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| Michael Jackson | 
Michael Jackson   (27.3.1942-30.8.2007) was the most influential beer and whisky writer   of his time. He pioneered the writing of whisky tasting notes and also   wrote many ground-breaking books on whisky manufacture and drinking   culture. In the first edition of his most famous book, The Malt Whisky   Companion (1989), he assessed 250 whiskies from 120 distilleries, a huge   effort at the time. Based on his work Lapointe and Legendre (1994)   studied the similarity of different whiskies. A total of 68 descriptors   used five or more times in the book for describing basic malt whiskies  aged circa 10 years were included  in a matrix analysis to produce the  dendrogram below to examine the similarities of different distilleries.  Colour, nose,  body, palate and finish descriptors were included. Some  of the connections are  quite expected, but for an average Scotch  enthusiasist some are at the  first glance somewhat compelling. That is  probably because the  descriptors are not scaled in any way and  therefore the smoky notes in  for example Aberfeldy and Glenugie are  statistically just as strong as  the smoky notes in Laphroaig. Also the  amount of colouring, the cask-types and the maturation time of whiskies  compared vary  considerably. Anyway, despite these shortcomings, there  is a highly significant correlation between the tasting notes and the  geographic  locations of the distilleries, especially in the 12  subgroups named from A  to L.  IMHO the dendrogram works pretty well in  terms of grouping  different styles of Scotch whiskies as well and at  least is an  eye-opener for some unpredicted similarities.
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| Lapointe 1994 | 
The most common descriptors for each group are listed in the table below: 
| color | nose | body | palate | finish | |
| A | full gold | fruity, salty | medium | oily, salty, sherry | dry | 
| B | amber | sweet, sherry | medium, smooth | dry, sweet | long | 
| C | pale gold | sweet, salty | medium to full, oily | sweet, spicy | big, long, spicy | 
| D | pale gold | fruity, grassy | oily | sweet, fruity | sweet, quick | 
| E | pale wyne, gold | fruity, peaty | light | sweet, spicy | fruity | 
| F | gold | aromatic | medium, smooth, light | sweet | sweet | 
| G | gold, full gold | grassy | smooth, light | grassy | dry | 
| H | white wyne, pale | sweet | smooth, light | sweet, dry, fruity, smoky | dry, light | 
| I | gold, full gold | dry, peaty | medium, light, firm | dry, smoky, sweet | salty | 
| J | full gold | dry, peaty, sherry | light to medium, round | sweet | dry | 
| K | gold, full gold | sweet, dry, peaty | medium to full | sweet, dry | dry, long | 
| L | full gold | aromatic, peaty | medium | sweet, smoky | smoky | 
...and the best whiskies of each subgroup are listed here:
| average | best in basic malts | pts | best in book (1st ed) | pts | |
| A | 75,3 | Laphroaig 10 | 86 | Laphroaig 15 | 89 | 
| B | 80,0 | Highland Park 12 | 90 | Macallan 25 | 95 | 
| C | 78,5 | Talisker 10 | 90 | Talisker 10 | 90 | 
| D | 69,5 | Auchentoshan 10 | 85 | Auchentoshan 18 | 86 | 
| E | 74,8 | Bladnoch 8 | 85 | Bladnoch GM1975 | 86 | 
| F | 76,5 | Springbank Cad15 | 88 | Springbank Cad21 | 92 | 
| G | 79,1 | Cragganmore 12 | 90 | Cragganmore 12 | 90 | 
| H | 69,2 | Bruichladdich 10 | 76 | Glenfiddich 30 | 86 | 
| I | 79,9 | Longrow 14 | 90 | Lagavulin 16 | 95 | 
| J | 72,8 | Linkwood 12 | 83 | Linkwood GM25 | 87 | 
| K | 74,0 | Dallas Dhu GM1971 | 85 | Dallas Dhu GM1971 | 85 | 
| L | 73,3 | Lochnagar 12 | 80 | Lochnagar NAS | 83 | 
An  interesting fact in MJ's tasting notes  is that there is a significant   correlation between colour, body, palate and  nose, but the finish  notes  do not correlate with the classification  derived from the other   descriptions. As expected the correlation  between the nose and the   palate is extremely strong, but there is also a  very strong correlation  between the colour and the body (texture) of  whisky, which might  support the hypothesis that added caramel colouring  affects the body  (or mouthfeel) of whiskies.
