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5th January 09, 07:20 AM
#1
This can't be right...
http://nonjatta.blogspot.com/2007/11/yoichi-1987.html
A Japanese single malt is the world's best scotch 2008??
What has the world come to?
However, the pictoral thread by Pour1malt shows that Talsiker is totally automated now....
Maybe they should take a hint?
:facepalm: :facepalm:
Thunderbolt
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5th January 09, 08:42 AM
#2
I have a feeling that you are correct in what you say.
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5th January 09, 09:05 AM
#3
Sorry,had asked a question...but answered it myself..
Cheers,
Chad
Last edited by puddlemuddle; 5th January 09 at 09:15 AM.
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5th January 09, 09:16 AM
#4
Opening the link it does say it won an award for the world's best Whisky, but I cannot see any claim to being the best Scotch.
Regional Director for Scotland for Clan Cunningham International, and a Scottish Armiger.
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5th January 09, 09:20 AM
#5
Since, by legal definition, to be called Scotch Whisky, the brew must be made from scottish natural waters and be rested in used barrels for at least 3 years ON SCOTTISH SOIL, I wonder just exactly what scottish distillery(ies) are performing the primary distilling, casking and aging, and where. There has to be some kind of paper trail as to where this stuff originates from before being shipped over to Japan for the final aging, tapping and bottling as a Japanese Scotch, be it single malt or blended. To be called single malt, the whisky has to come from a single distillery and a single batch group from that distillery (although multiple barrels from that batch are blended together, usually diluted and then sold as "single malt"---unless bottled at "cask strength", which is straight from the cask un blended and undiluted).
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5th January 09, 09:21 AM
#6
![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by cessna152towser
Opening the link it does say it won an award for the world's best Whisky, but I cannot see any claim to being the best Scotch.
Aha! There speaks a man with a legal brain! Well done,Alex. Phew!
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5th January 09, 12:12 PM
#7
![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by cessna152towser
Opening the link it does say it won an award for the world's best Whisky, but I cannot see any claim to being the best Scotch.
Man, I hope you're right......
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5th January 09, 12:19 PM
#8
The List Goes On
Well, as the world's best whisk(e)y that means it was better than anything produced in Scotland, Ireland, Canada, the USA, Turkey....
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5th January 09, 12:27 PM
#9
That is a single rice scotch.
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5th January 09, 01:00 PM
#10
![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by ForresterModern
Since, by legal definition, to be called Scotch Whisky, the brew must be made from scottish natural waters and be rested in used barrels for at least 3 years ON SCOTTISH SOIL, I wonder just exactly what scottish distillery(ies) are performing the primary distilling, casking and aging, and where. There has to be some kind of paper trail as to where this stuff originates from before being shipped over to Japan for the final aging, tapping and bottling as a Japanese Scotch, be it single malt or blended. To be called single malt, the whisky has to come from a single distillery and a single batch group from that distillery (although multiple barrels from that batch are blended together, usually diluted and then sold as "single malt"---unless bottled at "cask strength", which is straight from the cask un blended and undiluted).
Actually, that's not completely correct. It is true for Scotland and probably the EU, but not other places, because it would be unenforcible. Now, most places in the US won't call the product Scotch out of professional courtesy, but it's not a law. I have no idea about the legalities in Japan, but I suspect it is the same.
It's just like Champagne, or any of the other designated products of Europe (wine, cheese, etc.). Any US producer can call their product champagne and not break the law, but most producers won't out of respect. Of course, they could never sell their product in Europe with that name.
We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance. - Japanese Proverb
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