Malt Whisky: The Complete Guide - An excellent introduction
I've been exploring the world of Scotch whisky by sampling the plethora of drams from the different regions of Scotland, namely Speyside, Islay, Highlands, Lowlands, Cambeltown, and the Islands. While sipping a variety of malts in the evenings is of course the main pleasure, I wanted to know more about the origins, history, distilling techniques, and regional differences to give me a better understanding and vocabulary to describe this mysterious and enticing sensory world.
I've read and enjoyed Charles Maclean's Spirit of Place: Whisky Distilleries of Scotland, which is a great way to learn the stories of each distillery and regional characteristics and a perfect primer to prepare for a Scotch whisky tasting tour. This book at hand is the best way to learn about the following chapters:
History:
1) Pre-1450: Early distilling in Europe and the Middle East
2) 1450-1600: Aqua vitae and the first alembics
3) 1600-1822: Rise of distilling in Scotland; the smuggling era
4) 1822-1900: blended whisky; the whisky boom
5) 1900 to present: malt whisky rediscovered
How whisky is made:
Water, barley, yeast, malting, peat, mashing, fermenting, distilling, filling, wood and maturation, warehouses
Whisky tasting:
Sensory evaluation, preparing for a tasting, the tasting procedure, the language of whisky tasting, chemical derivation of flavor, tasting wheels
Whisky regions:
Highlands (North, Speyside, Central, East, West), Cambeltown, The Islands, Islay, Lowlands
A-Z Directory of malt distilleries, with tasting notes and photos of labels
This is the perfect primer, so what are you waiting for?