Whisky — Scotch Types, 5 Regions, 7-Step Manufacture, Irish, Bourbon, Canadian, Japanese & Service

F&B Service · Part 5 · Module 24

Whisky — Scotch Types, 5 Regions, 7-Step Manufacture, Irish, Bourbon, Canadian, Japanese & Service

By Tourism369 · Food and Beverage Service · UGC NET Paper 2

Whiskey = “usige beathe” (Gaelic) = “water of life.” First produced in Ireland. Irish monks brought distillation to Scotland. Scotch = 40–55% ABV. Single Malt = 100% barley, one distillery, pot still only. Bourbon = 51% corn, Kentucky, charred oak. Irish Whiskey = triple distilled, no peat, 5-year minimum.

📖 Introduction

Whisky = distilled from cereal grains + matured in wood casks. Word = from Latin “acqua vitae” = equivalent of Gaelic “usige beathe” = “water of life.” Spirit first produced in Ireland. Irish monks brought distillation craft to Scotland. Coffey Still invention = revolutionised whisky (lighter styles from maize, barley, rye). Whisky ABV: 40–55%.

🥃 3 Types of Scotch Whisky
Grain Whisky
Made from maize (mainly), wheat, millet + small barley. Produced by Coffey Still. Light-bodied. Cheaper and quicker than malt.
Blended Whisky — 90%+ of Scotland’s output
50% malt + 50% grain blend. More malt = Deluxe whisky. Smoother, longer in cask. Brands: Ballantine, Bells, Chivas Regal, Cutty Sark, Johnnie Walker Black Label, Vat 69, Teachers, Old Parr.
Malt Whisky — 100% malted barley only
Single Malt: One distillery, one year, 100% barley malt, pot still ONLY, majority twice distilled. Max 165 proof.
Vatted/Blended Malt: 100% barley malt from 2+ distilleries. Previously called Vatted Malts. Max 165 proof.
Famous: Glenfiddich, Glenlivet, Macallan, Talisker, Highland Park, Laphroaig, Singleton, Glenmorangie.
🗺️ 5 Whisky Regions of Scotland
1. Lowland — Smooth & slightly fiery
Light in salt and peat. Most served as aperitif. Brands: Auchentoshan, Bladnoch, Glenkinchie.
2. Highland — LARGEST producing region
Powerful, rich flavour, quite smoky. Famous distilleries around River Spey. Brands: Macallan, Glenfiddich, Glenlivet, Glenmorangie, Singleton. Note: “Glen” = Valley.
3. Islands — Fine malts
Islay, Jura, Mull, Orkney, Skye. Brands: Talisker, Highland Park, Laphroaig, Arran.
4. Speyside — Named after River Spey
Rich flavour, complexity, relatively mild. Brands: Glen Morey, Glen Spey.
5. Campbeltown — Former whisky capital of Scotland
Heavy and smoky whiskies. Brands: Springbank, Longrow, Glenscotia.
⚙️ 7-Step Whisky Manufacture

1. Malting: Steeping → Germination → Kilning with peat (gives smoky flavour). Peat = fuel from decomposed vegetation.
2. Milling: Ground into fine powder = grist.
3. Mashing: Grist + hot water (65°C) in Mash Tun → wort.
4. Fermentation: Yeast added to wort. Short fermentation (~48hrs) = malty. Long fermentation (~55hrs) = lighter, complex, fruity. Fermentation vessels = tunroom.
5. Distillation: Wash = 8% ABV → Pot Still (twice) → “Low wines” (23% ABV) → redistilled → Foreshots + Heart (kept) + Feints (discarded).
6. Maturation: Stored in oak barrels. Scotch = min. 3 years. American classics = min. 4 years. Single malt: Ex-Bourbon, Ex-Sherry or Refill casks. Vanilla (Bourbon) and tannins from oak.
7. Bottling: Chill filtration (prevents cloudiness) + caramel added to standardise colour.

🌍 Whiskies from Other Countries
Irish Whiskey — Triple distilled, NO peat
Spelled “whiskey.” Malted + unmalted barley + small quantities of other grains. Triple distilled → less congeners → light, easy on palate. No peat in kilns → no smoky flavour (except Connemara Peated Irish Malt). Min. 5 years in oak casks. Produced by Coffey + Pot Still. Brands: Tullamore Dew, Bushmills, Jameson, Paddy’s, Middleton Rare.
Canadian Whisky
Rye + malted barley + corn + wheat. Produced by Coffey Still. Aged in charred oak casks for 3 years. Between Scotch and Bourbon in taste — light-bodied, slightly sweet. May add tiny quantity of sherry or wine. Brands: Canadian Club, Crown Royal, Black Velvet.
American Whiskey (spelled with “e”)
Bourbon: Min. 51% corn + rye/wheat/malted barley. Coffey Still. Charred oak casks. Min. 4 years. Made in Bourbon County, Kentucky. Brands: Jim Beam, Wild Turkey, Maker’s Mark, Four Roses.
Rye Whisky: Min. 51% rye. Continuous Still. Min. 2 years (usually 4). No colouring/flavouring.
Tennessee Whisky: Sour mash, charcoal filtered before maturation.
Japanese Whisky — Scotch-inspired
Made from millet, corn, rice. Both Pot Still and Coffey Still used. Peat imported from Scotland. Less peaty than Scotch. Light nose. Crystal-clean water. Brands: Hibiki, Yamazaki, Hakushu, Yoichi, Nikka.
🥃 Service of Whisky

Scotch/Irish Whiskey: Straight or with splash of spring water or ice in Old Fashioned glass. Single Malt: Straight with a few drops of spring water only. Canadian/Bourbon: Straight, on the rocks or with splash of soda/water.

Congeners = impurities/chemical compounds produced during fermentation (tannin, acetaldehyde etc.). Give whisky flavour + aroma but excess = undrinkable. Present in dark spirits (brandy, whisky) and wine. Cause hangover.

🎯 UGC NET Key Points — Part 5 Module 24
◆ Whisky = “acqua vitae” (Latin) = “usige beathe” (Gaelic) = “water of life”
◆ First produced in IRELAND · Irish monks brought distillation to Scotland
◆ Scotch ABV: 40–55%. Cask strength = bottled from barrel undiluted
◆ Blended Scotch = 50% malt + 50% grain · 90%+ of Scotland’s output
◆ Single Malt = 100% barley, ONE distillery, pot still ONLY, mostly twice distilled
◆ Highland = LARGEST whisky producing region · “Glen” = Valley
◆ Campbeltown = former whisky capital of Scotland
◆ Peat = fuel from decomposed vegetation → gives smoky flavour
◆ Short fermentation (~48hr) = malty. Long fermentation (~55hr) = lighter, fruity
◆ Scotch maturation = min. 3 years · American classics = min. 4 years
◆ Irish Whiskey: triple distilled, NO peat, min. 5 years in oak
◆ Bourbon: min. 51% corn, charred oak, min. 4 years, Kentucky
◆ Tennessee = sour mash + charcoal filtered before maturation
◆ Japanese whisky = peat imported from Scotland · Brands: Yamazaki, Nikka, Hibiki
◆ Congeners = chemical compounds giving flavour/aroma; excess = undrinkable
Continue Learning

Next: Module 25 — Brandy

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