Mackmyra First Edition was indeed the first edition of Mackmyra to be released in the United States. And I don't believe it had a successor. It arrived with considerably less fanfare than every single malt dropped by every Pacific nation. It was bottled at 46.5%abv, unfiltered, uncolored and in a 1 liter bottle......and sold for less than $60 at many East Coast retailers. It's also tasty. Yet it didn't sell very quickly. Again, it wasn't marketed within an inch of its life; and since the distillery wasn't an employer of the late Jim Swan, it wasn't lavished with attention by whisky writers. So the US never got a Mackmyra sequel and all of that distillery's many bottlings stayed in Europe.
As mentioned earlier this week, the folks at Mackmyra like to experiment. They have warehouses in all sorts of environments. Big barrels, little barrels. They do some maturation in Swedish oak and use Swedish wine casks, in addition to utilizing classic whisky oaks and cask types. They use Swedish barley and Swedish peat. And they're owned by a cooperative. How this never became the official hipster whisky, I'll never know.
Distillery: Mackmyra Svensk Whisky
Region: Sweden
Type: Single Malt
Age: ???
Maturation: 94.6% Bourbon casks and 5.4% Swedish Oak, with 45% stored in 100-liter casks
Release Year: 2008-2009
Alcohol by Volume: 46.5%
Chillfiltered? No
Colorant added? No
(Sample from one my event bottles)
NEAT
Its color is straw. The nose's early notes include saline, wheat bread, grape candy and cinnamon. Then cardamom, yeast, walnuts, jasmine and bubblegum. It sounds messy but actually comes together well. The palate is thick and creamy, with toasted oak spice on top and dried herbs below. Malty and warm, with a touch of mocha. Gradually develops a Worcestershire sauce-type savory note. It finishes mmmmmalty. Slightly ashy. Toasted oak spices and a bit of vanilla ice cream.
WITH WATER (~40%abv)
The nose opens up nicely with plums, orange candy, and lime juice. Then vanilla and eucalyptus. More toasted oak and savory notes in the palate. Some salt and malt, with a slight phenolic note. It finishes with dried herbs, sea salt and semi-sweet chocolate.
WORDS WORDS WORDS
I've had this whisky on five occasions and have enjoyed every time, though this round was the best, especially because this was the first time I'd diluted it. As well as it performs neatly, it improves with a little water. It really is a pleasant drink, perky on the the nose and simply solid in the mouth. If you can still find a bottle on the shelves here in The States for less than $60, I do recommend it.
Availability - Very scarce in the US
Pricing - somewhere between $45 and $70
Rating - 85 (two points up from my review 5 years ago)
Quick question; I've noticed that Serge references batches of the 1st Edition (eg 2008-02, 2008-03). I can't tell from your photos, but is there batch numbers on the bottle, and if so, which batch is yours. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteGood question. The batch number of the First Editions were always shown in the info section on the front label, next to the ABV, but the American release was missing that (see my photo above). In any case, I feel like such an arse because I always record bottle codes, but I didn't for this one.
DeleteWhiskybase shows only one unnamed batch that got a 1 liter bottling (https://www.whiskybase.com/whisky/16279/mackmyra-the-first-edition), but the listed cask info is wrong and the site is often lacking on American releases. Perhaps this was a batchless batch? Sorry, I couldn't be of more help.
Thanks for the follow up. A batchless batch it is!
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