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Food & Drink Living

Spirited debate: Tasting and talking Virginia whiskey (and one rum)

Whiskey goes way back in Virginia. In 1620, English settler George Thorpe made the first batch of spirits in Jamestown using corn—not barley, as was the tradition in Europe—obtained in a trade with the indigenous Powhatan people. George Washington added to the commonwealth’s whiskey heritage, distilling a rye mash in Mount Vernon in the 1770s. Of greater relevance today is Culpeper’s Chuck Miller. He rescued an abandoned 3,000-gallon copper pot still from a hillside in Nelson County, and, with his wife Jeanette, became the first licensed craft distiller in Virginia in 1988. “I feel like I started a revolution,” says Miller.

In the decades since, a growing number of new distillers have followed the small-batch path in Virginia. With the cold weather blowing in, we decided it was time to sample some of those local efforts. So we gathered a few experts and enthusiasts to try two of Miller’s Belmont Farm creations and six other brown liquors made in and around Charlottesville. See our tasting notes below, and then find your own favorite to warm up the chilly nights ahead.

Belmont Farm Virginia Straight Bourbon Whiskey, Culpeper

92 proof. Aged two years in charred white oak barrels.

Nose: “Baking spice.” “Floral.” “Chocolate.” “Fruit tart.”

Palate: “Maple-driven sweetness.” “Pears and malt.” “Heat builds on the tongue.” “Too hot.” “Rough around the edges.”

Notes: “A little cloying for my taste.” “Long finish with corn and smoke at the end.”

Spirit Lab Distilling Single Malt Whiskey, Batch 5, Charlottesville

96 proof. Cured in charred white oak and bourbon barrels, finished in sherry and port casks. Total aging of 42 months.

Nose: “Toasted pear crumble.” “Maple syrup.” “Malt.”

Palate: “A little malty.” “Complex citrus notes.” “Balanced flavors.” “Hint of cinnamon.” “Anise.” “Fig.” “Light on the tongue.” “Mellow.”

Notes: “A complete whiskey.” “Yeah, dog! There’s some serious flavor here.” “Austere sweetness.”

Ragged Branch Farm, Signature Bourbon, Albemarle County

90 proof. Aged four years in charred white oak barrels.

Nose: “Raw grain.” “Honey.” “Tangy and sweet.”

Palate: “Maple.” “Burnt caramel.” “Caramel.” “Spicy.” “Molasses.” “Continuously hot.” “Spicy.”

Notes: “Good, young bourbon.” “It’s a little like candy your grandmother would give you, in a good way.” “Interesting late-night sipper with some ice.”

Virginia Distilling Company, Prelude American Single Malt Whiskey, Lovingston

92 proof. Aged three years-plus in sherry, cuvée and bourbon casks.

Nose: “Baked goods.” “Floral.” “Smoke.” “Chocolate-covered cherries.”

Palate: “Malty.” “Orange peel.” “Tobacco.” “Toffee.” “Sharp.” “Opens up the more you sip.”

Notes: “Very good American/Virginian example of a Scottish single malt.” “Light for a malt but hard to pigeon-hole, which is a good thing.”

Ragged Branch Farm, Wheated Bourbon, Albemarle County

90 proof. Double oaked, twice barreled (no aging duration given).

Nose: “Grassy.” “Young grain.” “Caramel.” “Sweet.”

Palate: “Spice.” “Fresh wood shavings.” “Heavy wheat, less oak presence.” “Expansive.” “Smoother than the [Ragged Branch] Signature Bourbon, but still a little hot.”

Notes: “Hot on the palate at the beginning but slightly mellows at the end.” “A little on the sour side.”

Belmont Farm Bonded Virginia Whiskey, Culpeper

100 proof. Aged six years in apple wood and Virginia white oak.

Nose: “Rice pudding.” “Cinnamon-raisin oatmeal.”

Palate: “Cinnamon and smoke.” “Caramel.” “Sorghum.” “Orange creme brulée.” “Smooth, slow release of flavors.”

