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Egypt is revered as the home of the famous Desert Ascetics, who first embraced a monastic life and established homosocial communities on the borders of their urban centres in the Nile Valley. Regarded as angels and warriors, the wisdom of the Desert Ascetics formed part of the oral and literary tradition of wonder-working saints whose commitment to asceticism was legendary and inspirational. Desert Ascetics of Egypt (ARC Humanities Press, 2020) grounds the mythologized stories of Desert Ascetics in the materiality of the desert, demonstrating the closeness of the desert, the connections between non-monastic and monastic communities, and the exciting insights into lived monasticism through the archaeology of monasticism in Egypt. New Books in Late Antiquity is presented by Ancient Jew Review. Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom is the Myra and Robert Kraft and Jacob Hiatt Associate Professor of Christian Studies at Brandeis University, the Senior Archaeological Consultant for the Yale Monastic Archaeology Project, and Co-Director of Monastic Archaeology in Scotland at Lindores Abbey. Michael Motia teaches in Classics and Religious Studies at UMass Boston. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Egypt is revered as the home of the famous Desert Ascetics, who first embraced a monastic life and established homosocial communities on the borders of their urban centres in the Nile Valley. Regarded as angels and warriors, the wisdom of the Desert Ascetics formed part of the oral and literary tradition of wonder-working saints whose commitment to asceticism was legendary and inspirational. Desert Ascetics of Egypt (ARC Humanities Press, 2020) grounds the mythologized stories of Desert Ascetics in the materiality of the desert, demonstrating the closeness of the desert, the connections between non-monastic and monastic communities, and the exciting insights into lived monasticism through the archaeology of monasticism in Egypt. New Books in Late Antiquity is presented by Ancient Jew Review. Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom is the Myra and Robert Kraft and Jacob Hiatt Associate Professor of Christian Studies at Brandeis University, the Senior Archaeological Consultant for the Yale Monastic Archaeology Project, and Co-Director of Monastic Archaeology in Scotland at Lindores Abbey. Michael Motia teaches in Classics and Religious Studies at UMass Boston. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Egypt is revered as the home of the famous Desert Ascetics, who first embraced a monastic life and established homosocial communities on the borders of their urban centres in the Nile Valley. Regarded as angels and warriors, the wisdom of the Desert Ascetics formed part of the oral and literary tradition of wonder-working saints whose commitment to asceticism was legendary and inspirational. Desert Ascetics of Egypt (ARC Humanities Press, 2020) grounds the mythologized stories of Desert Ascetics in the materiality of the desert, demonstrating the closeness of the desert, the connections between non-monastic and monastic communities, and the exciting insights into lived monasticism through the archaeology of monasticism in Egypt. New Books in Late Antiquity is presented by Ancient Jew Review. Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom is the Myra and Robert Kraft and Jacob Hiatt Associate Professor of Christian Studies at Brandeis University, the Senior Archaeological Consultant for the Yale Monastic Archaeology Project, and Co-Director of Monastic Archaeology in Scotland at Lindores Abbey. Michael Motia teaches in Classics and Religious Studies at UMass Boston. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/middle-eastern-studies
Egypt is revered as the home of the famous Desert Ascetics, who first embraced a monastic life and established homosocial communities on the borders of their urban centres in the Nile Valley. Regarded as angels and warriors, the wisdom of the Desert Ascetics formed part of the oral and literary tradition of wonder-working saints whose commitment to asceticism was legendary and inspirational. Desert Ascetics of Egypt (ARC Humanities Press, 2020) grounds the mythologized stories of Desert Ascetics in the materiality of the desert, demonstrating the closeness of the desert, the connections between non-monastic and monastic communities, and the exciting insights into lived monasticism through the archaeology of monasticism in Egypt. New Books in Late Antiquity is presented by Ancient Jew Review. Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom is the Myra and Robert Kraft and Jacob Hiatt Associate Professor of Christian Studies at Brandeis University, the Senior Archaeological Consultant for the Yale Monastic Archaeology Project, and Co-Director of Monastic Archaeology in Scotland at Lindores Abbey. Michael Motia teaches in Classics and Religious Studies at UMass Boston. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/archaeology
Egypt is revered as the home of the famous Desert Ascetics, who first embraced a monastic life and established homosocial communities on the borders of their urban centres in the Nile Valley. Regarded as angels and warriors, the wisdom of the Desert Ascetics formed part of the oral and literary tradition of wonder-working saints whose commitment to asceticism was legendary and inspirational. Desert Ascetics of Egypt (ARC Humanities Press, 2020) grounds the mythologized stories of Desert Ascetics in the materiality of the desert, demonstrating the closeness of the desert, the connections between non-monastic and monastic communities, and the exciting insights into lived monasticism through the archaeology of monasticism in Egypt. New Books in Late Antiquity is presented by Ancient Jew Review. Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom is the Myra and Robert Kraft and Jacob Hiatt Associate Professor of Christian Studies at Brandeis University, the Senior Archaeological Consultant for the Yale Monastic Archaeology Project, and Co-Director of Monastic Archaeology in Scotland at Lindores Abbey. Michael Motia teaches in Classics and Religious Studies at UMass Boston. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Egypt is revered as the home of the famous Desert Ascetics, who first embraced a monastic life and established homosocial communities on the borders of their urban centres in the Nile Valley. Regarded as angels and warriors, the wisdom of the Desert Ascetics formed part of the oral and literary tradition of wonder-working saints whose commitment to asceticism was legendary and inspirational. Desert Ascetics of Egypt (ARC Humanities Press, 2020) grounds the mythologized stories of Desert Ascetics in the materiality of the desert, demonstrating the closeness of the desert, the connections between non-monastic and monastic communities, and the exciting insights into lived monasticism through the archaeology of monasticism in Egypt. New Books in Late Antiquity is presented by Ancient Jew Review. Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom is the Myra and Robert Kraft and Jacob Hiatt Associate Professor of Christian Studies at Brandeis University, the Senior Archaeological Consultant for the Yale Monastic Archaeology Project, and Co-Director of Monastic Archaeology in Scotland at Lindores Abbey. Michael Motia teaches in Classics and Religious Studies at UMass Boston. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/religion
Egypt is revered as the home of the famous Desert Ascetics, who first embraced a monastic life and established homosocial communities on the borders of their urban centres in the Nile Valley. Regarded as angels and warriors, the wisdom of the Desert Ascetics formed part of the oral and literary tradition of wonder-working saints whose commitment to asceticism was legendary and inspirational. Desert Ascetics of Egypt (ARC Humanities Press, 2020) grounds the mythologized stories of Desert Ascetics in the materiality of the desert, demonstrating the closeness of the desert, the connections between non-monastic and monastic communities, and the exciting insights into lived monasticism through the archaeology of monasticism in Egypt. New Books in Late Antiquity is presented by Ancient Jew Review. Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom is the Myra and Robert Kraft and Jacob Hiatt Associate Professor of Christian Studies at Brandeis University, the Senior Archaeological Consultant for the Yale Monastic Archaeology Project, and Co-Director of Monastic Archaeology in Scotland at Lindores Abbey. Michael Motia teaches in Classics and Religious Studies at UMass Boston. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/christian-studies
This week on #ScotsinUs, we revisit one of our favorite topics - the distilleries of Scotland! Camilla G Hellman is in conversation with three distilleries, Lindores Abbey Distillery, Ardnamurchan Distillery and Port of Leith Distillery, who share exciting news and updates, and give us some insight into their whisky and gin making To learn more about Lindores Abbey Distillery, visit https://lindoresabbeydistillery.com/ To learn more about Ardnamurchan Distillery, visit https://ardnamurchandistillery.com// To learn more about the Port of Leith Distillery, visit https://www.leithdistillery.com/ To learn about about the American-Scottish Foundation, visit https://www.americanscottishfoundation.com/home/index.html #whisky #gin #lindores #whiskey #distillery #leith #Ardnamurchan #edinburgh #scotland #scots
Join me as I fly into Edinburgh and make my way north to the Spiritual Home of Scotch Whisky - Lindores Abbey. It's been a few years since I visited the distillery and back then, their spirits were still new to the world and had not aged the required 3 years to be considered whisky. But we took time to chat about their recreation of Friar John Corr's Aqua Vitae. Now the whisky is here and the distillery is maturing into a nice profile of tours and experiences. We'll learn what has been going on with Lindores Abbey, get to know what the tours are like, how you can enhance your experience at the distillery, and find some cool side trips. Plus, we'll have another installment of This Week in Whiskey Lore. Enjoy and if you find Lindores Abbey is a distillery you want to visit, head to whiskey-lore.com/flights and go to the profile to add it to your free wish list in the Whiskey Lore Travel Guide. Cheers and sláinte mhath! Drew
Glenglassaugh and bless you@HighlandPark @GlenGlassaugh @gordon_macphail
Glenglassaugh and bless you@HighlandPark @GlenGlassaugh @gordon_macphail
MCDXCIV – does that ring a bell? And no, it's not a typo… It's a Roman numeral and it stands for 1494, quite a pivotal year in the world of whisky and especially for the newly founded Lindores Abbey Distillery.1494 is the year in which, according to the Scottish Whisky Association, the earliest documented record of distilling in Scotland occurred in the Exchequer Rolls (the tax records): An entry lists “To Friar John Cor, 8 bolls of Malt, wherewith to make Aqua Vitae for King James IV.”Friar John Cor produced this water of life exactly in the place where you find Lindores Abbey Distillery today. Cool background story – don't you think?!Mr. John Howison then bought the Lindores Abbey estate in 1913 and we had a chance to talk to his great-grandson Drew McKenzie Smith, who, together with his wife Helen, founded Lindores Abbey Distillery in 2016.We know, we know, that's a lot of facts and numbers, but isn't it absolutely fascinating? In our opinion, it is! We hope you think the same because if yes, this presents a perfect chance for you:Listen in and find out more about Drew McKenzie Smith and Lindores Abbey and maybe discover some more intriguing stories about its historic past, its malty present and its promising future.
