DrRHCMadden
Limeburners Single Malt American Oak
Single Malt — Western Australia, Australia
Reviewed
July 23, 2022 (edited July 24, 2022)
Currently attempting to add some more commentary to old notes where I have liquid left in the bottle. Next on the list I’m going back to one of my staple favourites, Limeburners American Oak. I don’t think Limeburners are particularly well known outside of Western Australia, let alone Australia. The Great Southern Distillery is located on the harbours edge in Albany, southern Western Australia where their spirits are distilled in traditional small batch copper pot stills from local barley and water drawn from the Nanarup aquifer that lies beneath Albany. For all those rock fans out there, the aquifer is formed from the ~40 million year old Nanarup Limestone, which I am sure must contribute a wonderful mineral quality to the water. All the standard releases are bottled at 43%, brought down from the cask strength by filtered rain water. The American Oak bottling is matured in refill American Oak and is probably the best representative of the core Limeburners range and spirit.
Great Southern Distillery uses a Solera System in their bottling process, whereby several casks are emptied to a large holding tank and left to marry. Half of the blended batch is then sent for filtering and bottling, and the remaining half is retained and the blending tank is topped up with new barrels. I believe Limeburners have been criticised for inconsistency in the past, but for the last three years or so that I have been enjoying the American Oak offering, I haven’t recognised any notable variability, so I’d suggest the early inconsistencies have been ironed out and the Solera System is doing what it’s supposed to; providing consistency from batch to batch.
N: Refreshing and juicy melon, rich barley, orchard fruit crispness, caramel cream.
P: Juicy stone fruit, vanilla and some ever so slightly sour citrus. Light honey and a really bright ginger spice. Lots of rich malted barely and woody tannin notes. All around full and somewhat creamy mouth-feel.
F: A little short. Vanilla and a nutty creaminess gives way to honey sweetness and then a ginger zing.
This is a punchy whisky, summery and bright. Whilst I think quite unique, this is still very approachable and readily appreciable. I can mull it over but not much work is needed to find what it has to offer. I like that. The nose perhaps is a little better than the palate. The nose reminds me of the overly glamourised tv commercials of fresh apples being misted and beads of water rolling down the side and cutting to summer flows with busy bees collecting pollen. If you could eat a smell then this smell would likely follow through with a brilliant fresh green apple crunch. I don’t know if a bright sunny orchard garden can be bottled, but I think this whisky may be close to it. I think this expression may have been my gateway into bourbons for the caramel and vanilla flavours and whilst those are undeniably here, the presence of the spirit is available and thats a great outcome to not have been completely overprinted. My only criticism I think would be that the ginger note is a bit overpowering at times but it’s not a major detriment really.
Distiller whisky taste #54
140.0
AUD
per
Bottle
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@cascode sounds like a plan 👍 let me know how you go.
@DrRHCMadden They have a three-pack sample set but that is what I tasted their standard range from previously. I’ll contact them and see if the current samples are from the new solera process.
@cascode Cameron’s taking care of the discussion here: https://distillery.com.au/pages/the-limeburners-whisky-range
@cascode as far as I am aware they are doing this for their core bottles. American Oak, Sherry Cask, Port Cask and possibly standard Peated. The sherry and port are also offered now in cask strength. The directors cuts, darkest winter, and heavily peated are all single casks still. The sherry and port are both fine, but they’re not, to me, on the same level as the American oak (the core spirit) and the darkest winter (the special peated). If you can get a tasting pack, or a cheeky trip to Albany, then definitely check it out. The new swan valley exclusive directors cut is pretty yummy also. I think they are now hitting their stride.
I wasn't aware they were using a solera-style process now. My previous tastes have all been at events or from distillery-filled samples and I did indeed find it highly variable. I'll have to try some Limeburner's again.