Invented:
Produced from:
In a:
Using a:
Alcohol yield:
MALT WHISKY
ca. 1500 AD
malted (germinated) barley
batch process
copper pot still
Lower yield than column stills
GRAIN WHISKY
ca. 1850 AD
Any type of grain
continuous process
column still
Higher yield than pot stills
November 15, 2014 - Looking back on things, the malt whisky market was still a cosy
‘niche’ market around the year 2000. At the time, I could still stock up on the fantastic
Laphoaig 10yo C/S (a litre of the ‘Green Stripe’ version) for 49,95 Euro’s - and I had
the foresight to buy five boxes of the stuff. That’s 30 bottles, so I still have some.
Mind you, in hindsight I should have bought even more, because the going rate for
that particular bottling is between 300 and an even more whopping 400 GBP right now!
That is almost 500 Euro’s in real money (at the current exchange rates).
But please note that most of the bottles I bought at the time did NOT increase in
‘value’ by 1000%. What’s more, malt whisky prices at the shops had already started
to increase around the year 2000.
One of the basic principles of
making a profitable trade is
‘buying low and selling high’.
Since whisky prices are quite
steep at the moment, this might
not be the best time to invest
your idle capital in whisky.
So, as it turns out that I may have been a little too far ahead
of my time when I wrote “whisky prices are crazy right now!”
over a decade ago. Compared to today, the whisky prices of the
early years of the 3d millennium even seem quite reasonable...
But ‘crazy’ and ‘reasonable’ are relative terms in free markets;
especially in free-spirited markets like the whisk(e)y market.
The ‘right’ price of a bottle of whisky (at a certain point in time)
depends on various factors. In the end, if a whisky producer is
able and willing to produce the Glen Git 3yo at a street price of
50 Euro’s, and if enough whisky consumers are willing and able
to buy it at that price, the market has spoken. The laws of
supply and demand tell us that 50 Euro’s is the ‘right’ price.
2014-10-17 on Twitter via @Globe&Mail
Are you a "high net worth individual"?
Good for you! Now there's yet another
#whisky to prove your worth to others.
The South African price: $200 000.
So, there were many upsides to the fact that malt whisky became
more popular than it had been during the 1990s. Prices were moving
upwards as well, but for a long time they were ‘small prices to pay’ in
exchange for the fact that whisky lovers got access to more malts.
However, increased demand also meant that the single malt whisky
category became a more important segment of the whisky industry.
That sounds cool - but it’s not necessarily good for everybody...
So, rather than applying the ‘best practices’ from malt whisky
to other parts of their portfolio, the whisky industry started to
apply the stuff that they had learned with the production and
marketing of blended whisky to single malt whiskies.
Scotch malt whisky may have been growing more important for
the bottom line of the large whisky producers, but even at the
end of the 2000s, malt whiskies were responsible for less than
10% of all whisky sales. Most whiskies by far were still blends.
In 2008, the Scotch Whisky Association announced that vatted malt whisky (a mixture of single
malts, also known as pure malt whisky) would henceforth be designated as ‘blended malt whisky’.
(Check out log entry #326 and beyond for details.)
And then the Scotch whisky industry started to blur the lines between malts and blends further...
The Scotch Whisky Association prefers the
abbreviation SWA - but in the light of their
recent actions I think that swASS would
be a better fit. After all, they consistently
act like ASSES about Scotch whisky.
At that point in time, I experienced my first
little ‘whisky credit crisis’ - the SWA didn’t
even try very hard to convince te public, but
just pushed through their proposal for a law.
The interests of the whisky industry and
the public seemed to diverge on this issue.
But that didn’t give those in charge pause...
The sour taste that this left in my mouth might have been one of the first symptoms of a
progression of my malt madness from stage 2 to stage 3 - where patients become less gullible.
Because malt whiskies and blended whiskies are mostly produced by a few large corporations,
these companies also control most of the whisky information that reaches the general public.
For many years I didn’t question most of the ‘facts’ that I learned about whisky, but after this
example of the cavalier attitude of swASS towards the truth, I re-examined some issues...
For instance, does it make sense to put malt whisky and grain whisky in the same category?
This log entry is the 2nd in a series of 3.
