Add zero gravity to your whisky for more intense taste

Published on

Washington, September 14: Apart from some ice, do you know what you need to make your whisky taste more smoky and intense? A bit of zero gravity.

According to a fasciting study done by a Scottish malt whisky distiller, the earth’s gravity may be threatening the taste of your whisky while in space conditions, it gets extra smoky and tastier.

To reach this conclusion, the famous Ardbeg distillery on the south coast of the isle of Islay in Scotland sent two vials of unmatured malt whisky on the Intertiol Space Station (ISS) three years back.

The vials had six ml of Ardbeg new spirit distillate along with a small quantity of charred oak wood shavings. The two materials were separated from each other by a glass partition so they do not mix.

noRocks, a US-based space research firm, sent the whisky vials to the ISS in order to probe the effects of low-gravity on terpenes - the organic compounds that give whisky its flavour.

In January 2012, the experiment was initiated as the astrouts broke the glass separating walls, thus allowing the distillate and oak wood shavings to come into contact with each other.

The vials remained on the ISS until September 2014, filly returning to the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on September 12, 2014.

The vials were in conditions of micro-gravity, with the distillate and oak wood in contact, for a total of 971 days, orbiting the Earth 15 times a day during this period.

The vials were delivered back to Ardbeg in November 2014, after which the distillate from both the micro-gravity and Earth samples was carefully extracted.

A range of comparative alyses were carried out to determine if there were any differences between the two sets of samples, Ardbeg said in a statement.

Now, according to a white paper by Dr Bill Lumsden, director of distilling and whisky creation for Ardbeg, the space whisky taste was better and “noticeably different”.

“The key aim of the experiment was to determine if conditions of micro-gravity would have an impact on the range of turally occurring terpene compounds and on the extraction,” he wrote. “We also wanted to assess the impact of maturation in conditions of micro-gravity on the flavour profile of oak-matured distillate,” he added. After examining both ISS and Earth samples, Lumsden found that the space whisky had a more intense and smoky flavour. (ians)

Top News

No stories found.
The Sentinel - of this Land, for its People
www.sentinelassam.com