However, because of lacking knowledge and
inaccurate tools the results of the distillation was
rarely the same. Sometimes the end product
turned out too weak, sometimes too strong, and
sometimes it even had a harmful influence on
the drinker’s health, leaving them with not only a
big head ache but with blindness. In the 16th and
17th centuries distilling went through numerous
advances that helped make distilling what it is today.
In about the 16th century whisky became very
popular and was deeply woven with Scottish
life. In the beginning of 17th century the ever
growing popularity eventually attracted the
Scottish parliament to get their fingers in the pie
and thereby introduced a taxation system on malt
and the end products. This forced distillers, who
could not afford the tax, to produce their beloved
product in secrecy and away from the public eye
– the mysterious and almost romantic period of
the illicit distilling and smuggling of whisky began.
To fight this illegal activity, the council employed a
special force: the excise men. These were the men
who searched for the smugglers and the distillers
who weren’t paying tax and often bloody skirmishes
took place in an attempt to settle the problem.
Soon smuggling became a highly developed art
form, smugglers were using anything they could to
conceal their product and transport it unnoticed.
They even developed techniques and an information
network to warn people of the approaching excise
men. Smuggling went on for about 150 years.
It was only in 1823 that the Duke of Gordon proposed
to the House of Lords that the government could
make more profit if whisky was produced legally. So,
a new law was introduced, demanding that distillers
had to pay a £10 licence fee as a set payment per
gallon of whisky. Almost instantly smuggling died
down completely. Today the Scottish Single Malts
and Blended Whiskies have fans and admirers around
the globe.
How is it made?
Malt Whisky is made from three ingredients;
barley, water and yeast. The following describes
the basic traditional process of making whisky.
The malting process begins as the barley is soaked in
water for two-three days in steep tanks. The soaking
increases the moisture content of the grains which in
turn triggers the germination process. The barley is
then moved to a malting facility (e.g. a malting floor
or a drum malting) where the germination continues.
The purpose of the malting is to convert the starch in
the grains into fermentable sugars which will feed the
yeast during the fermentation stage. Heat is produced
during the germination so it is important to turn the
barley continuously to keep the temperature even. If
the temperature rises above 22°C the grains will die
and the process of converting the starch into sugar
will be halted. In a traditional malting floor the barley
is turned by hand with wooden shovels called ‘shiels’.
After the germination is completed it is necessary
to prevent the grain from developing further,
thereby using up its food supply (the fermentable
sugars). This is accomplished in a kiln where the
malt is dried to remove enough moisture from
each grain so that further growth is halted.
A kiln is a two-storey building where the upper
floor is perforated to allow hot air to pass through
from below. The lower floor contains a furnace
where bricks of peat are burned to generate heat
and smoke. The heat and smoke rise through the
perforations and dry the green malt. It is during this
stage that the malt gains its characteristic ‘peat-reek’.
To be continued in the next issue
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The Process of Whisky making. Photo by The Eye |
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