DAVID BEHÖVER MER SPRIT! Dagens "grej of the day" är att David fått en rent preussisk ordning på flaskor och samples i sitt whiskyrum. Vän av ordning (och även Jeroen och Mathias) undrar hur länge det håller. Det kommer en komet till jorden! Den kommer att sopa bort alla destillerier – som inte räddas. Det är grunderna i en lek som våra vänner + två hemliga medverkande kommer att leka. Här är reglerna och förutsättningarna. Veckans destilleri 12" remix är inget mindre än Lindores Abbey! Så häng med för mystiska kometer och munkbränd sprit. Halshäll! https://www.entreawhisky.se/194 Vad var det i glaset? Mathias hade Bushmill 16 YO. David hade ingenting alls i något glas. Jeroen smuttade på Fuji single blended whisky: https://www.whiskybase.com/whiskies/whisky/233681/fuji-gotemba-single-blended-japanese-whisky Glenglassaugh Portsoy, en rökig Glenglassaugh finns minsann även på Systembolaget! https://www.systembolaget.se/produkt/sprit/glenglassaugh-4146501/ Den selektiva destillerikometen Var med och sno destillerier från Jeroen, Mathias, David och de två hemliga gästerna! Khaddafi om leken hon leker: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lf6Xe7iVdE4 Just själva stunden då han säger leken hon leker: https://youtu.be/Lf6Xe7iVdE4?t=136 Veckans destilleri, 12” inch remix: Lindores Abbey! Hemsida: https://lindoresabbeydistillery.com/ Det finns ganska många på Systembolaget: https://www.systembolaget.se/sortiment/?q=lindores%20abbey Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LindoresAbbeydistillery scotchwhisky.com: https://scotchwhisky.com/whiskypedia/12545/lindores-abbey/ Hur Lindores Abbey trycker lite väl kraftigt på den låååååånga historien: https://lindoresabbeydistillery.com/our-story/ Ja, Jim Swan var med och konsultade för det destilleriet: https://scotchwhisky.com/magazine/latest-news/12831/whisky-legend-dr-jim-swan-dies/ Den där grejen med om de hade grävt fram basen till gamla pannor – vill de påstå: https://scotchwhisky.com/magazine/latest-news/21836/lindores-abbey-dig-unearths-historic-first/ En intervju med ena grundaren: https://scotchwhisky.com/magazine/interviews/five-minutes-with/18059/five-minutes-with-drew-mckenzie-smith-lindores-abbey/ Här når du oss: En trea whisky på Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/entreawhisky) Maila till oss på hej@entreawhisky.se Davids blogg tjederswhisky.se (https://www.tjederswhisky.se) Följ oss på Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/entreawhisky Bli medlem! https://entreawhisky.memberful.com/checkout?plan=74960
Vi tar oss an tre whiskys från Lindores Abbey som ligger på samma plats som världens första whiskydestilleri låg. Historiens vingslag är verkligen närvarande hos detta relativt unga destilleri men det hindrar dem inte från att göra riktigt bra whisky. Skål på er och ha en trevlig WhiskyVecka
Every year, Binny's wine, spirits, beer and cigar buyers sample thousands of products to find the best stuff for the best price. Also every year, we at Barrel to Bottle ask the buyers to answer a nearly impossible question: what was at the best thing you had this year? Heaven Hill 7-Year-Old Bottled in Bond Kentucky Straight Bourbon Domaine Tempier Bandol Rouge Cuvée Classique 2020 Penfolds Bin 389 Cabernet Shiraz 2020 Sierra Nevada Celebration New Scotch, including Lochlea, Ardnamurchan, Torabhaig, Lindores Abbey, Clydeside, Kingsbarns, Nc'nean and The Lakes Lost & Found Cream Machine Alec Bradley Lake Shore Drive Four Star Society Colibri V-Cutter & EVO Lighter Gift Set Val de Garrigues Cotes du Rhone Rouge Ruinart Rosé If you have a question for the Barrel to Bottle Crew, email us at comments@binnys.com, or reach out to us on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram. If we answer your question during a podcast, you'll get a $20 Binny's Gift Card! If you like our podcast, subscribe wherever you download podcasts. Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts.
SKOTTLAND ALL OVER BABY! Makalös natur, hisnande vyer och en del whisky förstås. Två tredjedelar ETW är i Skottland och här berättar vi om våra upplevelser, direkt på plats. Fältmässigt ljud från ett litet cottage utanför Stornoway. Vi spelade in i närheten av Stornoway som ligger på Isle of Lewis, inte Harris: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stornoway Vad var det i glaset? David hade en Ar7, en bra Ardbeg: https://www.whiskybase.com/whiskies/whisky/87507/ardbeg-ar7-sms David mindes rätt i att han hade skrivit smaknoter på den: http://tjederswhisky.se/elements-of-islay-ar7/ Jeroen hade en Old Pulteney 17 YO, exakt vilket år den är buteljerad vet vi inte riktigt men här är en: https://www.whiskybase.com/whiskies/whisky/120192/old-pulteney-17-year-old Ballindalloch distillery där det finns en bourbon barrel som numera har Davids namn på sig: https://www.ballindallochdistillery.com Kennetpans distillery som la ner på 1800-talet redan: https://www.entreawhisky.se/75 Rosebank distillery: https://www.rosebank.com Lindores Abbey distillery: https://lindoresabbeydistillery.com Aberargie distillery: https://www.morrisondistillers.com/distillery Johan Blom, selfiemannen! https://www.facebook.com/johan.blom.391 På Lewis finns det faktiskt ett destilleri som vi inte tänkte på, nämligen Abhainn Dearg: https://abhainndeargdistillery.co.uk Isle of Raasay distillery: https://raasaydistillery.com Torabhaig: https://torabhaig.com Talisker: https://www.malts.com/en-row/distilleries/talisker Butt of Lewis: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ButtofLewis https://www.visitouterhebrides.co.uk/see-and-do/butt-of-lewis-rubha-rohanais-p523611 Ardnamurchan distillery: https://www.adelphidistillery.com Här når du oss: En trea whisky på Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/entreawhisky) Maila till oss på hej@entreawhisky.se Davids blogg tjederswhisky.se (https://www.tjederswhisky.se) Följ oss på Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/entreawhisky Bli medlem! https://entreawhisky.memberful.com/checkout?plan=74960
Vi tar oss an senaste utgåvan av Benromach 15 och den visar återigen att man inte behöver leta de där superspecialarna för att få riktigt bra whisky! Så klart tar vi en titt på veckans övriga släpp också och hittar några guldkorn, 30-årig single malt från Islay för under 5 000 och Lindores Abbey kommer med nyheter.Skål på dig och ha en trevlig WhiskyVecka
