Tuesday 9 February 2021

THE RETURN OF SOMETHING SPECIAL ALBEIT NAS

THE NEW DECANTER

I first tasted Something Special in 1977 in Poona. It was an exquisite experience and I decided to carry out detailed research on this Blended Scotch. I found that it was an illegal and raw blend first bottled in 1793 from what was to become Bon Accord Distillery in 1860. The Something Special website claims that Hill & Thomson Wines and Liquor in Edinburgh started the production and sale of an excellent blended Scotch whisky in 1793 and that it was granted a Royal Warrant by King William IV in 1838. This is a hoax, as William IV died in 1837. The whisky and distillery are not named. Moreover, blending of malt and grain whisky was permitted only in 1860 for distillers; other traders, like grocers, were permitted such blending in 1863.The term Scotch came from 'Scottish' and was first used in the mid-18th century.

                                                                 

It came out as a 12 YO Premium Whisky thereafter, not an 8 YO. Bon Accord distillery, renamed to North of Scotland distillery, was taken over by the Longmorn Distillery Company in 1893, and the whisky was bottled soon thereafter as a Grant's Distilleries' product (1897). The website also claims that it was granted a Royal Warrant by Queen Victoria, who died in 1901. This is most probably another hoax, as no distillery was given the prefix ‘Royal’ in that period. In 1877 Hill, Thompson & Co. offered the role of export salesman to William Shaw. In 1902 he established the Queen Anne blend, which soon became the company’s flagship whisky.

 Grant's Distillery was destroyed by a fire in 1910, but was repaired and running in 1911. A new blended whisky, named SOMETHING SPECIAL, came out with great fanfare in 1912, quietly burying its dubious past. The website states that the business was still owned by Hill & Thomson and advertised as “A Scotch for a Special Occasion.” It quickly became popular in the United Kingdom and around the world, competing with Walker's, Dewar's and Buchanan's whiskies, among many others.

The iconic decanter was first produced in the distinctive diamond shape in 1959 and heralded around the world as a statement of quality and originality. By then, it was locked in a direct competition with JW Black Label, Seagram's Chivas Regal, Phipson's Black Dog and Dewar's, all splendid 12 YO bottlings.

In 1972, the Glenlivet and Glen Grant Distilleries Ltd amalgamated with the blending concerns of Hill, Thomson and Co.Ltd and Longmorn Distilleries Ltd to become The Glenlivet Distillers Ltd. Something Special was then bottled by Hill, Thomson and Co.Ltd, Paisley, Scotland as an 8 YO at very good prices ($15 for an 86 proof 43% ABV 750 ml decanter). The website claims SOMETHING SPECIAL™ whisky was launched in new markets across Latin America and Asia in 1985, where discerning connoisseurs were demanding high quality Scotch whisky. This is a part lie, as SOMETHING SPECIAL™ was freely available across India, even in its Military Canteens in the 70s. What very few people realised was that now Something Special was in the same stable as Chivas Regal, though not under Samuel Bronfman. Sale in India was stopped in end 2001 to allow Chivas 12 YO free rein while it displaced JW Black Label from top spot in the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent and China. Its primary market remains Latin America and Italy. A bottle or two is often found in odd locations. What did happen was the release of their 15 YO in 2006, focussed on in Latin America with a few bottles trickling over to Asia as rarities.

The archives paint a very different story. In 1709 Andrew Thomson inherited the business of his father–in–law, Mr Brown, who was a brewer and vintner in the Grassmarket in Edinburgh. About 20 years later the business was moved to "The Vaults" in neighbouring Leith, which were bought by the company on 29 July 1782. The firm of J G Thomson & Co was founded by James Gibson Thomas in 1785 at the Vaults to supply goods like whisky, brandy and wines. James Gibson Thomson junior, the son of the company’s founder, was associated with the company from 1820 to 1876.

In its early years the major part of the business was in the import and distribution of wines from the continent. Later it traded in wines and spirits of all descriptions, imported or home produced. The company’s wholesale business was carried out under the name of J G Thomson & Co and the private trade was carried out under the name of Thomson Lauder & Co.

