After Japanese Whisky, Canadian Whisky might be the whisky that we in the US are most deprived of. If you read Davin De Kergommeaux's excellent blog CanadianWhisky.org, you will see reviews of all sorts of fascinating Canadian Whiskies, very few of which are available anywhere in the US. Now, Japan is one thing given the distance, but it seems silly that we can't get all of the great whisky being made just north of the world's longest undefended border. For this reason, I get very excited when I see any new Canadian product, so I was happy to review Crown Royal Black.
Diageo owned Crown Royal is, of course, the top selling Canadian Whisky in the US. The newly released Crown Royal Black is higher proof (45% vs. 40%) and was matured in charred oak barrels to give it a more bourbon-like profile.
Crown Royal Black, 45% abv ($23)
The nose on this is very bourbony with doses of corn and rye spice. The palate is less distinctly Canadian than I would expect. It does start off quite sweet, but there is some significant rye in there that emerges and grows stronger. In some ways, it does taste more like a sweet bourbon, albeit a very sweet one, than a typical Canadian Whisky. The finish has some ethanol notes. This is a very approachable whisky, and the stronger rye presence adds some depth to the usually very sweet and one-dimensional Crown Royal flavor profile. It's a pleasant drink and definitely a step up from the regular Crown. It's the type of drink I would definitely order if it started popping up in hotel, airport and other bars with limited selections.
I swore off Crown Royal after a hard night turned into a dog-sick next day. It tasted like they poured sugar into the whisky, and my hangover certainly seemed to back up that theory.
ReplyDeleteHave you tried Caribou Crossing? It's a single barrel Canadian bottled by Sazerac that I can recommend without reservations. It has some of that Canadian sweetness, but it's very creamy, and the sweet never becomes cloying, but rather velvet-banana-caramel. It's really scrumptious stuff if you get a chance to run across it.
I have yet to thoroughly explore CanadianWhisky.org, but I have seen it referenced, and if I may, the author of the site is Davin, not David. :)
Thanks for your comments AaronWF. I haven't tried Caribou Crossing yet, but I would like to. I've heard many good things about it.
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks for the correction, I think it was autocorrected to "David" (Sorry Davin!).