Notes: “Needs a drop of water to open it up. After that, you get the apple wood right away.” “Another complete whiskey.” “Has a lot of depth.” “+++!”

Vitae Spirits, Barrel-Aged Rum, Charlottesville

90 proof. Unspecified aging period in bourbon and wine barrels.

Nose: “Bright, orange peel.” “Butterscotch.” “Molasses.”

Palate: “Buttery.” “Cocoa.” “French toast.” “Round.” “Full but thins out to a peppery finish.”

Notes: “Not as sweet as I’d expect a rum to be.” “Almost like an Armagnac.”

Silverback Distillery, Blackback Straight Bourbon Whiskey, Nelson County

86 proof. Two-and-a-half years in charred white oak barrels.

Nose: “Freshly split oak.” “Caramel.” “Butterscotch.”

Palate: “Graham cracker.” “Grain—something light, like wheat, as well as corn?” “Initially bracing but rounds out.”

Notes: “A young bourbon that shows characteristics of an older one. It sips well and has staying power.”

Tasting team

Ivar Aass: Co-founder and co-owner of Spirit Lab Distilling. (Aass reserved comment on his own product.)

Joe Bargmann: Living/Special Publications Editor, C-VILLE Weekly.

Larry Bleiberg: USA Today columnist, veteran travel and food writer, president-elect of the Society of American Travel Writers.

Will Curley: Co-owner, The Wine Guild of Charlottesville.

Rebecca Edwards: Nationally recognized mixologist who works at Tavola.

Max March: C-VILLE Weekly editorial designer, food and drink enthusiast.

Jake Mooney: C-VILLE Weekly contributor, former New York Times columnist, trenchant observer of life (including whiskey).

Whiskies

Belmont Farm, Virginia Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Spirit Lab Distilling, Single Malt Whiskey Batch 5

Ragged Branch Farm, Signature Bourbon

Virginia Distilling Co., Prelude American Single Malt Whisky

Ragged Branch Farm, Wheated Bourbon

Belmont Farm, Bonded Virginia Whiskey

Vitae Spirits, Barrel-Aged Rum

Silverback Distillery, Blackback Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Categories
Living

We’ll toast to that: New cidery set to open in September

Bryant’s Cider will open a production and tasting room Labor Day weekend in Roseland. Set amidst the Blue Ridge Mountains in a rustic, all-original 19th-century barn with hand-carved logs and original architectural features, the tasting room will feature Bryant’s hand-crafted hard ciders, which are produced using fresh-pressed Nelson County apples from the cidery’s own farm.

The small-batch ciders are crafted using traditional methods, with natural carbonation; the premium cider is non-filtered, non-pasteurized, and uses no artificial ingredients. The ciders are fully dry, with no added sugars.

To celebrate the opening, four bands will play music throughout the weekend, and there will be food from 151 BBQ and other local vendors. Bryant’s will also tap two limited release ciders: The Ol’ Lady, a bourbon barrel-finished cider with organic ginger using barrels from Charlottesville’s Ragged Branch Distillery; and Red Eye, a cold-brew coffee cider using fresh coffee from Nelson County’s Trager Brothers Coffee.

Worth the drive

For those interested in a Labor Day weekend day trip, the Inn at Little Washington will celebrate its 40th anniversary with a food and music street festival in the streets of Little Washington, Virginia, on Sunday, September 2. Annette Larkin, the Inn’s director of public relations, says the event pays homage to talented chefs who have worked in the kitchen of the Michelin-starred restaurant (the Inn has earned two).

“This event was created to highlight the next generation of culinary stars,” she says. “Twenty-five of our former sous chefs will be returning to cook their finest offerings, which will be served along with fried chicken, barbecue, local wine, and beer.”

Many of these chefs have gone on to esteemed careers as executive chefs at top restaurants in both the region and the country.

Larkin says there will be bands, Janis Joplin, Cher, and Elton John impersonators, hot air balloons, and fireworks, too.

On the half shell

Ivy Inn chef and owner Angelo Vangelopoulos will participate in the premiere Commonwealth Coastal Classic on the Norfolk Waterfront September 15.