In 1884 the firm acquired Glen Garioch Distillery in Old Meldrum, Aberdeenshire and owned it until 1908. In 1890 it took over the Leith firm, Scott & Allan, and its two clippers, which brought cargoes of wines and brandies into Leith. Scott & Allan were also cork cutters. In 1905, J G Thomson & Co became a limited liability company.

The company went into voluntary liquidation in 1921 and the buildings and stocks were taken over by J M Hogge on behalf of the new company, which was a private company without a stock exchange quotation. By the 1930s, J G Thomson & Co was supplying wines to most of the top hotels in Scotland and had become one of the country’s leading independent whisky blenders, with a prosperous overseas trade. By 1959 it owned three bonded warehouses and large duty paid warehouses. The company acted as agent, stockist and distributor in Scotland for many famous and internationally known brands of wines and spirits. It also functioned as a very large exporter of whisky to all parts of the world, especially to the USA, and was involved in the blending of whisky. The company maintained a large transport fleet with depots in Leith and Glasgow, and its own cooperage.

After the Second World War many private hotels amalgamated into larger chains or were acquired by breweries. This effectively removed J G Thomson’s principal outlets. In 1960 it was bought by Charrington United Breweries Ltd of London. Three years later Charrington acquired the Glasgow firm J & R Tennent Ltd and in 1966 J G Thomson became a subsidiary of Tennent Caledonian Breweries Ltd.

IN THE ITALIAN MARKET

ONE OF THE FINEST 15 YEAR OLDS





SOMETHING SPECIAL RETURNS TO INDIA IN 2020 BUT AS A NAS EXPRESSION

SOMETHING SPECIAL is still a premium Blended Scotch whisky, the no. 1 Scotch whisky in the Dominican Republic, the no 2. in Colombia and overall no. 3 premium Scotch whisky brand in South America. It’s considered an outgoing and sociable whisky that celebrates life, an optimistic attitude and everyday success. As may be seen in the photos at the top, it is now a NAS expression and the decanter, while retaining its diamond cut, has been slimmed down a mite. The decanter for the SOMETHING SPECIAL LEGACY is unique and seems a stand-out collector's item.

Surprisingly, SOMETHING SPECIAL made its debut in Latin America in 2004 as a 12 YO Blended Scotch whisky. The award-winning blend contains fine Speyside malt whiskies and is sculptured around the outstanding Longmorn single malts, embellished by classy single malts from the Glenlivet, Glen Grant, Aberlour, Laphroaig and Allt A Bhainne distilleries, among others. They are melded together in single grain whisky from Strathclyde to give it its unmistakably sweetness with a hint of smoke. The trace of peaty character is imbued from a single malt produced at the Allt À Bhainne distillery in Keith, Speyside. The Islay contribution is made by an unpeated whisky from, surprisingly, Laphroaig, a distillery well-known for its unique pungent, medicinal and smoky spirit. This expression is said to have aged in Bourbon and Sherry casks but the Sherry influence in this blend seems minimal. 

It is deep gold in colour with E150A caramel additive, chill filtered and blended in Scotland. It is bottled in both Scotland and India. The Scottish version is at 40% ABV in a 70cl bottle and at 43% ABV in a 75cl bottle in India.

Nose: When you pour this blend in your glass you immediately get peat and light smoke that remind you of a light Islay whisky. However, on inhalation, the peat and smoke prove evanescent and are driven back quickly to the back of the glass and grain, wood, sundry dried fruit and malt come into play. After a while in the glass, earth and wood tones begin to dominate. There isn’t much sharp alcohol, which is good but this blend would benefit from some more fruity tones.

Taste: Sweet (Sugar, Honey) and Spicy Oak. The sweetness becomes syrupy if swigged after a chillied momo.

Finish: Not overly long and quickly getting dry. Some Cocoa powder, nuts and wood.

If you add four or five drops of water, the peat on the nose withdraws to the background. Floral and mineral tones appear. The palate however just gets watered down. So you can nose this blend with and without a few drops of water but it is best sipped neat.

