Generously_Paul
Old Line American Single Malt
American Single Malt — Maryland, USA
Reviewed
October 17, 2017 (edited January 24, 2018)
This review is from a bonus sample provided by Scott from our tour group. Old Line is a new comer to the whiskey world. This is an American single malt made from 100% malted barley from the Pacific Northwest. Made in pot stills and aged in charred new American oak 10 gallon bucke...I mean barrels, for two years. Bottled at 43% ABV and is probably natural color of a beautiful deep red mahogany. Most likely chill filtered.
The nose starts off a little harsh, but a little extra time takes care of that. Strong charred oak. Vanilla, toffee, caramel and maraschino cherries. A little malty, but the oak hides most of it. Red apples and a little berry note. Not bad for only 2 years. After a little more time, some buttercream and vanilla cake, roasted caramel malts and brown sugar appear. There is a slight cardboard note that is a little out of place. Some cinnamon and clove in there as well.
Very strong oak on the palate. Somewhat bitter. Vanilla and cherry cough syrup. Sour apples, burnt toffee and caramel. Cinnamon and clove. More bitterness comes in, it really erases the nose in the overall experience.
I added water to see what would happen. It takes out any harshness in the nose and brings out more toffee and apples. Water nearly kills the palate but everything is still there, including the bitterness, just all weakened.
A medium bodied mouthfeel. Dry but fairly smooth.
The finish is long, but that is a bad thing here. Bitter oak, cough syrup and barrel char.
It's my belief that the use of such small barrels was simply a way to get product on shelves as fast as possible. I've heard that barley distilled in pot stills is a much harsher spirit than a corn mash bill from column stills. This is why scotch is not typically matured exclusively in virgin oak, because the wood tannins are extracted too quickly and does not play well with the new make spirit. I could be wrong on that, but it's what I remember. The nose on this young single malt is pleasant enough, but the palate and finish killed it for me. 3 stars, but it could be a 3.25 with water. Thanks for the sample Scott.
Cheers
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You need to start putting those writing skills to good use. Maybe a 2nd job with Whisky Magazine? :)
@Rick_M actually I work in home audio/video repair. I fix surround sound receivers, power amps, DVD/CD/BLURAY players, cassette decks and video projectors. It's analytical at times so I guess that counts.
So Paul, what exactly do you do? I'm thinking you're either a kept man based on that James Bond slogan under your avatar, or, possibly a therapist, since you're analytical and spend so much time hanging around a bunch of psychologically challenged people. ;)
Excellent review, Paul. I thought this one was pretty tasty considering it’s youth, plus the fact it’s craft whiskey. I don’t think American distilleries should even focus on imitating scotch, but that’s just me. Cheers.
My wife is a Jr. High teacher. Her two sisters are university level professors (one at MSU). I see what they do and what they go through. Believe me, I'm no teacher. I just like to pass along things I pick up on my ever winding journey
always learn something new from your reviews. You should teach a course at MSU or UofM on The Physics of Distillation. Good review as usual