Main My profile Registration Log out Login
Elite FraggerS
Monday
13.10.2025
11:30 PM
Welcome Guest | RSS LoginRegistrationMain
[ New messages · Members · Forum rules · Search · RSS ]
  • Page 1 of 1
  • 1
Forum moderator: Muffin  
Coach Factory Outlet
ronalhjtDate: Tuesday, 2013-08-06, 6:20 PM | Message # 1
Group: Guests





STILL POWER | Copper pot stills s14.txt,1,S] in the Hakushu distillery My barman has much to say about the properties of the water used in Hakushu and Suntory's other famed single malt, Yamazaki (the Japanese are obsessed with water, ascribing mystical attributes to it). "The water for Yamazaki was used in the tea ceremony for centuries," he explains. "It has some remarkable quality. We can't put our finger on it scientifically." And, indeed, Sen no Rikyu鈥攖he 16th-century tea master who perfected the tea ceremony鈥攃hose Yamazaki water for his tea. Yet the unique properties of Japanese malts are about more than water.As proud as the Japanese are of their achievements with single malt, the whiskies they drink most often are blended. "The Japanese consumer has no patience for tastes out of balance," explains Neyah White, a former bartender from San Francisco and current brand ambassador for Suntory. "Since the vast majority of the whisky consumed gets stretched with water, in the form of the Highball, the blenders are critical." The whisky, in other words, has to hold its own against <a href=http://www.coach-outlet-storeonline.com/>Coach Factory Outlet Online</a> water. Another curious specialization is the use o <a href=http://www.coach-outlet-storeonline.com/>Coach Factory Online</a> f native Japanese oak in fermentation barrels鈥攁n oak known as Mizunara. Whisky matured in Mizunara barrels loses an exceptional amount o <a href=http://www.coach-outlet-storeonline.com/>Coach Outlet Store</a> f water through evaporation, making for a much more condensed final product. Moreover, says White, "the incense and sandalwood aromas they impart just cannot be found anywhere else." The bar's air of quiet, mastered pleasure mirrors the astonishing ascendency of Japanese whisky, which regularly surpasses its Scottish progenitor in international whisky awards.
 
  • Page 1 of 1
  • 1
Search:


Copyright MyCorp © 2025
Make a free website with uCoz