Hobart French Oak Pinot Noir Tasmanian Single Malt Whisky - Fourth Release - 19-002 - Current

Hobart French Oak Pinot Noir Tasmanian Single Malt Whisky - Fourth Release - 19-002 - Current

$195 AUD

57.7%

500 ml

This is in effect the Hobart Single Malt Fourth Release by Devil’s Distillery and is described as Batch Nº: 19-002 bottled on 3rd May 2019.

The liquid is a marriage of selected small American oak ex-Bourbon cask matured, finished in French oak Pinot Noir.

Official Tasting Notes

Nose: Heavily charred American Oak, Stewed Fruits & Chocolate Fudge. Followed by caramelised brown sugar, vanilla bean & ripe mango.

Palate: Creamy vanilla, butterscotch and a burst of tropical fruits greet the palate. With Papaya, Kiwi Fruit, Melons and candied orange peel all making an appearance.

Finish: Sweet Plum, citrus, fermented grapes and cocoa nibs carry long into the finish. With stewed apples, brandy custard and some white oak spice.

 

This product is located in Australia.

Distillery

Devil's Distillery

A colourful name for what is in many ways a conventional malt whisky distillery producing the “Hobart” single malt whisky along traditional lines with all the advantages which that entails. Whilst the distillery is suitably conservative in its approach to the making of its signature Hobart whisky, it is much more adventurous with its other spirits, but that’s another story, as is what lies behind its sister enterprise, the Tasmanian Moonshine Company with its barrel-aged new make (Tasmanian Malt). Both companies were the brain-child of local businessman, Rocky Caccavo.

Devil’s Distillery not only pulls together all of the recognisable components which make up a Tasmanian single malt but adds some interesting twists in terms of managing the distillation run so as to get the “middle cut” just right, and then the equally important maturation regime. Devil’s Distillery uses medium charred American oak barrels with a range of sizes from 20 to 100 litre capacity casks. The finishing casks are mostly European oak, which previously held fortified wines.