A Timeless Secret
It is said that the art of distilling was discovered
somewhere in Asia in approximately 800 B.C.
The assumption was that this technique was merely used to make perfumes,
however this has been refuted.
The method by which the processes found its way to the
British Isles is uncertain; however we do know that the Moors brought the art
of distilling to Europe. It is believed
that the art was then refined in monasteries throughout central Europe.
Apparently the patron saint of Ireland, St. Patrick, carried this trade into
the monasteries in 432 AD on a Christian mission. Regardless, the Celts did
attain the secret eventually and made their water of life that in Gaelic is
pronounced “Uisge Beatha”.
This simple yet not well-known name is how the scotch
whiskey came to be, as Uisge means whiskey. The millstone year for whiskey in
history would have to be 1494 as a Sir Friar John Cor of Scotland ordered eight
bolls of malt. It was reportedly to be used
for aqua vitae which is the first accountable proof of production of whiskey in
Scotland.
The skill of distilling soon left the monasteries for
the farms where just about everyone was making whiskey up until about 1820 this
is when the government decided they were going to shut down personal and
private distilleries making them illegal. The rough and sometimes brutal taste
differs greatly from today. It was not
until the eighteenth century that it was discovered that with aging came a
mellower brew. The findings of the aging process was practically tripped upon
when an old cask long forgotten was found full of the good stuff.
The uniting of the two parliaments one from England
and one from Scotland in the year 1707 is what drew into effect the Union Act.
Realizing that it would pay off for both sides, they came up with an unheard of
plan for making the malt.
By the year 1725 the English malt tax was forged
however not without bloodshed. At this
time every second bottle of malt distilled in Scotland was of the illegal kind
due to roving excise men, illicit distilleries, and the fashion of smuggling.
In 1820’s much trouble arose in the form of crime and
tough taxing policies which eventually became completely unmanageable. To solve
the problem, the government ordered the Excise Act which allowed the government
to track which distilleries were legal and those which were not by using
labels.
Whisky started out as a product for the British market
in the 1820s, but today it has become a drink that is appreciated and loved
around the world. Much of this incredible development is the result of the
introduction of blended whisky. Even
today approximately 90 percent of all whisky that is produced in Scotland is
used in blended whisky. However the interest of single malt whisky has increased
in recent years and this development is likely to continue.
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