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At The Whisky Tasting

Whisky tasting for the professional

by Pasha Malla

Published in the September 2008 issue.  » BUY ISSUE     

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dewar’s 18-year-old founders reserve, blended

All right, guys, keep in mind that I’m new to this. I taste... fruit. Berries, maybe — or grapes. Oh, and it’s also sort of peppery, but then there’s this sweet and sour taste underneath. And — whoa — now my throat is burning. God, it really hurts. How’s this: a Dr-Pepper-and-Chinese-takeout smoothie, and also I’m a sword swallower who just swallowed a sword but screwed it up somehow.

laphroaig 12-year-old oloroso cask, islay single malt

Greek salad, souvlaki, french fries, onion rings, ketchup, root beer, Peanut Buster Parfait. Oh, wait — that’s what I had for dinner. After the first sip I barfed a little in my mouth.

chivas regal 12-year-old, blended

Lawn mower clippings, blotter acid, honey-flavoured breakfast cereal — and oak, right? I can definitely taste the oak. If bark were a drink, this stuff right here would be it.

glengoyne billy’s choice 1989, single highland malt

Peat, soil, roots, the semi-decomposed flesh of bogmen. Hey, here’s a funny coincidence: in 1989, my buddy Matt’s older brother came home drunk to find me scratching with his Supertramp records, and he made me eat a handful of dirt. And there was a flower in it — a daffodil, I think. “Eat the flower, rapmaster,” he kept saying. “That’s it, G-Money. Eat the fucking flower.”

benriach 1984, speyside single malt

Here’s a guess: an ox that drank nothing but lava its entire life urinated into this bottle, then someone set the ox’s pee on fire, put the fire out with bleach, and shook it up with equal parts turpentine, nail polish remover, and cigarettes. Also, would it be ludicrous to suggest a hint of pear?

bowmore 1985, islay single malt

McRib. Definitely McRib.

talisker 18-year-old, island single malt

Do you guys have any buddies whose burps are, like, super intense? The kind that come at you and it’s like you’re eating death — but they’re also alive in a weird way? My buddy Matt’s burps are those kind. Fanning the air just circulates them — excites the molecules or something, I’m not sure — and then they’re just everywhere. It’s like you’re living inside the burp. And maybe you get home hours later and the smell is still on your clothes, and you can still taste it, and your girlfriend makes you sleep on the couch. Yeah, this whisky reminds me of that.

highland park 1976, single cask single malt

Drakkar Noir!

glenmorangie margaux cask finish, 1987, highland single malt

Did I ever tell you guys about the time my buddy Matt and I stashed a bottle of Crown Royal in his hockey bag and it broke on a skate blade? We wrung out whatever equipment we could into a big jug and then poured the rest directly from the bag. Sure, there were little bits of glass in each drink, but it didn’t work out that badly, although the next morning Matt coughed up a lot of blood and I had a pretty wicked stomach ache for about a week. And then — whoa, word of advice: don’t stand up too fast! How many whiskies have we had now? Jesus.

aberlour a’bunadh, batch 17, speyside single malt

I can’t feel my tongue. It’s gone totally numb. Ah gah gah gah gah gah. Gah.

glengoyne robbie’s choice 1989, single highland malt

Hemlock, you say? Hold on. Can I ask a question? How do you know what hemlock tastes like? What are you, Macbeth? Oh, look at me, I know what hemlock tastes like. I’m so sophisticated I can drink poison and it doesn’t even kill me. You know what, Johnny Scotchmaster? You’re right: this whisky does taste like poison. Look, I’ll spit mine back so you can gargle it and swish it around and whatever else you get up to so you can taste all that delicious hemlock. Maybe this time you’ll detect a hint of arsenic or cyanide. Jesus. My buddy Matt told me this was going to be a wank show — but, wow, I never thought I’d be drinking with the immortal.

brora 1982, rare malts selection, single highland malt

No, you’re being an asshole.

signatory vintage 1975, east ayrshire, single lowland malt

Pass.

glenfiddich 1976, vintage reserve selection, single malt

Whisky. It just tastes like whisky. I can’t taste anything else anymore. Everything tastes like whisky and I love you all and I’m sorry I came. I’m really, really sorry.

Pasha Malla recently published The Withdrawal Method, a collection of short stories. His first anthology of poems, All Our Grandfathers Are Ghosts, comes out this fall.

Comments (8 comments)

Matt Coates: Does it really take this many words to express "Pasha Malla finds whiskey to be yucky"? Such pointless writing. August 29, 2008 09:21 EST

Jleary: I'd disagree with the comment that this writing was "pointless" because it took so many words to express that Mr. Malla finds whisky "yucky." I don't know what Malla's point was, but if it was to make me laugh out loud, or to entertain, or to dazzle with brilliant writing while lampooning pretension and threading a thin storyline throughout, I'd say that he not only made his "point," but also something of an indelible stain that may be tough to clean up.

(On the other hand, if his point was only to express that he finds whisky "yucky," then I completely agree: worthless, and a waste of our time). September 01, 2008 23:58 EST

Anonymous: Pointless? Have you heard of satire? I laughed out loud and sent a copy to my sister. I'm sure that is what I would be thinking at a whiskey tasting even if I didn't say it. September 17, 2008 16:13 EST

Anonymous: Wow Walrus! How utterly tasteless....literally

This article was like reading a feeble attempt at a Vice mag editorial wannabe... Ouch! That was pathetic. Seriously that was rubbish.

Truly
Saroosh

October 02, 2008 10:05 EST

Rachel: I thought it was a wonderfully funny piece. Since when does all writing have to be about brevity instead of entertainment? "Whiskey is yucky" works if you have no sense of humour. October 16, 2008 21:25 EST

Dr. Whisky: Lampooning pretension? Satirical?
Funny, cuz the only pretense I found in this drivel was in the arrogant tone of its composer and lack of respect for the communities of craftsmen that make the stuff. And satire? by definition satire should be ironic, should profess to approve what is ridiculed, should ridicule to bring about some improvement... all these impressions display is Malla's self-obsession and keen interest in bodily fluids. Finally, all user displayed comments show is that we all take what we love too seriously: swords, selves, or scotch.
Nice work, Pasha. October 21, 2008 06:45 EST

Tim F: What a waste of some great whiskies. Still, at least you got a cheap laugh out of it - that was the point, wasn't it? Bravo. October 21, 2008 09:20 EST

Tim W: I can't believe the comments of some of the blokes writing in. I am a huge fan of single malt whiskey and thought this was hilarious, with a typical account from a whiskey novice who happened to enjoy himself despite his aspirations to learn about whiskey. A great satire... October 24, 2008 17:27 EST

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