuf
Black Dog Black Reserve Scotch WhiskyBlack Dog Black Reserve is a rich and rare premium blended Scotch whisky loaded with exceptional characters. It is blended to perfection with a multitude of malt spirits chosen from the various regions of Scotland.
- See more at: http://www.unitedspirits.in/scotch-brands.aspx?id=45&val=fifth#sthash.UktvoMsa.dpuf
Black Dog Black Reserve is a rich and rare blended Scotch whisky loaded with exceptional character. It is blended well with a multitude of malt and grain spirits chosen from various regions of Scotland. On completing 8 years in barrels, it is exported to India for bottling and sale. A few barrels are bottled for the local market as well. The whisky has a distinctive briny note, picked up in transit from Scotland to India.
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Black Dog Gold Reserve Scotch Whisky
Black Dog Gold Reserve Aged 12 Years is a blend of 25 fine malt and grain whiskies from four regions of Scotland - Speyside, Islay, Highlands and Lowlands, each matured for a minimum period of 12 years creating a bouquet that captures all the flavours of Scotland, giving the blend its very distinctive flavour and taste. Over 95% of its output is bottled in India, the balance going into travel packs in Duty Free shops and other markets. There is a distinct difference between the two, possibly caused by the effect of maritime air on the barrels as they travel to hot and dusty India, where the angel is far more demanding-up to a 12% cut. Sadly, this version is but a pale shadow of the Black Dog 12 YO of yesteryear. Whyte & Mackay use a different source of water, have different stills and can NEVER replicate Mackinlay's whiskies. That said, Johnny Walker Black Label started to use unpeated Caol Ila 12 YO and Talisker, changing the flavour profile markedly and elevating this brand to No.1 in the Blended Scotch 12 YO range, from which it was displaced in India by the Famous Grouse 12 YO, which sadly has been discontinued. Teacher's 50, Ballantine's 12 YO, Dewar's 12 YO and Buchanan's 12 YO are currently vying for top honours in this category.
The latest offering from the brand is Black Dog Triple
Gold Reserve. In the triple maturation process, Grain and Malt whiskies are matured separately in American
Bourbon Casks and then blended together
and matured again in Oloroso Sherry Butts for an extra long period of time to
give the blend a distinctive flavour and a delicate finish. This gives this
scotch a very fine finish, and is a tangible improvement of the 12 YO Black Dog Gold Reserve. Its effect on the market is yet to be assessed as the owners are waiting for the Black Dog Gold Reserve to run its course, what with Whyte and Mackay and its massive inventory being sold yet again, this time to Philippines-based Emperador Inc.
Black Dog Reserve Scotch Whisky
Black Dog 18 years old Scotch Whisky is known as Black Dog Reserve Scotch. It is matured for a minimum of 18 years in oak casks. Master
blenders carefully put together a fine blend of Aged Malt and Grain Whiskies
to make this an exceptional Scotch whisky. Black Dog Reserve Scotch has won Gold award at
the MUNDUS Vini International Spirit Awards held at Germany in 2011. This is
the third Gold award won by this 18 year old Whisky, making it one of the top five of the world’s
best tasting 18 year old blended Scotch whiskies. I can vouch for it, as it melts into your tongue like honey. It is as good as The Glen Ord Singleton 18 YO, which forms the body of JW Blue Label, an NAS blend.
Black Dog Quintessence Scotch Whisky
The Black Dog Quintessence is a 21 year old blend. It is pure liquid gold as it is handcrafted to meticulous perfection by Black Dog’s master blenders. Only 25 of the finest single malts and grain whiskies have been drawn from the Highland region of Scotland, in particular from Speyside to provide that special key – “finesse”. Like a loving partnership each individual part has made its own inimitable contribution. Balance and harmony prevails throughout this noble elegant spirit. After a long 20 year maturation in Bourbon barrels, the final year is spent in the finest Oloroso sherry butts. These aren't just any sherry butts; they are specially selected from Spain’s noblest Bodegas of Gonzalez Byass in Jerez de la Frontera; these Matusalem butts provide the perfect platform to marry and mould Black Dog 21 years old Blended Scotch Whisky. This whisky has been sold out, more's the pity. I did manage to taste it at The Patio in 2013 and can still recall that dram.
The Black Dog Gold Reserve 12 YO is available at most duty free shops at close to US$ 37.00 per 750 CL. These are all Bottled In Scotland whiskies but are rapidly fading out. They are far too expensive. In the free market in India, The Black Dog Gold Reserve 12 YO Bottled In India is freely available at US$ 28 and below. The rush for this brand at this price by people who don't care where it was bottled is unbelievable. The 12 YO is the brand that is selling the fastest globally when seen YoY, averaging 45-50%!
Black Dog's scorching growth contrasts with overall blended scotch sales coming under pressure globally, and within India, for different reasons. The only other blended scotch brands to report five year double-digit growth are Black & White (19.8%), Old Parr (14.8%), Passport (13.7%) and VAT 69 (10%) among a list of the world's 50 top scotch brands compiled by International Wine & Spirit Research.
How Scotch Whisky is faring globally |
Together
with James MacKinlay, he discovered the blend he was looking for. Its
unique taste, delicate aroma and smooth effect on the palate were the
aspects that appealed the most and brought an end to Sir Walter
Millard's quest. Being a keen 'Angler' and considering his love for his
favourite sport, Sir Walter Millard named the Scotch after his favourite
fishing fly - the Black Dog. - See more at:
http://www.unitedspirits.in/scotch-brands.aspx?val=black-dog#sthash.s6i9BKwZ.dpuf