News und Informationen finden Sie in unserem Shop auf https://www.whisky.de/whisky/aktuelles/nachrichten.html 00:14 Laphroaig präsentiert Ian Hunter Edition No. 4 00:50 The Balvenie ernennt Kelsey McKechnie zum neuen Malt Master 01:18 Lindores Abbey stellt "The Casks of Lindores" Oloroso Sherry Butts vor 01:45 NEU: Springbank Sherry Wood PX Cask Matured 10 Jahre 02:14 Islay trifft Mexiko: Smokehead Tequila Cask Terminado 02:37 The Macallan veröffentlicht Kurzfilm „The Spirit of 1926“ über Janet Harbinson 03:12 NEU: Tobermory 21 Jahre & Ledaig Red Wine 2012 - 9 Jahre 03:41 NEU: Wolfburn Christmas Edition 2022 - "Let it Snow" 04:01 Diageo investiert in die Oxford Artisan Distillery 04:24 Crown Royal erweitert Portfolio mit einem 29 Jahre alten Whisky 04:43 NEU: Mackmyra Ambassadör 05:07 PŌKENO Single Malt Whisky betritt die Weltbühne des Whiskys
Es begibt sich immer Anfang Mai, dass die nördlichste Deutschlands Whiskymesse in Kiel stattfindet. Regelmäßige Zuschauer wissen, dass wir diese Messe als so eine Art "Heimspiel" ansehen und so ging es im Jahr 2022 endlich wieder nach Kiel. Jetzt kommen wir endlich zur Nachbetrachtung und verkosten ein paar Abfüllungen, die uns in den Einkaufskorb gesprungen sind. Mit dabei: Benromach Writer's Tears, Lindores Abbey, Blair Athol
UNDAN FÖR ESS! Efter en liten snabbrecension av ett nytt whiskyglas kastar vi oss vindsnabbt in på hur man snabbar upp processen av att göra mogen, fin whisky på nolltid. Dessutom: Destilleriet Tullamore och ordet "Make", inte den goda new maken som vi alla (utom Mathias) älskar, utan bara make. Hittepå eller inte? Bara att lyssna! Swosh! Vad var det i glaset? David fortsätter dricka icke-whisky på grund av muskelavslappnande medicin men Mathias smuttade en 14 YO (!) Mackmyra från privatfat medan Jeroen körde Loch Lomond Inchmurrin 12 YO: https://www.systembolaget.se/produkt/sprit/loch-lomond-inchmurrin-48501/ Cradle glass: bra eller anus? Här kan ni kolla in glaset: https://www.cradleglass.com/ …från destilleriet Cradle Mountain: https://www.cradlemountainwhisky.com/home Ett av tusen exempel på köpta idiotartiklar som rekommenderar ett gäng skitglas har du förresten här: https://luxe.digital/lifestyle/home/best-whisky-glasses/ Glaset Corkcicle Whiskey Wedge i den där artikeln kan kanske vara det dummaste som hänt i whiskyvärlden sedan Diageo blandade annat än Cardhu i Cardhu 12 YO och fortsatte buteljera den numera blended malten som Cardhu 12 YO. Göra whisky bra när den är ung: tips och tricks! Det minst sagt ensidigt positiva eftermälet efter Jim Swan som David menar borde problematiseras: https://www.alltomwhisky.se/2017/02/jim-swan-dod-en-av-de-stora-ar-borta/ https://www.masterofmalt.com/blog/post/jim-swan-a-legacy-of-style.aspx https://scotchwhisky.com/magazine/in-depth/12859/obituary-dr-jim-swan-1941-2017/ https://whiskipedia.com/heroes/jim-swan/ https://www.whiskyadvocate.com/remembering-dr-jim-swan/ Andrew Derbidge om australiensisk whisky som ”under-matured yet over-oaked”: https://www.whiskyandwisdom.com/australian-whisky-has-an-image-problem/ Det här med långa jäsningstider… Exempel på nya och gamla destillerier med långa jäsningstider är Arbikie, Ballindalloch, Glenfarclas, Glen Scotia, GlenWyvis, Kilchoman, Lindores Abbey och Oban. Och Laphroaig jäser förresten inte alls på 48 timmar men väl på de ordentligt korta 50–55 timmar. Fatfyllningsstyrka… Det japanska Fuji Gotemba heter numera Mt. Fuji fyller sina fat med för maltwhisky på superlåga 50,5, och när de framställer vad som skulle ha kallats bourbon om destilleriet låg i USA kör de med 55,5. Även svenska Agitator fyller på låga 55%. Egensinniga Benrinnes: https://www.malts.com/en-gb/brands/benrinnes Veckans ord: make Alfred Barnards klassiska bok The whisky distilleries of the United Kingdom (1887) finns i hur många facsimilutgåvor som helst. Stora delar av boken är ofattbart astråkiga men i små doser är han ganska kul att läsa. Veckans destilleri: Tullamore (D.E.W.) Originaldestilleriet Tullamore grundades 1829 och lades ned 1954. Sedan gjordes whiskeyn på John's Lane, innan det lades ned 1974. Efter det gjordes Tullamore D.E.W. på både Midleton och Bushmill's men numera är det alltså William Grant & Sons som kokar spriten på sitt nya destilleri som kom i produktion 2014. Kapaciteten var inledningsvis på 1,8 miljoner liter ren sprit per år, en siffra som dubblades till 3,6 redan 2017. Numera har destilleriet fyra pannor för produktion både av maltwhiskey och single pot still whiskey, all trippeldestillerad. 2017 lades också ett graindestilleri med en kapacitet på åtta eller nio miljoner liter ren sprit per år till området. https://www.tullamoredew.com/en-gb/ Här kan man läsa lite mer, om än kort: http://www.historyireland.com/volume-22/tullamore-d-e-w-distillery/ Davids recension av Tullamore D.E.W. Cider cask finish från 2017: http://tjederswhisky.se/tullamore-dew-cider-cask-finish/ Här når du oss: En trea whisky på Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/entreawhisky) Maila till oss på hej@entreawhisky.se Davids blogg tjederswhisky.se (https://www.tjederswhisky.se) Följ oss på Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/entreawhisky Bli medlem! https://entreawhisky.memberful.com/checkout?plan=74960
News und Informationen finden Sie in unserem Shop auf https://www.whisky.de/whisky/aktuelles/nachrichten.html 00:00 Whisky.de News 00:14 Glengoyne schließt mit Chapter 3 die Legacy-Reihe ab 00:36 Die weltweit größte Flasche Whisky kommt unter den Hammer 01:23 Glasgow Distillery wechselt zu größeren Flaschen 02:05 Diageo startet seine limitierten Editionen Lagavulin und Caol Ila Fèis Ìle 2022 02:41 Bunnahabhain stellt drei Fèis Ìle Abfüllungen für 2022 vor 03:30 Bobby Anderson, Manager der Speyburn Distillery, geht in den Ruhestand 03:47 Glen Scotia bringt seinem ältesten Whisky auf den Markt 04:23 Lindores Abbey bringt 'The Exclusive Cask' Abfüllungen nach Deutschland 04:54 Tamdhu mit zwei neue fassstarke Abfüllungen zu ihrem 125. Geburtstag 05:22 Jack Daniel's bringt Bonded Series auf den Markt 06:46 St. Kilian Distillers präsentiert ‚Der Blinde und der Blonde‘ den ersten Whisky mit Etikett in Blindenschrift
Eine Superlative im Gepäck zu haben, ist aus Marketing-Sicht immer gut. Die neue Scotch-Destillerie Lindores Abbey besitzt in Sachen Superlative aber wahrscheinlich das i-Tüpfelchen. Deren Whisky produzieren neben den Ruinen der Lindores Abbey. Dem Kloster, in dem 1494 der erste schriftliche Beleg für Whisky dokumentiert wurde bzw…seines Vorläufers. In diesem Interview unterhalte ich mich daher mit Gerd Schmerschneider, dem Importeur der Lindores Abbey Whiskys. Wir sprechen über die Schwierigkeiten vor denen neue Destillerien aktuell stehen und wie Lindores Abbey einen Whisky-Stil kreiert, der stark an die Aromen jener ur-alten Whiskys erinnert, bei denen noch mit Kräutern und Gewürzen aromatisiert wurde. In dieser Episode machen wir daher eine Reise in die Whisky-Herstellung des 15. Jahrhunderts.
