The Finest Taste in Whiskies

 

Blending in cultures, finest taste and the good times together. Best blended Scotchis handpicked Indian blended whisky infused with Scotch from other parts of the world, particularly from Islay, the Scottish Highlands and Speyside. It then moves on to the process of maturity and aging to further add to the taste, done so in large oak barrels depending on the blended whisky brands. How about an introduction to the finest variations of whiskies:

  1. Malt Whisky: Made from malted barley and has to be distilled in pot stills. The process of malting is elaborate.
  2. Grain whisky: Whisky that is not made from malted barley. It can contain any type of grain and is also a mixture.
  3. Single Pot Still Whisky: It may contain grain, also unmalted barley, but it is exclusively distilled in pot stills.
  4. Bourbon: Bourbon must contain at least 51% corn. The rest is a mixture of some barley for the fermentation process, as well as rye and/or wheat. There are different types of bourbon with regard to the production process.
  5. Blended Whisky: Indian blended whiskycan contain any mixture of different whiskies (malt, grain). These whiskies differ in type, but especially in their origin, i.e. the distillery they come from. The character of a blended whisky is determined by the ratio of whiskies from different distilleries, since each distillery produces different flavours. For the well-known brands the ratio is always the same, so the taste doesn’t change. In order to be able to produce these large amounts of blended whisky, there are malt whisky distilleries that produce exclusively for the blended whisky industry and don’t bottle any single malts. Most blends contain more grain whisky than malt whisky. The higher the malt whisky ratio, the better the blend.

As sir Winston Churchill would put it: “My tastes are simple, I am satisfied with the best”.

 

  1. Blended Whisky: Indian blended whisky can contain any mixture of different whiskies (malt, grain). These whiskies differ in type, but especially in their origin, i.e. the distillery they come from. The character of a blended whisky is determined by the ratio of whiskies from different distilleries, since each distillery produces different flavours. For the well-known brands the ratio is always the same, so the taste doesn’t change. In order to be able to produce these large amounts of blended whisky, there are malt whisky distilleries that produce exclusively for the blended whisky industry and don’t bottle any single malts. Most blends contain more grain whisky than malt whisky. The higher the malt whisky ratio, the better the blend.

As sir Winston Churchill would put it: “My tastes are simple, I am satisfied with the best”.

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