Eagerly awaiting the release of the SOMETHING SPECIAL LEGACY.







Wednesday 9 December 2020

JOHNNIE WALKER KEEPS ADDING RARE WHISKIES TO ITS PORTFOLIO

NEW JOHNNIE WALKER RELEASES

I have already posted the entire family of Johnnie Walker bottling through the ages at https://noelsramblings.blogspot.com/2020/06/all-that-you-wanted-to-know-about.html/ That is a fairly wide selection with over 350 separate bottlings in their all-encompassing brand. Yet there appears to be no shortage of old and rare whiskies, as new bottlings keep cropping up every now and then. Its time to show them on this post before loading them onto my Johnnie Walker Family Tree.

After the Game of Thrones Series, some standard bottles were reworked. The Gold Label, an 18 YO featuring Clynelish and Cardhu was withdrawn and reappeared as Gold Label Reserve 16 YO. They soon became NAS whiskies, one of which marked their 200th anniversary.   

               

Johnnie Walker Platinum Label 18 Year Old was inspired by the tradition of giving private blends to a close circle of family friends by John Walker & Sons. Blended from whiskies matured for at least 18 years, it combined sophisticated and contemporary tastes with classic Johnnie Walker flavours. This was the first premium brand whose name neither fitted the category of colours chosen across their palette nor the intended recipients, and this title was phased out, only to be replaced by the very same whiskies, now named 18 YOs, nothing more. 

                        

2021 Chinese New Year Editions

Johnnie Walker has launched two exclusive Chinese New Year limited editions: an intricately illustrated Johnnie Walker Blue Label and a first-of-its-kind John Walker & Sons King George V limited edition.

John Walker & Sons King George V is a combination of whiskies originally crafted to celebrate the first Royal Warrant granted to Johnnie Walker in 1934 to supply Scotch whisky to the British Royal Household. Drawn from extremely rare casks from the now-silent Port Ellen distillery, Johnnie Walker says the whisky is elegantly rich and creamy. It is the first limited edition of the John Walker & Sons King George V to be released and features bespoke artwork with a modern take on traditional Chinese patterns and designs.

The illustrations on the new John Walker & Sons King George V limited edition are a fitting tribute to this exquisite whisky added to the Chinese New Year offering.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label has a rich history of Chinese New Year releases, each year bringing a bespoke pack and bottle design celebrating that year's Zodiac sign. The 2021 design was created by award-winning Chinese artist Shirley Gong and features illustrations of the ox, a symbol of prosperity and growth.

Both 2021 Chinese New Year limited-edition designs are available in selected markets globally at a recommended price of £200 for the Johnnie Walker Blue Label release and £400 for the John Walker & Sons King George V edition.

Additions to the Chinese Zodiac Releases:

Johnnie Walker Blue Year of the Rat Blended Scotch Whisky 70cl / 40%, 2020. A limited-edition blended whisky from Johnny Walker which celebrates Chinese New Year 2020. This special bottle of Blue Label features illustrations by artist Shirley Gong, reflecting the prosperity and abundance that the Rat's arrival signifies. Mellow and rounded aromas of dry smoke and sweet raisins fill the nose, with notes of hazelnuts, honey, rose petals, orange and aromatic smoke on the palate. £210.

Johnnie Walker Blue Year of the Ox Blended Scotch Whisky 70cl/40%. A limited-edition bottling of Johnnie Walker Blue Label celebrating Chinese New Year and the Year of the Ox. The bottle features artwork from award-winning artist Shirley Gong, with the ox symbolising prosperity, growth and good fortune. In the illustrations the ox is honoured for its majesty, poised high above mountain clouds representing longevity. The remarkable visuals are completed with celebratory lanterns and cherry blossom, signifying good fortune in the year to come.

Lunar New Year With New Limited Edition Year of the Dog Bottle: The Johnnie Walker Blue Label Year of the Dog limited-edition bottle was released in Feb 2018 in celebration of the Lunar New Year. As part of the brand's Pioneering Spirit Series, Johnnie Walker continues to pay homage to the traditions of Asian culture and lasting heritage of the Chinese Zodiac.

