Saturday, March 3, 2012

The Salty Dog of the Isle of Islay


Downstairs at the Dirty Spank, Millard "Salty Dog" Cleveland, the legendary blues virtuoso who taught Johnny Scuffles to play guitar, will be playing all week.  Ironically enough, during the same week, the gods of the uisge beatha water of life have blessed Bacchus at Babel with the Salty Dog of Scotch Whisky: a limited edition, 3rd release bottling 1979 Port Ellen, aged for 24 years to perfection.  While it remains to be seen who shall reign as “Peat Rex” (we have a strong inclination that Laphroaig will be crowned), we have unilaterally identified Port Ellen the Salty Dog of the Hebrides Archipelago. 



Do not be fooled by the gentle balance of the initial nose: you will soon be transported to the scattered shipwrecks which pepper the coastlines of Argyll and throughout the Inner and Outer Hebrides Archipelago, the southernmost of which is Islay, known as Banrìgh nan Eilean, or “The Queen of the Hebrides.”  As this deceptively smooth whisky sucks you into her tide, you will feel it open with the brine, the peat, and the iodine of a treasure chest covered in barnacles and seaweed and the charred planks from which it marooned.  As you break off the barnacles, push aside those charred planks, and remove the nest of seaweed, that treasure chest will open up and reveal its golden booty.  Thank you, gods of whisky.


Port Ellen distillery was first established in the 1820s, during the last days of Lord Byron, John Keats, and Percy Bysshe Shelley.   The Distillers Company Limited acquired the distillery in 1925 around the same time it merged with John Walker & Son and Buchanan-Dewar.  Diageo currently owns Port Ellen and the distillery closed in 1983, though Diageo continues to operate Port Ellen Maltings and supplies most of the island’s operating distilleries with malt.  Nonetheless, the sealed warehouses remain and the stock casks are cult treasures available in limited edition release bottles.  We have heard tales of brawls over such limited bottles during the annual Islay Whisky Festival.  But…who wouldn’t scrap for a taste of the Salty Dog of the Inner Hebrides?      

Monday, January 23, 2012

Bienvenue!

Bacchus at Babel, located just above a seedy dive bar charmingly referred as The Dirty Spank, is a private drinking club housed within an infinite library.  We offer nothing but the rarest of spirits and only classic, exotic, or positively unique cocktails.  Occasionally, we may make available to our patrons bottles of 1982 Château Pétrus upon request, but we typically do not serve beer or wine.

This week, our mixologist will offer an Armagnac tasting as well as his signature Last Word:

1 part Hendrick's Gin
1 part Green Chartreuse
1 part fresh lime juice
1 part Original Maraska Maraschino Liqueur

We have an affinity for anything based upon a recipe developed by Carthusian monks utilizing the alchemical principles of medieval apothecaries and more than 130 local herbs, so chartreuse is more than just our favorite color.

In keeping with the same theme, we chose Original Maraska for the maraschino cherry element of the last word.  Dominican apothecaries, housed in a monastery in Zadar, Croatia, first created the miraculous elixir that is known today as Original Maraska Maraschino Liqueur.  The first recipe appeared in that Zadar monastery in the 16th Century, and the drink was known at the time as Rožolj – derived from the latin ros solis for “dew of the sun.”

We need not introduce Hendrick’s Gin.

For discussion purposes, be prepared to compete for the “last word” on our literary subject of the week, Umberto Eco’s Il nome della rosa, and other issues related to semiotics.