A less familiar term than many other whiskey classifications, Single Grain Irish Whiskey is a description that is simple to explain once you break it down. Clearly all the whiskey in the…Show more
A less familiar term than many other whiskey classifications, Single Grain Irish Whiskey is a description that is simple to explain once you break it down. Clearly all the whiskey in the bottle must have been distilled and matured in Ireland - that’s what the Irish Whiskey part of the description refers to. The opening word “Single” simply means that all the whiskey in the bottle must have been matured at a single distillery. And the “Grain” part? Broadly speaking whiskey can be divided into two categories; that which is produced by distilling an alcoholic liquid fermented from a combination of water, yeast and malted barley grains; that which is produced by distilling a similar liquid where the malted barley is substituted by other grain - be that corn, maize, rye, un-malted barley etc.
Grain whiskey is frequently distilled in a continuous, or column, still - as opposed to the pot-stills use for malt whiskey production - and after distillation is often, stronger in alcoholic content and more neutral in flavour than malt spirit. As a result it is typically used in blended whiskey. However, good quality grain whiskey, distilled with care and well matured in good quality wood, from a single distillery, can be complex and delicious. In Ireland, Cooley Distillery, makes an excellent and popular example under the Greenore brand name.
Currently 3750 whiskies stocked at Hard to Find Whisky including many Single Grain Irish whiskies