This annual limited-edition series, now in its fifth installment, honours each Lunar New Year with a commemorative bottle inspired by the Chinese Zodiac. The 2018 bottle artwork, created in collaboration with multi-award winning Taiwanese artist Page Tsou, follows the Johnnie Walker Striding Man as he celebrates the Lunar New Year alongside the design's proudly displayed Shar Pei. Originally bred for Chinese nobility, the Shar Pei is renowned for its rarity, a key characteristic of Johnnie Walker Blue Label. With only 1 in 10,000 whiskies distilled by Johnnie Walker possessing the caliber required to craft the Blue Label blend, each bottle exemplifies exclusivity and prestige.

The precious design consists of a total of four dogs all chosen for their special meaning in Asia. This unique design tells the story of the Johnnie Walker Striding Man and a loyal companion as they journey around the world bringing prosperity and rejoicing in the arrival of the New Year. The design also contains various symbols of wealth and prosperity making this bottle extremely unique and the perfect gift to give this Chinese New Year.

Decorated with precious metals and a lacquered, ink-jet finish, the bottle itself depicts an ancient Chinese triptych design of beautiful lanterns, fireworks, and dancing dragons, embodying emotions felt while ringing in the New Year: an eagerness for exploration to worlds unseen, and an inspired sense of optimism and progress – the cornerstone of Johnnie Walker. Man's best friend is pictured standing honest and loyal while traveling through this vibrant landscape, representing the best traits of human nature.

The Lunar New Year is one of the most recognized Chinese traditions around the globe. Johnnie Walker Blue Label Year of the Dog is a true collectors' item and the perfect gift for celebrating the Lunar New Year with loved ones and friends. The bottle comes in stunning, collectible packaging that features a front-and-back view of the dazzling bottle – a great keepsake for any home bar or tablescape. Johnnie Walker Blue Label Year of the Dog is available nationwide with a suggested retail price of $258.00 (750 ml/bottle, 43% ABV).

John Walker & Sons Bicentenary Blend Blended Scotch Whisky
28 Year Old, 70cl / 46% ABV

A limited-edition blended whisky from John Walker, celebrating the journey that John Walker & Sons has taken over the last 200 years. Inspired by the list of flavours on an original inventory list form John Walker's store, master blender Jim Beveridge has crafted a complex, rich whisky with a medley of tropical flavours imparted by rare stocks from ghost distilleries Pittyvaich, Cambus and Port Ellen. Aromas of exotic fruits, cinnamon, soft smoke, figs, candied ginger, berries and aromatic spices fill the nose and are echoed on the palate.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label King George V Blended Scotch Whisky                Chinese New Year 2021, 70cl / 43% ABV

A limited-edition King George V blended malt from the John Walker & Sons Collection that celebrates Chinese New Year 2021. It is a rare combination of exquisite whiskies, originally crafted to celebrate the first Royal Warrant granted to Johnnie Walker to supply Scotch whisky to the British Royal Household. Drawn from extremely precious, rare casks, every bottle of John Walker & Sons King George V contains irreplaceable whiskies from the now silent distillery of Port Ellen. It is an elegantly rich and creamy whisky that has precious rarity reflected in every drop. 

 

Wednesday 19 August 2020

SEAGRAM'S 100 PIPERS FAMILY

  100 PIPERS SCOTCH WHISKIES

The Original 100 Pipers NAS

Seagram's 100 Pipers is the leading introductory Scotch whisky in India and is supposedly also the leading Standard Scotch in many countries around the world, including Thailand, Spain, Venezuela, and Australia. The brand's unique iconography and heritage reflects the essence of a "True Legend". It is available as a NAS 750 ml bottle, a 12 YO 750 ml, The Black Watch and, in its latest avatar, an 8 YO Blended Malt.