Welcome to Future Faith, a podcast, newsletter, and publication about living faithfully in an age of democratic destruction, ecological collapse, and economic irrelevance, available for free on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Substack:Every morning I go on a walk past a river, beside a centuries-old working millpond, into a graveyard and apple-laden church ground, and through the ruins of a twelfth-century abbey.If you walk around my village, you'll see dozens of houses that are made of the exact same stones as the former abbey.There's a reason for this: When Henry VIII dissolved all the monasteries and started his own church in order to self-bless his murder of innocent women, locals in my village stole the monastery's rocks.The faded tourist sign says that the locals treated the monastery as a “convenient quarry.”A convenient quarry.That's Christianity vs. Secularism in a nutshell, isn't it?Because it's inherently consumerist, post-modernity loves to harvest what Christians first cultivated:* Hospitals* Universities* Human rights* Universal basic incomeSecularism wants the kingdom without the king, the light without the power, the cathedral without the cornerstone.MonasteriesWhat do you picture when you hear the word “monk?”Old men in black robes?Old women in white robes?Why not a young bearded brewer who brews beer for the glory of God?Why not a stay-at-home dad who adores children and wants to adopt a dozen orphans?Why not a working mom who erects houses for the benefit of people who would never qualify for a mortgage?What do you picture when you hear the word “monastery?”A rotting stone building, utterly detached from the world?Why not a vibrant house, street, neighborhood, village, or city?When I hear the word “monastery,” I envision an estate.When Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries, he sold their buildings and land to whichever local elite offered the most cash.This allowed the British aristocracy to amass vast estates, with thousands of those plundered monasteries still owned by those same families to this day. (There are 144 estates over 10,000 acres in Scotland alone.)Michelle and I have visited dozens of estates on various outings around the UK:* Chatsworth (1,822 acres, down from 200,000) invented the banana we all know and love.* Buccleuch (217,000 acres) raises 19,670 sheep, 700 cattle, 32,000 hens, and 117 red deer hinds.* Atholl (124,000 acres) hosts weddings and functions, has a trailer park, and does castle tours.* Highclere (5,000 acres) shot to fame as the shooting location for Downton Abbey.When I picture a modern monastery, I picture a not-for-profit sustainable estate — studded with dozens of villages and hundreds of people — being run by kingdom principles for kingdom purposes.The kingdom economyThe poor will always be among us because the rich will always be above us.But not in the Acts 4 church, where there were “no needy people among them.”And not in today's monasteries, either.For nearly 1,700 years, Christian monks and nuns have practiced Universal Basic Income.In my travels, I've visited monasteries in Greece, Italy, Spain, England, Scotland, and elsewhere. I've been to many of the great foundations, including Monte Cassino, Assisi, Subiaco, etc. Monasteries are the last place in Christendom that still practice koinonia, the ancient and subversive Acts 2 practice that radically set apart the early church from the rest of society.Koinonia is often translated as “community” or “fellowship,” but both are really terrible translations. “Brotherhood” and “communion” come closer, but the best description of koinonia might be “non-political spiritual communism.”From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.This isn't forced or coerced secularist state-implemented communism. We know that doesn't work.This is a Holy Spirit-led sharing of life. It is a communal life the world can never know or re-create. In monasteries, koinonia looks like this: Everyone works a reasonable amount of time (typically 4–6 hours each day, 5–6 days each week) and contributes 100% of the proceeds to the monastery. The abbot and his team then ensure that everyone's needs are provided for: food, clothing, shelter, medical, soul care.No one is wealthy, but everyone is rich.The impossibility of individualityJust like biblical churches, monasteries aren't democracies.The abbot or abbess (from “abba,” meaning father) is in charge.All the brothers or sisters put their faith in Christ and their trust in their abbot, and he is to lead them well — not as coercive politicians do, but as a true servant-hearted leader.That's why most rich Westerners — single or otherwise — will never enter a monastery.It requires submission and surrender to a communal cause.How will they know us?I wish Christians were more like Jews and Muslims.You can always spot a Jew in the crowd.She's the one with gorgeous hair and the husband with the yarmulke.You can always spot a Muslim in the crowd.They're the ones not eating until sundown.I'm not saying we should cover our women or face east at sunset. You know what I mean. Christians are barely discernible.There's only ever been one marker that really separates Christians from our neighbors — unconditional love, even for those who hate us.But are we loving radically enough to make the world take notice in this attention culture?Where are all the disturbing Christians?Why don't people leave our presence feeling deeply unsettled?Being around Christians should feel conspiratorial, revolutionary, even dangerous.After all, we serve a God who wants to change everything.There is some biblical precedence for the concept of monasticism:* Elijah fled to the desert during a time of great persecution, and communed with God until the day he was called the restore the kingdom to their heavenly king.* Yahweh sent Moses and the Israelites into forty years of desert wanderings in order to shake off the mental shackles of slavery and prepare them for life as a free people.* John the Baptist counterintuitively moved to the desert to become an evangelist and prepare the way for his cousin Jesus.