My
history with Teeling Whiskey goes back almost seven years. I was the Whiskey
Consultant for Vom Fass’s flagship store in Madison, Wisconsin, and
there were several independent bottlings of Teeling whiskeys available. One of
them, called Against the Grain, was my secret weapon whenever someone
came into the store and suggested they didn’t care for whiskey at all. I’d pour
them a sample, and it was a game-changer more often than not.
Since
moving on from Vom Fass, I’ve not had much opportunity to try Teeling’s whiskeys.
I’ve seen them on the shelves, but I’d always explore something else. I came
across a triple pack of 50ml Teeling’s Single Malt, Single Grain, and Small
Batch whiskeys one day, and it would be my opportunity to try all three.
If
you’re not familiar with the Teeling family, you should be. Go back a few
generations to Walter Teeling, who started the journey back in 1792 in
Dublin. There is a suggestion that the Teelings have been involved ever since. In 1987, John Teeling
purchased a formerly-state run industrial alcohol facility, installed a couple
of stills, and then became the Cooley Distillery. Cooley wasn’t any distillery; it was winning
accolades for what it produced. It became so much so that in 2011, Beam
Suntory bought it.
And
that may have been the end of Teeling, except it wasn’t. John’s sons, Stephen
and Jack, teamed with their first employee, Alex Chasko (its
Master Distiller and Blender), and opened the Teeling Whiskey Distillery
in 2015, the first new distillery in Dublin in 125 years. Because of that,
combined with laws governing Irish whiskey, anything with the Teeling label before
2018 is sourced (from Cooley, Old Bushmills, etc.).
Today’s
review is of its Single Grain release. While we’re in 2022, the Trinity Pack I
purchased was from 2019. I believe this whiskey is still a Cooley product and the
labels state it is crafted and bottled
by Teeling (rather than distilled).
The
Single Grain starts with a mash of 95% corn and 5% malted barley. If that has
you scratching your head, recall that single
refers to the distillery, not the actual grain content. Single malt or single
grain whiskey comes from a single distillery, whereas a blend is from several. It
carries no age statement, but it is aged between five and six years. It spent
time in former Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon French Oak casks. Packaged at 46%
ABV (92°), you can expect to spend $45.00 or so on a 750ml bottle.
How
does the Single Grain fare? The only way to answer that is to #DrinkCurious.
Appearance: Poured neat into my Glencairn glass, this
single grain whiskey presented as deep orange. It formed a medium-weighted rim
that released wide, slow legs that fell back to the pool.
Nose: Before
I even picked up the glass, a waft of butterscotch was easy to find. Once I brought
it close to my face, I found plum jam, vanilla, French oak, and sawdust. The
last note was curious because, in my experience, it suggests smaller cooperage,
which isn’t the case here. As I drew that air past my lips, oak and toasted
pineapple rolled across my tongue.
Palate: The first sip seemed thin, but that texture
thickened quickly, making it full-bodied and creamy. Coconut and Werther’s candy
came out in a big way on the front. Next, I tasted date, pear, and cranberry. The back featured oak, caramel, and toffee.
Finish: The French oak woke up on the finish and kept
building. At its crescendo, cinnamon spice and toffee toned it. The
finish was long and very dry, almost giving me the pucker power that one should expect from Cabernet Sauvignon casks.
Bottle, Bar, or Bust: I went
into this review wanting to like the Teeling Single Grain. The independent
bottlings of its Single Grain from the Cooley Distillery were lovely.
Unfortunately, that wasn’t my experience with their branded one. I’m not
suggesting this is bad because it isn’t. It just lacks anything remarkable to
give a wow factor. I do appreciate
its 46% ABV versus the 40% that so many Irish whiskeys have, but that in and
upon itself doesn’t push it over the edge. For the price, I would recommend
trying this one at a Bar before
committing to the entire bottle. Cheers!
My Simple, Easy to
Understand Rating System
- Bottle = Buy It
- Bar = Try It
- Bust = Leave It
Whiskeyfellow encourages
you to enjoy your whiskey as you see fit but begs you do so responsibly.
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