The Seagram’s 100 Piper’s blend was created by the Chivas Brothers in 1965, and, as was usually the case with Chivas Brothers, first launched in the US.  It owes its name and Celtic imagery to the old Scottish tradition of bagpipers who led soldiers into battle. The ‘100 Pipers’ name in particular, literally comes from the famous ballad of ‘The Hundred Pipers’, which tells of the heroic Bonnie Prince Charlie’s 1745 uprising led by a troop of 100 bagpipers.

Four years later, in 1969, the name ‘Seagram’s’ was added to the label (and remains to this day), and the Scottish flag removed. A 12-year-old extension was added in 1986, by which point 100 Pipers was selling 800,000 cases globally, of which 270,000 were in the UK. A 20-YO version followed two years later. It was claimed to be the fourth best-selling Scotch in Scotland.

In 1992, 100 Pipers became the first Seagram-owned Scotch whisky in Korea and was launched in Thailand a year later. Back in the UK it was decided to co-opt a famous Scottish regiment into the brand and rechristen it the ‘100 Pipers of the Black Watch,’ just in that nation. The more observant consumers may have wondered why there was just one piper on the label, and in due course the brand became simply The Black Watch blend.

The contents in the bottle hadn’t changed, and Brits drinking Black Watch were enjoying the exact same standard blend as Thai, Indian and other Asian consumers with their 100 Pipers. By the time Pernod Ricard had acquired the lion’s share of Seagram’s spirits business in 2001, the focus was very much on 100 Pipers in Asia. 100 Pipers started bottling in India in 2011 and is reported to be the seventh largest selling brand of Scotch whisky across the world.

The 100 Pipers 8-year-old blended malt was launched in Thailand in 2005. All this time the brand’s spiritual home was Allt-a-Bhainne, the Speyside distillery built by Seagram in 1975. It is also locally bottled in India where sales of 100 Pipers reached 300,000 cases in 2011.

The Hundred Pipers family claim that the aroma is sui generis woody and fruity, with a touch of peat oaky fragrance in medium intensity creating an aromatic sweetness. The nose is full and fruity with delicate honey and vanilla notes. The body is heavy, sweet, complex and rounded, leading to a taste that is full bodied, mellow and sweet, combined with well balanced notes of fruitiness and soft smokiness. It is rounded off by a finish that is floral and elegant, with subtle oak notes coupled with vanilla. These notes stand out in the 12 YO and The Black Watch.

The 8 YO Blended Malt is evidently a non-conformist. The nose is biscuit & buttery like Apple jelly. The palate is oily, thick and very sweet, like autumn fruit syrup. The apples remain with a touch of quince. The cask wood is well integrated. The finish is sweet, with a slight dry spiciness. Some nuttiness maybe. Overall, a very gentle and fruity whisky. Would have benefited from a balancing dryness.

Friday 31 July 2020

WRITER INSTRUCTOR PAR EXCELLENCE: GP CAPT (R) NA MOITRA (VM)

BIO DATA: GP CAPT NOEL AMIYAKUMAR MOITRA VM (RET'D)


An alumnus of Loyola School and Junior College, Pune, I hold a Diploma in German, obtained in 1972 from Goethe-Institut at Max Mueller Bhavan, Pune. A linguist, I speak French, Hindi and three other regional languages. I have led a rather unusual existence, from a fighter pilot to an eminent journalist to a Defence Consultant.
  • Passed SSLC Exam with Distinction. 
  • 1st in UPSC Selection Exam (Air Force) for the National Defence Academy.
  • 1st in NDA Air Branch Cadets written tests.
  • 1st in 107 Pilot's Course Ground Subjects.
  • 1st in Flying Instructors School, Tambaram, Chennai.
  • Bagged Majithia Trophy with record marks that still stand.

MAJITHIA TROPY AWARDED BY AIR MSHL BW CHAUHAN
  • Inducted MiG-21 bis in 1976.
  • Fastest 1,000 hrs on the MiG-21 Bis.
  • Appointed sub-editor for the Air Force Flight Safety Magazine
  • Inducted Mirage 2000 aircraft in 1985, after a 10-month training period.
  • Only one of two pilots to induct 2 types of aircraft.
  • Fastest 1,000 hours on the Mirage 2000 in the world.