* If you study the life of Jesus, note how many times Christ removed himself “to a desolate place.”Notice how all of these “monks” were incredibly connected to God and deeply invested in the renewal of the world? Notice how setting themselves apart actually allowed them to dive into culture and make a greater impact? It's almost as though Christians are supposed to retreat in order to advance.Let's face it: Churches haven't been churches in a long time. Worship bands and motivational preachers and fancy buildings take precedence over sharing our wealth, living a rule of life in community, and housing the poor.It's almost as if the monastery is a place of reformation and preparation for the next move of God in our lives and our culture.First EgyptWhen most people think about monasteries, they assume it's just a retreat from “reality.”And it definitely can be that.But that wasn't the original intention, not by a mile.Inspired by Elijah and John the Baptist, monastics like Anthony the Great renounced the brutality, injustice, and oppression of the Egyptian mega-cities and moved to the desert to practice a Christ-centered life.Pachomius developed the idea of monks living together, and in doing so, creating an alternate social structure to stand in sharp contrast to the rest of the world.In an age before the Internet, social media, and viral videos, more than 50,000 people joined the Egyptian desert fathers and created what became known as Cities of God.From there, the movement went viral, spreading all over the planet.Monasteries aren't retreats— they're just new garden cities where the presence of God is actually welcomed.Because monastics renounce individualism and work together as humans were meant to do, it means they inevitably become places of great art and culture, both attracting outsiders and sending people back out.A nowhere always becomes a somewhere when Someone shows up.Then ItalyA college student named Benedict of Nursia grew so horrified by city life in Rome that he moved to the ruins of Nero's villa at Subiaco. Living by the simple rule of “ora et labora” (pray and work), Benedict founded twelve communities in all, laid the groundwork for Western monasticism, and single-handedly saved Western civilization from extinction.Benedict shapes every single day of our lives, and you can trace a direct line from Benedict's communities to the faith transformation of hundreds of millions of people over the past 1,500 years.A nowhere became a somewhere when Someone showed up.Then GermanyIn 1722, Nicolaus Ludwig Count von Zinzendorf bought a huge estate from his grandmother and invited several hundred Christian refugees to build a village on a corner of his estate.The Herrnhut story is now world-famous, especially the 24/7 prayer meeting that lasted for more than a century and sparked America's Great Awakening.The community sent out hundreds of missionaries to all parts of the world, ministering to slaves in the West Indies and the Inuit in Greenland.They founded a denomination that still has over 1,000 congregations.They played a vital role in the salvation of John Wesley, whose ministry has impacted tens of millions of hearts.One estate — one monastery — continues to impact lives nearly three centuries later.A nowhere became a somewhere when Someone showed up.Monasticism has problemsAs usual, religion crept in, always ready and willing to replace real leaps of faith.The monks in many monasteries I've visited get up far too early, hours before the sun, as though it's somehow “godly” to ignore the natural rhythms by which God saw fit to govern our biological bodies.Many monasteries fundamentally misunderstand prayer, spending four to six hours per day in the recitation of written chants instead of practicing a constant communion with Christ that leads to real action.Many monasteries are self-protective and entirely self-focused, completely ignoring the Scriptural call to go out to the ends of the earth — that we are the hands and feet of Christ who must go to seek and save the lost.Entrepreneurs for JesusWe are living in an age of democratic destruction, ecological collapse, and economic irrelevance.As the hyper-elites execute their Great Reset, the world is headed toward an unprecedented economic crisis. Within our lifetime, billionaires will control the global economy, the average house will cost $10 million, and surveillance currencies will dominate society.This new economy is creating millions of families in need of affordable shelter, climate refugees in need of resettlement, and workers in need of sustenance when they are excluded from the corporate economy.The church has a once-in-ten-generations opportunity to serve an unprecedented number of people in dire economic straights.Throughout history, monasteries have fulfilled the biblical mandate to provide food, clothing, and shelter to people in need. To fund these works of generosity and hospitality, monks and nuns have practiced sanctified stewardship for millennia:* Vatopedi Monastery grows olive oil.* Himmerod Abbey had a museum, art shop, cafe, guesthouse, and fishery.* Saint-Sixtus Abbey brews the best beer in the world.* Caldey Abbey makes perfume.* Ampleforth Abbey presses cider.* Prinknash Abbey blends incense.* Little Portion Hermitage runs a bakery.* Cîteaux Abbey ages cheese and makes caramels.* Buckfast Abbey hosts conferences and raises honeybees.* Lindores Abbey invented scotch.Depending on the skills and passions of the monks and nuns at each monastery, the community soon becomes self-sufficient — and because they live so simply, don't have a profit motive, and share everything in common, they soon have a surplus to share with a world in need.Questions to prayerfully considerWhere will God show up to meet real needs next?Will we be the ones to welcome Him in?My friend Andrew says that his job in life is to transfer as much earthly money into eternal value as possible.It begs some questions:* If all your needs were met and you didn't have to work a job to pay bills, what would you do for the kingdom?* How would you contribute to the kingdom if you didn't have to waste a moment working to pay rent or a mortgage?* How would you invest your time in eternity if you didn't have to enrich a land-lorder or a banker?Most people miss their calling because they get mired down trying to pay bills.God can and often does use us when we're working those dead-end jobs, but let's not pretend we weren't all made for more.You are unique in all of human history, with gifts and talents and strengths to contribute to the world that no money-hungry business could ever extract.