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Andresky: Scotland’s whisky feels the ‘burn’ that bourbons don’t

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There is an old Scottish saying about how to predict their weather: “If it’s not raining, then it’s about to.” The land of endless rainbows resonates in my memory when I toured the famous Highlands some years back.

A Scottish whisky-maker back then told me that the “burn” is what makes the “Uisge Beatha,” which is Gaelic for “water of life.” A burn is a spring water-fed stream. It’s the source of all great scotch. Like our American whiskey (notice we use an E in the spelling), the water makes all the difference. 

The Scottish Isle of Islay (pronounced Is-Lay) ferments the strongest-tasting scotch malts of all, an almost medicinal flavor incomparable to any other. The water source of those Islay distillers, such as Ardbeg, Lagavullin and Laphroaig, are the spring waters that flow over long stretches of dense peat bogs. The burn plays the biggest role for that strong, peaty taste. The intensely fresh, clean spring water on the Isle of Islay is soft water. And almost everywhere else in Scotland, scotch is made from soft water.                                                

In Tennessee and Kentucky, our American bourbon benefits from its water sources as well. American bourbons use naturally hard water, which gives the yeast nutrients to help it thrive.

Scotland’s soft water comes from springs that most likely have contact with granite. Granite is an impervious rock, unlike Tennessee limestone or chalky Kentucky subsoils and is usually mineral-free and purer than hard water-fed springs.

At least four Scottish distillers use hard water, so you can compare hard- and soft-water scotches. On the Orkney Islands, two scotch-makers, Scapa and Highland Park, use hard water. Glenmorangie, a very popular single-malt brand, sources from the Tarlogie Springs, which have underground limestone beds, but are not quite as hard as bourbon water sources. Glenmorangie has honey-like character. The fourth, Glenkinchie, has high levels of calcium in its hard-water burn.

Scottish single malt-makers profess that the purity of scotch is also in the type of barley used. It’s this roasted malt barley process that comes in contact with the burn and “cooks” it all together to make single-malt scotch.

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