Salty finish, which is to be expected from an Island dram. Oh well, guess we're all idiots.įinish: Sea salt, nutmeg, ginger, wood, orange zest Which, in hindsight, I wish my great great great grandfather had said when he was burying those Gypsies as punishment for stealing a turnip. Think more like a dry highland than an Islay. I'm being stupid.Īnyway, this is earthier than peat. I wonder if drinking this will remove the curse. Taste: Earth, smoke, pepper, anise, turnip, allspice, ham, carrot, milk chocolate I spent at least two episodes of Archer finding each nook and cranny on this one. And it takes a long time to really open up. I'd be lying if I didn't say I love cinnamon, and this has it in spades. Nose: Peat, cinnamon, anise, rubber, nutmeg, oak, dusty leather books, little bit of peach Let me tell you something about curses: My family has one, and it says we'll all be self-deprecating, and I don't really think. Her obtuse prediction came true, and thus we have a whisky now. The name comes from an old legend involving a soothsayer/seer/crackpot who cursed the Campbell family when she was thrown out of Jura back in the 1700s. It's also non-chill filtered, which I'm impressed by. Limited to 10,000 bottles per year, this version is made up of various different casks of peated whiskies, and finished off in Oloroso sherry cask. Isle of Jura Prophecy is a NAS offering from Isle of Jura. I've been wanting to try it for awhile now. until they were horribly maimed by Islanders who felt losing their land was an affront.īut enough about my checkered ancestry, first up I'd like to thank /u/Devoz from the bottom of my potentially sinned family heart for a sample of this dram.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |