Ballyannan woods, yesterday. I have no idea how to use a camera.
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Now you’re gom
https://twitter.com/kayleywbu/status/598627740728823808
https://twitter.com/itshazelrose/status/598619145773670400
https://twitter.com/ItsEoghanWalsh/status/598619359574106112
https://twitter.com/Thomas_Stafford/status/598618519253741568
https://twitter.com/Ericoherlihy/status/598616805716959232
https://twitter.com/Dln_Mrphy/status/598616580239564800
https://twitter.com/JNyagaya/status/598614815846825985
Reaction to the (strangely true) news that trance flash-in-the-pan Basshunter is going to play the fucking Comm.
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Bottler
So I got to attend the launch of the new bottle-your-own doodad in the heritage centre here in town. Fun event, not least because I got to meet the top guys in IDL, the peeps behind Life Of Stuff, and also take home a free bottle of cask-strength hooch. The article felt a bit rushed and I’m not entirely happy with it, but here you go anyway. Also, for purposes of clarity, I should point out that the mixologist I consulted went to school with me. Check out his website, which is very sharp..and was created by another guy we went to school with. Midleton College oldboyz rule.
The Celts were a crafty bunch. Enjoying as they did the odd drink or ten, they realized that storing their alcohol was a problem, and they set to work finding a solution. At roughly the same time Jesus was turning water into wine at the wedding at Cana, our ancestors across northern Europe were carving wooden staves and binding them together to create the first rudimentary shapes of what we now call the barrel.
Not that they boasted about it – Celts had no written language at that time, and virtually all physical evidence of the barrels themselves has disappeared. But the Romans took note of this ingenuity, and in the first century AD Pliny The Elder noted the use of casks by Celts living in the vicinity of the Alps.
This humble vessel became the tool upon which empires were built, vast migrations were enabled, armies deployed, and in which alcohol was transported, stored and matured. This last use has seen the barrel live long into the plastic age, because, unlike its synthetic counterpart, wood interacts with its contents; it has a personality and identity all of its own. So it seems fitting you can now stamp your own personality and identity on the contents of this most ancient of vessels, as the Jameson Heritage Centre in Midleton has installed a device that allows you to bottle your own, personalized whiskey straight from the cask.
The launch was an important one for Irish Distillers, a fact driven home by the presence of Master Distiller Brian Nation and recently promoted production director of IDL, Tommy Keane, who was general manager of the Midleton plant. Both men played huge roles in the transformation of the distillery into one of the largest and most efficient operations in the world, but there is no grandstanding about it. They both talk about how happy they are at the growing community of distillers in Ireland, how the whiskey renaissance is good for everyone. This rebirth of our national beverage has seen the distillers in Midleton embrace the Celtic spirit of innovation through the recent release of Dair Ghaelach, the first whiskey to be finished in native Irish oak.
Ignacio Peregrino, general manager of the Jameson Heritage Centre in Midleton pointed out that the personalized bottles of Jameson you can buy in the distillery gift shops in Cork and Dublin are by far the best selling items they stock, so it made sense to enable the public to take the finals steps in the journey from grain to bottle.The expression (a fancy whiskey term for variety) in this case is Jameson Select Reserve Black Barrel, a sweet, sherried drink that is a great introduction to the Jameson premium whiskey sector. The contraption that dispenses the whiskey is a reassuringly solid wooden device with a barrel sat atop it and a steam-punk dispenser complete with levers. Add to this some gravity and a bottle, and you get to fill your bottle with cask-strength whiskey.
Once you’ve selected and filled your 700ml bottle, you personalise the bottle label with your name, the date, the number of the cask, the bottle number and the alcohol strength before placing the label carefully on the bottle and creating your own completely exclusive bottle of Jameson Select Reserve Cask Strength Black Barrel. This is the only way to get your hands on the cask-strength version. After your bottle is labelled, you can log your bottle in the ledger, ensuring that your bottle becomes part of the history of Jameson forever. The ‘Bottle Your Own’ experience costs €100.
It’s worth noting that cask-strength is a whiskey category in itself: Most whiskeys have purified water added to them after being released from their three year-plus sleep, bringing them down to a still-impressive 43% or 40%ABV or so. But cask-strength is, as you would imagine, a more potent beast, in this case a daunting 59%ABV. For someone who enjoys a big, punchy flavor, cask strength is heaven. However, a teardrop of water can also open it up, bring out new flavours and personality that may have been partially eclipsed by the powerful alcohol vapours, so it’s worth having a bit of H2O on hand to soften the fire.
But if you would rather take your Black Barrel in a cocktail, mixologist Andy Ferreira of RaiseTheBar.ie and bar Pigalle on Barrack Street in Cork city has a recipe to tickle the tastebuds.