“Vocation” comes from the Latin for “voice.”Does your work speak of who you are and whose you are?You are worth more than your paycheckWe can survive without bankers and landlords, but we can't live without farmers and mothers.So why do the former get paid so much more than the latter?Because we live in an upside-down society:* Insurance salesmen are incentivized to deny claims and let people die, while nurses suffer to keep people alive.* Fart app creators make millions while teachers have to buy their own chalk.* Bankers sit at a desk all day and type fake credit numbers into a screen, while active workers must pay them back by creating and handing over real wealth.Sadly, most of the vocations that really matter, the ones that are incredibly humanizing, are almost entirely devalued by the monetary system:* Caring for widows/single moms* Feeding the hungry* Clothing the naked* Visiting prisoners* Being a mother or father, especially to orphans, foster kids, and at-risk teens* Sustainable organic farming, forestry, and soil production* True education (not propagandizing or teach-to-test)* MentorshipBut these callings matter — really matter — in the monastery system.A vision for a modern monasteryImagine an estate.Hundreds or thousands of organic and sustainable acres under stewardship.Dozens of villages.Maybe even a garden city or two.Hundreds of families, couples, and singles by choice and by circumstance.With everyone answering a calling, practicing a real vocation, working as unto the Lord.Not one land-lorder or banker to lay waste to anyone's time.With all profits to advancing the kingdom of heaven instead of the empire of man.A group of people setting themselves apart in order to advance the Kingdom.Like the monastic movements of the past, this one monastery could serve as a template for hundreds or thousands of others to follow — a platform for launching new and better works around the world.It's time for Christians to make monasteries great again.A call to actionThe church of Christ has been a convenient quarry for secularism for the past century, and as our society now grounds itself to dust, there is an opportunity to rebuild cities of God on firm foundations with the only cornerstone that cannot be shaken.Please pray that God would send radically generous gospel patrons to fund the rebuilding efforts.Some of these city-monasteries will be family condos in high-rise towers.Some of these monasteries will be slums in hyper-cities.Some of these monasteries will dorms in universities.Some of these monasteries will be renovated abbeys and nunneries that have gone belly-up due to religion and a lack of vision.In our case, we sense ours will be some sort of village-packed eco-estate.Each of us needs to seek God's face on the kind of set-apart monk or nun He is calling us to become.We are the hands and feet of Jesus in this world. The harvest has and always will be plentiful, but the workers are few. So let's get to work.Thanks for listening to Future Faith. We are 100% follower-supported, so please head over to jaredbrock.com to partner with us as a gospel patron.If you think this episode is important and adds value to our global church family, please email the link to your friends or share it on social media. Get full access to Future Faith at jaredbrock.substack.com/subscribe
http://www.whisky.de/p.php?id=LINDO0CE0 Nosing : 06:08 Wir verkosten den Lindores MCDXCIV (1494). Das Kloster Lindores Abbey spielt in der Geschichte von Scotch Whisky eine wichtige Rolle: Aus dem Jahr 1494 stammt die früheste schriftlichen Erwähnung von Whisky (oder Aqua Vitae), in der Exchequer Roll desselben Jahres. Bruder John Cor, ein Lindores Mönch, wurde von König James IV beauftragt, aus Malz Aqua Vitae herzustellen. Heute, 500 Jahre später, wird direkt gegenüber der Lindores Abbey wieder Whisky produziert. Der Lowlander reift zum Teil in Wein- und Sherryfässern. Jetzt auch als Podcast: https://www.whisky.de/shop/newsletter/#podcast Geschmacksbeschreibungen und Informationen finden Sie in unserem Shop auf Whisky.de Abonnieren http://www.youtube.com/user/thewhiskystore?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whisky.de/
As whisky fans, we are fascinated by origin stories. Yet they are so hard to prove. Last time I was in Scotland, I went to "The Spiritual Home of Scotch Whisky" Lindores Abbey. So called, because it is here that Friar John Corr produced aqua vitae ("water of life") for King James IV in 1494 - the first record of distilling in the country. Join me as I talk with the founder of the distillery that owes its existence to that tax record written so long ago.
News und Informationen finden Sie in unserem Shop auf https://www.whisky.de/whisky/aktuelles/nachrichten.html 00:00 Whisky.de News 00:15 Gordon & MacPhail füllt ältesten Single Malt Scotch Whisky der Welt ab 00:50 Torabhaig kündigt zweiten Single Malt Whisky an: The Legacy Series - Allt Gleann 01:26 Neu: The Glenlivet's Caribbean Reserve 01:49 Moffat Distillery: Die Bauarbeiten beginnen 02:18 Lindores Abbey bring den ersten Singel Malt auf den Markt 02:39 Ardgowan sichert sich 8,4 Millionen Pfund für neue Brennerei 03:26 Macallan Concept No. 3 kommt 03:53 Neu gestaltete Cardhu Besucherzentrum wird eröffnet 04:23 Waterford füllt den weltweit ersten biodynamischen irischen Whiskey ab 05:02 BORCO erweitert irisches Whiskeyportfolio um den Blend THE BUSKER 05:47 Heaven Hill eröffnet Bourbon-Experience 06:15 Neu: Horse with no Name
#ScotsinUs Podcast- WHISKY SPOTLIGHT Monday May 31st 7PM EDT Join us "in conversation" as we spotlight Scotland's leading export, whisky. We are joined by three leading representatives from the whisky sector in Scotland who join us for a fascinating insight into their organizations and their passion for whisky. Lindores Abbey Distillery - Drew McKenzie Smith, Managing Director joins us as we learn of Lindores history which recognizes the Abbey as the Spiritual Home of Scotch Whisky. Records show that distilling first started on the site in 1494 - or before. And now Lindores readies for the release of their "1494", the first whisky from Lindores Abbey in over 500 years! Drew shares with us information of how you can tour or arrange an event at Lindores Abbey Distillery. Bonhams, Edinburgh - Martin Green, Whisky Specialist joins us to discuss Bonhams upcoming Whisky Sale on June 1st. We learn of some of past record prices attained and gain insight into upcoming lots offered next week, including The Macallan (1938), Black Bowmore (1964) and Bowmore (1955) as well as how you can participate in the upcoming whisky sale. Edinburgh Whisky Academy - Jack Dalton introduces us to EWA sharing with us the opportunities available through their accredited online or in person courses to develop better understanding of whisky. For the whisky Ambassador or whisky lover. The in-person courses are delivered at the Georgian mansion, Arniston House, outside Edinburgh. The podcast is also available in video format on our Facebook and YouTube platforms also. www.americanscottishfoundation.org americanscottishfoundation@gmail.com
