Overall rating
0/100
ratings
0
Whiskybase ID
WB192021
Category
Blend
Bottler
Woven Whisky (WvnW)
Bottled
2021
Number of bottles
430
Strength
46.8 %
Size
100 ml 500 ml
Added on
18 sep 2021 3:36 pm by holborndrinker
Single Cask Whisky
Overall rating
0/100
ratings
0

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Whisky reviews for Woven Experience N. 3

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  1. Official tasting note

    Nostalgia; a past that, ironically, only exists in the present.

    A rose-tinted look backwards. That’s what we set out to capture in N.3. The oily, rich aromas found in whiskies that simply don’t exist anymore. Maybe they never did. This is a modern blend, inviting you to take a moment to reflect upon the past. Your own personal nostalgia. We all have a unique path that got us here, take some time to appreciate it. Raise a glass to you.
    This is Experience N.3.

    No. of Bottles:430
    Bottle Vol. 500ml
    ABV:46.8%
    Blending Date:03/04/2021
    Marrying:105 Days
    Composition =
    Component One:58.8% + Component Two:9.8% + Component Three:29.4% + Component Four:2.0%

    The concept of N.3 came from us receiving a heavily sherried Speyside single malt that reminded us of an old bottling of Vat 69 (an original Leith blend) that we had sampled during the ‘research’ period when starting Woven.

    The malt was this over-the-top, bold, tannic, spicy, monster that had everything shouting at the same time. A real brute of a Speysider! We decided our job as blenders was to mediate, de-escalate things a bit and calm things down.

    In the end, we made a ‘super grain’ whisky with a very old Highland grain and young Lowland which gave brightness and depth, and with the malt… wow.

    It was stunning. We also added a touch of Islay malt which acted as a rope bridge between the grain up-notes and the malt base-tones.

    Absolutely delighted with the blend, we decided to marry in an ex Highland single malt cask to add texture and mouthfeel. When we drew a sample at c.30 days, we were surprised to find that the balance of the whisky had shifted from spice and juicy fruit, towards wood and minerality with the spice and fruit moving towards the back of the pallet.

    We decided to let the whisky marry for an extended period in the same cask, allowing the complex flavours to mellow and fall into place. We also borrowed a technique from Cognac production where we gradually reduced the ABV over a period of time to bottling strength to allow the subtleties of flavour and texture to come to the forefront of this whisky.

    The results for us is in a nutshell... "old things" - the smell of an antique bookshop, old people (ha!) the taste of a pub that’s long closed down. But also we think some of those whiskies that people lament about from the "golden age of blends" when blends contained banging malts because there wasn't a single malt market for it. The past and present in one sip.

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