“Jameson Black Barrel Cask-strength has got us pretty excited at Raise the Bar. A big part of what we do is to try and evolve classic cocktails and introduce new and exciting elements and flavor profiles to existing recipes. The increase in ABV from the cask strength gives an already ludicrously tasty whiskey an added umph and will stretch what is already a very long finish.
“We’ve been using Black Barrel as our whiskey of choice in our Old Fashioneds for a few years now. The concentrated spice, nutty notes and vanilla sweetness are wonderfully enhanced by this method of preparing a cocktail. The Old Fashioned is the epitome of a classic and globally a standard setter amongst bartenders. Since it’s birth sometime in the 1880’s bartenders have added there own nuances but the basic ingredients and principles remains the same – sugar, bitters, base spirit stirred over ice and finished with an orange zest, the gradual dilution of the ice enhancing the rich notes in the spirit.”
Andy’s Black Barrel Old Fashioneds went down a treat at the closing event of last year’s Web Summit, the F.ounders Group gathering of 280 international technology leaders at the Grainstore in Ballymaloe, but for the cask-strenght edition he recommends a slight upgrade: “Previously we have made Black Barrel Old Fashioneds with a drop of good sherry and chocolate bitters. In Pigalle in Cork city our signature whiskey cocktail is the ‘Black in Fashion’. Jameson Black Barrel, bitters and a house syrup of Antica Formula sweet vermouth, blackberries and honey.”
Andy’s recipe is as follows:
Black in Fashion
Stir over ice:
70 mls Jameson Select Reserve Black Barrel Cask-Strength
20 mls syrup (equal parts sweet vermouth, honey, blackberries)
2 dashes of Angostura bitter
Orange zest to finish.“The higher ABV in the cask strength Black barrel will be softened by the tangy, woody notes of the vermouth. Orange and dark fruit merge with the toasted wood and spices roll through from the pot still whiskey and flame-charred barrels.
“We extenuate this further by coating the glass with smoke from a Jameson stave that we scorch with a high-intensity flame. But this is a drink that is warm and soothing in cold months, and cool and refreshing on a long summers day.”
Or what our Celtic forefathers might have called ‘an all-rounder’. But a warning from history: Greek historian Diodorus Siculus writing between 30 and 60BC noted the Celts’ love of full-strength alcohol, discussing how they took their libations with no added water, before drinking it greedily and falling into a stupor or a manic disposition. So when you decide to roll out the barrel and toast Celtic ingenuity, it might be best to do so in moderation.– The bottle-your-own facility is available in the Jameson Heritage Centres in Dublin and Midleton now.
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I had to go to Scotland for a whisky festival to be told about the new release from the guys in my hometown. Then I came home and had to sit on the info, but thanks to whiskey super-sleuth Matty Healy, the cat is officially out of the bag.
The launch is in Bordeaux in early June – I wasn’t invited so you know it’s important. Couldn’t have gone anyway as I’m doing the Dingle Distillery Whiskey Academy. Sniff.
Update: Matty gave a h/t to Jim Clarke for spotting the source of the info, which you can view here.
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Behind-the-scenes shots from Youghal production of Oliver!
I kinda thought we were at the point where we try to pretend that Fagan wasn’t an anti-Semitic stereotype?
Via.
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One of my children, who was 15 at the time, suddenly realised that they were talking about me… she said: ‘Mammy, is that about us?’ And I said: ‘I am sorry darling but it is’.
“And she said: ‘Are we safe?’ and I said: ‘Darling, I’m going to keep you safe – and we are safe and there is no danger and we are fine’. But that really broke my heart. That my little girl…… didn’t feel safe.
Breda O’Brien recallsher daughter listening to a discussion on Pantigate on the radio. In a far-reachingly stupid interview, Breda makes a number of laughably ridiculous claims, such as this:
I later ask if she believes gay sex is natural.
“It depends on what you define as ‘natural’,” she says.
“To be sexually attracted to people is obviously completely natural and gay people can love as much as anyone else. But if you are looking as nature intended, I think that sex is very bound up with having children.”
So where does all this fit in, in the context of her own life?
Are you going to have any more children?
“No.”
Does that mean you abstain forever?
“No. Because sex is about bonding and pleasure and expressing love.”
But you said it should be bound up with having children?
“I said that was one aspect of it but they don’t always have to go together… I think the bonding aspect of it is really important.”
So why shouldn’t that be the same for gay people?
“Because I think that there is a complementarity… I really hope you report this fairly… I think there is a complementarity between men and women that.. that is, you know, it is everywhere. It is in eastern symbolism, you know the Yin and the Yang, the male and the female and there is a ‘uniqueness’ about that relationship.”
There is no god.