OTHER ASPECTS: SERVICE LIFE

  • Edited all IAF Coffee Tables from 1990 to 1996.
  • Staff Officer to 2 Air Chiefs.
  • Edited all that they wrote, from important letters to newspaper releases, compliments to obituaries.
  • Did 11 months flying cross-training in Germany.
  • Flt Cdr of first Mirage 2000 Squadron.
  • Commanded a Mirage 2000 Squadron.
  • Awarded Vayu Sena Medal in '93.
  • Only pilot to fire an S-530D BVR missile; it cost as much as a Mig 21 Bis.
  • Base Cdr at that Station, with 15,000 heads.
  • 1st in Staff College Entrance exam.
  • Did Staff Course in UK.
  • Did my BBA in the UK (University of Reading).
  • Did AREA Course in Japan.
  • Equally fluent in both UK and US English.

DIVERSE SKILLS

  • Intelligent, sharp, hard-working, focussed, punctual, work oriented and a team player.
  • Invariably ranked first, since cadet days in 1967, in ALL courses undergone.
  • Professional Military Pilot with 33 years of experience in the Indian Air Force (IAF).
  • Became Command Instrument Rating Examiner(SWAC) on MiG-21 aircraft in 1982.
  • Instructor in Flying and Flying-related subjects since 1980. Ranked 1st in the entry     course.
  • Tested air/ground crew on Mirage-2000 aircraft as sole Air Force Examiner for 5 years.
  • Did my A-1 Instructional Rating on Mirage-2000 aircraft.

  • FELICITATED BY ACM SK MEHRA, CAS IAF, ON CROSSING 1000 HRS ON MIRAGE 2000 

  • Staff Officer to two Air Chiefs, the highest and most prestigious post in that rank (Lt.    Col.).
  • Wrote over six speeches/obituaries/prefaces/messages/presentations, etc. for both daily,    6 days a week.
  • Specialist in editing and formatting mainly official letters and documents, as well as              memos, minutes and reports.
  • Considerable HR experience, commanding a Flying Squadron and later as Base                 Commander at an airbase housing 15,000 bodies.

  • BASE CDR RECEIVES ME ON LANDING AFTER CROSSING 1000 HRS ON TYPE

  • Awarded VM (DFC) 1993
  • Widely travelled, with 62 countries visited, before and after Service. 
  • Have absolute command over the English language and the nuances, inflections & subtleties that differentiate the exceptional from the excellent.
  • In my spare time, taught the English language in a syllabus-oriented open forum for airmen. Gave one-on-one tuition to promising students.
  • Did my Bachelors in Aerodynamics.
  • An Indian native English speaker, I have done my education and over 95% of my work in      Queen’s English.
  • Did my Masters in Defence Studies: Application of Air Power.
  • Read speak and write German fluently.
  • Help non-native English speakers get exceptional grades.
  • MIRAGE 2000 LANDING ON A HIGHWAY

    IN SERVICE QUALIFICATIONS:

  • Majithia Trophy 
  • IRIE(Command Examiner) MiG-21 ac
  • IAF Examiner Mirage 2000 ac
  • QFI A-2 on MiG-21 ac
  • QFI A1 on Mirage 2000 ac
  • Vayu Sena Medal
  • PSA (Staff Course Abroad)
  • Diploma in German
  • BSc Physics: Aerodynamics
  • BBA: Man &Material Management, University of Reading, Berkshire UK
  • MSc: Military Studies-Employment of Air Power.
  • Types of ac flown: 24
  • WITH SINGAPORE AIR CHIEF
    ANCILLARY ACHIEVEMENTS:

  • Journalist of note, in India and Cyprus. Worked with Contact Communications, New Delhi     and Cyprus Smart Media Group, Limassol.
  • Winner of Best Editor/Writer Award 2009 (Asian Countries) at IMB Munich, Germany.
  • Consultant to Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd. Israel. 
  •