Each part deals with a particular decade;
The 1990s - Stage 1 of my malt madness
The 2000s - Stage 2 of my malt madness
The 2010s - Stage 3 of my malt madness
The number of internet users (in the ‘developed’ world) shot past
50% in a few years time. Financially speaking, that was a very nice
development - plenty of companies required my kind of expertise.
So, I could afford to expand my ‘reserve stock’ of spare bottles,
whilst enjoying a growing number of other whisky websites..
A few liquorists gave customers the chance to sample a whisky befores buying a big bottle.
These were exceptions though - most clients had to take their chances when investing in a new bottle of whisky.
With a growing number of whisky lovers finding each other on the web or in real life, it wasn’t long before people
got the idea of swapping samples (filled from their big bottles) with others. With every swap, both parties would
double the number of different whiskies that they got to sample - without the need to increase their budgets.
In hindsight, the most recent ‘malt whisky boom’ probably started in the early noughties.
More expressions of more whiskies became available in more liquor stores and webshops
in more countries. This meant that more potential customers got access to more whiskies.
Initially, those were mostly Scotch whiskies, but towards the end of the decade, so-called
‘world whiskies’ (made in countries like Japan and India) became more prolific as well.
The more different whiskies you sample, the easier it becomes to identify and compare
different characteristics in a whisky. By 2010, I had sampled over 3,000 malt whiskies.
Granted, the first ‘malt maniacs’ already published a few E-pistles in the 1990s, but it
wasn’t until the early years of the 3d millennium that things really took off. We became
a global community and our membership grew from a handful of whisky lovers (mostly
located in Europe & the US) to 3 dozen certified malt maniacs from all over the world.
This gave us a ‘global’ perspective - and access to a wealth of whisky knowledge,
So, grain whisky is produced from (mostly) different ingredients, using different equipment in a different process.
When continuous column stills were introduced a century and a half ago, the spirit they produced could just as
easily have been called ‘vodka’. But the name ‘(grain) whisky’ was chosen instead - and the practice of blending
malt and grain whisky became incredibly popular (and profitable)...
As I would discover during stage 3 of my malt madness, there were other issues that deserved second thoughts...
December 15, 2014 - Fate has farted in my face
once more. Some style sheets cascaded all across
‘Ye Olde Syte’ - so many pages are now difficult to
read. Sorry about that - thinking about a solution.
October 7, 2014 - I just heard that my ex-fellow
maniac Lawrence Graham from Canada was made
‘Keeper of the Quaich’. Wow, remember when we
were just a wide-eyed, ‘amateur’ whisky collective.
November 15, 2014 - Yes, entry #402 is alive.
At the start of the new millennium, stage 2 of my
‘malt madness’ set in; the Malt Maniacs collective
grew and we even set up our own ‘MM Awards’.
November 11, 2014 - Hurray! After a break that
lasted for more than two years, I’ve just published
entry #401 of my Liquid Log. It looks at phase 1
of my ‘malt madness’ from a historical perspective.
November 30, 2014 - How & when did stage 3
of my ‘malt madness’ begin? As log entry #403
explains, it was probably when I realised that
Scotch malt whisky had fundamentally changed.
December 23, 2014 - On this happy #Festivus
most of this site is still in the crapper, I’m afraid.
The sitemap provides an overview of the repairs.
Follow me on Twitter for news and updates...
December 12, 2014 - Over the past three log
entries I’ve been mostly gazing at my own navel,
but log entry #404 deals with a more practical
topic: MM webpages that can not be found...
September 18, 2014 - The Scots get to vote on
their possible independance of the UK today. It
may become a very close race - and a ‘yes’ vote
could influence whisky prices around the world.
February 1, 2014 - With the 20th birthday of
this website coming up, I decided to get to work
on version 3.0. But the first item on my ‘to do list’
was the Malt Maniacs Archives reconstruction.
September 24, 2014 - The latest press release
from “one of the most respected names in Scotch
whisky” announces “a range of new expressions
and never-before-released single malts - the hidden
gems of its portfolio”. They also call it a “bold move,
unprecedented in recent years”. Wow, it seems like
the copywriter was in very high spirits indeed...
October 1, 2014 - Yes! The malt whisky season
has now started in earnest with the publication of
the 10th edition of the Malt Whisky Yearbook.
Short review: best value whisky book this year.