The event—an expo-style festival modeled on other popular Southern culinary festivals held in such locales as Charleston and South Beach—will feature small plates from more than 30 Virginia chefs; interactive demonstrations; Virginia wine, beer and spirit tasting stations; original artisan work; and live music.

Mead your maker

Mead, an alcoholic beverage with roots in ancient history, is brewed from honey, water, and yeast, and has long played an important role in the mythology of various cultures. Soon Charlottesville’s cup will be overflowing with the nectar of the gods, when Altavista-based Skjald Meadworks launches its Charlottesville tasting room at 1144 E. Market St. in the next few months.

Gwen Wells, wife of meadmaster Jerome Snyder, says Charlottesville was a natural extension for their product.

“I’ve had a crush on Charlottesville for years,” she says. “I love the mountains, the outdoors, the music, restaurants, and people. We are outgrowing our space in Altavista, and I was ready to close my business and do something different, so we decided that I would take over the daily operations of the meadery, set up a bigger and better tasting room with a gift shop, and why not here? Here we found ‘our people’—curious, open-minded, adventurous, and friendly. There are so many craft breweries, so many music venues, that we feel right at home.”

She says they currently offer several varieties of mead, including one with lavender and vanilla and another with Earl Grey tea and lemon, and soon will have meads with strawberry, heather, ginger, and fig.

While the couple awaits ABC permission to open the tasting room, they’ve decided to open the gift shop, which features work by local artisans, by September 15.

In the meantime, Skjald Meadworks mead is available locally at Market Street Wine, Beer Run, and by the glass at Firefly, which has even started “Mead Mondays” with special prices for their meads.

Categories
Living

Stonefield’s ‘luxury’ green market

On Thursday evenings and Saturday mornings now through October, a luxury farmers market will take place on the open green space at The Shops at Stonefield, located at the corner of Hydraulic Road and Route 29.

The Green Market Stonefield will focus on quality over quantity from hand-selected vendors “to create something different,” says Caroline Birgmann, a Stonefield PR rep. The markets will include Virginia-based North Cove Mushrooms, Earlysville’s Buck Mountain Farms and Sylvanqua Farms, and Rocksalt, My Chocolate Shoppe, DuCard Vineyards, Early Mountain Vineyards and Castle Hill Cider, among others. There will also be artisan and craft vendors, plus food tastings from Stonefield restaurant partners like Burton’s Grill and Burger Bach.

The markets will also feature live music and occasional fashion shows from Stonefield apparel retailers.

Vendors will set up their wares under a 40-by-100-foot tent so markets can take place rain or shine, from 4 to 7pm Thursdays and 8:30am to 12:30pm Saturdays—the same time as the popular City Market. Some of the vendors—such as Caromont Farm and Mountain Culture Kombucha—will participate in both markets, but many vendors will be different.

Sweet pairing

Get thee to Splendora’s Gelato on the Downtown Mall for a gelato sandwich made with cookies from Found. Market Co. dough. Splendora’s owner and wizard of all bizarre-but-delicious flavors, PK Ross, says she’ll offer a rotating selection of cookie/gelato combinations. Last week’s combos: snickerdoodle cookie with gianduia gelato, and ginger cookie with cardamom gelato (this reporter’s personal favorite).

With the grain

According to a press release issued by Governor Terry McAuliffe’s office on April 19, Ragged Branch Distillery, which opened in 2010 in Charlottesville with the intention of producing its Virginia Straight Bourbon Whiskey from 100 percent Virginia-produced grain, has received a $17,000 grant from the Governor’s Agriculture and Forestry Industries Development Fund, administered by the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, to assist with the Ragged Branch project, and Albemarle County is matching that grant with local funds. The release also says the distillery will create four jobs in the county over the next three years.

Barracks Road boon

Later this summer, Boston-based farm-to-fork casual eatery b.good will open in the Barracks Road Shopping Center North Wing, in the space between Pink Palm and Penelope. Also new to Barracks Road is Oliva, open now next to Talbots and Barnes & Noble, which offers a large selection of gourmet olive oil and balsamic vinegar, in addition to other culinary gift items.