Karuizawas for LMdW 2014: The Sherry Sessions

Post by Stefan Van Eycken, Tokyo

Last week, we spent some quality time with 4 Karuizawas from the late 70s/early 80s matured in ex-bourbon wood. Today, we’re continuing with the two remaining Karuizawa single casks released by LMdW in 2014, matured – as is more habitual for this distillery – in ex-sherry wood: 1981/2014 (#152, 54.5%, Vintage Label) and 1981/2014 (#136, 55.3%, Artifices-series).
On the nose, the initial impression is that the #136 is more fruity, whereas the #152 is more vegetal. With the #136, when you start off, you get dried fruits (dates, figs), rum-raisin butter cookies and a hint of porcini. All very elegant and quite restrained (for a Karuizawa, that is). But give it some time, and then it develops in other directions, too: herbs (rosemary, thyme), old wardrobes, a drawing room the morning after, archives (old paper – nothing musty, just pleasantly old), wood veneer… The drawing room becomes the centre of activity after about half an hour and a few drops of water bring out the smoke even more. On the palate, it opens with a lovely savoury attack, but quickly moves into more citrusy territory (grapefruit, mikan). After that, you get the dried fruits hinted at by the nose accompanied by some Nutella on slightly-burnt toast (a common occurrence at my house - the slighly-burnt toast, that is, not the Nutella). The finish is long and quite ‘dirty’ (think potato peel, root vegetables) with hints of oregano, rosemary, thyme and steamed endives. Towards the end, there is a lovely citrusy afterglow (kabosu).

On to #152, then. As said, you get more veggies here, right from the get-go. On the nose, it opens with lotus root, burdock and turnip. But there’s much more coming at you: candied orange peel, herbs (thyme again), humidor notes (again, yes) and, after a while, you find yourself smack in the middle of a Chinese medicine/dried goods shop. There’s also a lovely touch of freshly crushed berries in there (brambles, strawberries, blueberries), and a mushroom risotto cooking in the background. This one really benefits from time in the glass: time pushes the sliders on the ‘mixing console’, but it’s not just a case of elements gaining in strength – everything becomes beautifully integrated after about 15-20 minutes. And if you give it even longer and add a few drops of water, you’ll get some fantastic old mimolette cheese. What a treat. On the palate, you get tons of flavour but everything in just the right doses (there is no excess, here – which you can’t say about most Karuizawas): spinach cake, herbs muffins, orange-drizzled grated carrots, truffle shavings, and so much more… With water and time, you get more blood orange jam and some rhubarb tart. Who needs more reason to be patient? The finish is slightly tannic and quite drying. Here the wood really dominates but there are hints of cumin, After Eights and yuzu jam, as well, which is nice. With water it becomes exceedingly drying, so – while it doesn’t affect the palate so much – the finish really suffers, so it’s best to keep the water where it is.

Two stellar Karuizawas from the Golden Age… but before we go, we’ll revisit an even older glory, bottled for LMdW in 2010. If that seems like an eternity ago, it certainly is in ‘Karuizawa years’. So much has changed since then… not for the better as far as availability is concerned, but I guess that’s the price of success (no pun intended). Five years ago this 1968 single cask (#6955, 61%) could have been yours for a few hundred euros. Now, you’d have to sell an arm and a leg for something similar. Anyway, let’s put those depressing thoughts aside for an hour or two and focus on the liquid at hand.

What an experience… On the nose, you get cola cubes (that’s somewhat unusual for Karuizawa!) and then a whole kitchen pantry: chutneys, preserves, fresh fruit as well (mangoes, overripe pineapple, honeydew melon), prosciutto, rillettes, pretzels, old rye whiskey… there is no end to the marvels waiting to be discovered here. On the palate, it is the most amazingly smooth cross-fade from sweet (jams, sweets of all kinds, baked goods, …) to sour (freshly squeezed citrus fruits from all corners of the world) with various tertiary notes floating by (any mention of these would be hopelessly partial anyway, so we won’t even go there). The finish integrates the two dimensions (the sweet and the sour) whilst adding precious oils, aspects of old wood and a touch of spice. The stuff that dreams are made of… and we’ll just leave it at that (so we can go back and have some more of this – carpe diem!).

Comments

elskling said…
Thanks again Nonjatta, very interesting tasting notes - i would add some fresh menthol notes again towards the finale of c136, which is an excellent 1981 Karuizawa.

All these recent bottles seem to prove that, contrary to some that like to say the Karuizawa that were released in 2010 or 2011 were better thant the recent ones (cheaper, yes!), that Karuizawa is still glowing, and very vividly at that - even more stellar than many very good Karuis from 2011 (but sometimes too massive imho).

I hear LMDW might release one or two 1985 this year - did you hear anything on your side ?
Anonymous said…
How can you pour a sealed bottle in your glass ?
I am so sad to see that even on Nonjatta Karuizawa bottles are sealed probably in order to be sold..
All these bottles are now so expensive that they will never be drunk by anyone...
Unknown said…
Just must ask what glass is that? Is it the spieglau sniffer?

Popular Posts