News und Informationen finden Sie in unserem Shop auf https://www.whisky.de/whisky/aktuelles/nachrichten.html 00:00 Whisky.de News 00:38 Lindores Abbey Distillery geht mit Whisky ins neue Jahr 01:13 Diageo-Archiv jetzt virtuell begehbar 01:33 Erste Einblicke in das Johnnie Walker Besucherzentrum in der Prices Street 02:06 Bushmills zahlt Amerikanern den ersten Drink des Jahres 2021 02:49 Willie Pratt, ehemaliger Master Distiller von Michter’s, verstorben 03:24 Live Tasting: Whisky Vision TV mit St. Kilian
Take a trip with me to both sides of the Atlantic for more of my favorite stories from Scotland, Tennessee, and Kentucky. Joining me this week are Wally Dant of Log Still Distillery, Richard Paterson of Whyte & McKay, Andrew McKenzie-Smith of Lindores Abbey, Andy Nelson of Nelson's Green Brier, Fawn Weaver of Uncle Nearest, and Duncan Bryden who showed me around Strathdearn, near the Tomatin Distillery. This was a fun year of interviews, I hope you enjoy.
An entry in the Exchequer Rolls of Scotland in 1494 points to Friar John Cor and a group of Tironensian monks as the likely source of the first aqua vitae provided to the king. This record has brought the home of these monks, Lindores Abbey, fame as the spiritual home of scotch whisky. But is it? Join me and Drew McKenzie-Smith, founder of Lindores Abbey Distillery, as we look further into the history of distillation on this historic property.
There's an old saying that "form follows function." It's the idea that a building's design should fit its intended purpose, and over the years, that's been the way whisky distilleries were designed by architects like Charles Doig - who developed the pagoda-like chimney vents that are a sure clue you're looking at a distillery in the distance. There's a boom in distillery construction around Scotland, and architects are taking cues from the past while designing contemporary distilleries that could be around for the next 100 years or longer. Gareth Roberts is one of those architects, with credits that include Ardnamurchan, Lindores Abbey, and Dartmoor distilleries. We'll talk with him on WhiskyCast In-Depth. In the news, we'll have the details on this year's International Wine and Spirit Competition-winning whiskies, along with the rest of the week's whisky news. We'll also share some of the things you're most thankful for during the holidays and answer some of your whisky questions on Behind the Label.
Lindores Abbey has a unique place in whisky history, thanks to Friar John Cor and the aqua vitae he distilled for the King in 1494. Gary Haggart has a direct link to the Friar as the first distillery manager at the Lindores Abbey Distillery, built right next to the ruins of the original abbey. He's even distilling modern-day aqua vitae instead of gin or vodka while the Lindores Abbey single malt matures. During the recent Wonderful World of Whisky show in Cornwall, Ontario, Haggart presented Lindores Abbey's young spirit to consumers for the first time, and we'll talk with him on WhiskyCast In-Depth. We also took our studio setup to Friday night's American Whiskey Convention in Philadelphia to talk with whisky lovers just like you as well as some of the distillers on hand that night. There's a lot to unpack in this episode, so make sure your battery's charged!
Jamie and Dave see how a new and modern Scottish distillery can work in an innovative way alongside Andrew from Lindores Abbey. We also discuss why local pubs are dying out and Andrew steps inside the Bartenders Studio
Lindores Abbey has a unique place in Scottish history. In 1494, the abbey's Friar John Cor was responsible for the oldest known written reference to whisky distilling in Scotland when the Exchequer Roll listed him as receiving "8 bolls of malt" to make aqua vitae for the King. 523 years later, whisky distilling is returning to Lindores Abbey, and we'll take a look at the past, present, and future of Lindores Abbey's place in whisky history with Drew McKenzie Smith. His family has owned the farm in Fife where the abbey's ruins survive to this day, and he's the founder of the new Lindores Abbey Distillery. In the news, contract talks will resume this week between Chivas Brothers and its workers in Dumbarton, Scotland, and the union's plans for strikes this week have been called off. Blended Scotch sales may be poised for a comeback, and Bruichladdich is turning the peat volume up to 11 with one of its new Octomore single malts. We'll also have tasting notes for four cask-strength whoppers and a first - a web site that puts you on hold.
The Tironesian monks of Lindores Abbey were forcibly removed by Protestant firebrand John Knox in 1559 but they've left an extraordinary legacy for Tayside. The orchards they planted with native French varieties of pear, plum and apple were subdivided as the nearby town of Newburgh took shape. Every autumn the locals set out their stalls and sell purple pyramids of unusual plums and cartloads of the apples that can ripen on the trees beyond Christmas. The monks are also credited with the creation of the first Scotch Whisky. There's certainly documentary evidence of them supplying potent quantities of aquavitae to the Scottish Court in 1494. Caz Graham follows the tracks of the Tayside monks and meets the local man aiming to create the first Lindores whisky for 500 years. Further up the River Tay Caz explores Britain's biggest reed bed in search of the desperately shy Bearded Tit and meets the last of the salmon net fisherwomen. Now 80, Nan Jarvis spent decades dragging nets through the silvery Tay in search of the King of Fish. photo courtesy of the RSPB.