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| Legendre 2004 | 
REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING:
Jackson M: The whole bibliography.
 Lapointe FJ, Legendre P. A classification of pure malt Scotch whiskies. Appl Statist 1994;43;1;237-257
Legendre   P, Lapointe FJ. Assessing congruence among distance matrices:   single-malt Scotch whiskies revisited. Aust N Z J Stat 2004;46;615-629
Mantel N. The detection of disease clustering and a generalized regression approach. Cancer Res 1967;27;209-220
Sokal RR, Rohlf FJ. The comparison of dendrograms by objective methods. Taxon, 1962;11;33-40
Ward JH. Hierarchical grouping to optimize an objective function. J Am Statist Ass 1963;58;236-244 
Hi, thank you so much for this blog and loads of very interesting info!
ReplyDelete"which might support the hypothesis that added caramel colouring affects the body (or mouthfeel) of whiskies."
OR this might also mean that 20 years ago producers used much less caramel for coloring single malts. If so then the color of particular whisky in this research is just a result of limited number of natural factors (age, cask type etc) and these factors lead to a very predictable palate.
Can you organize/mail the original Articles from
ReplyDeleteFrancois-Joseph Lapointe / Pierre Legendre?
I find these kinds of 'analysis' bring nothing. Too old reviews of whisky that is no longer available. Pretty useless.
ReplyDeleteHi Teemu,
ReplyDeleteAny chance if you could replicate Michael Jackson's exact tasting notes on the Cragganmore 12yo - which he first published in his 1989 malt whisky companion book? Keen to know more =) thanks.
Cragganmore 12y (late 1980s) 40%
DeleteColour:golden
Nose:The most complex aroma of any malt. Its bouquet is astonishingly fragrant and delicate with sweetish notes of cut grass and herbs (thyme perhaps?)
Body:light to medium, but very firm and smooth
Palate:Delicate,clean,restrained, with a huge range of herbal flowery notes.
Finish:Long.
Score 90
This is great! Would be useful if we could apply this to a tasting note/review website e.g. connosr to find similar tasting whisky... or to find less expensive alternatives for flavors we like.
ReplyDeleteThe diagram might need to be updated though? I dont understand how highland park falls under the B group (no mention of peat in it, and I dont think Dalmore or Glenlivet are like HP at all) or how Imperial is in the L group (the imperial I have has no peat), etc.
Thanks for sharing!
It is just a statistical model based on the tasting notes from 1989 by MJ. Peat is just one singular descriptor and they are not weighted by their intensities.
DeleteBesides, here are the MJ notes from 1989. The malts have changed a bit over the years ;)
Highland Park 12y 40%
Colour: amber
Nose: smoky, "garden bonfire", sweetness, heathery, malt, hint of sherry
Body: medium, exceptionally smooth
Palate: succulent, with smoky dryness, heather-honey sweetness and maltiness
Finish: teasing, heathery, delicious.
Score 90
Dalmore 12 40%
Colour: full, amber
Nose: powerful with sherry, fruit and malt
Body: medium to full, but never very sweet or sticky. soft
Palate: rounded and velvet-smooth, with a big development of dry, spicy, bitter-sweet malmalade-like orange and heathery, smoky flavours. Even a faint tang of saltiness.
Finish: long with more orangy notes
Score 79
Glenlivet 12y 40%
Colour: pale gold
Nose: remarkably flowery, clean and soft
Body: light to medium, firm, smooth
Palate: Flowery, peachy, notes of vanilla, delicate balance between sweetness and malty dryness
Finish: restrained, long, gently warming
Score 85
Imperial GM/CC 1970 40%
Colour: full gold
Nose: sherryish, aromatic, smoky
Body: medium to full, soft, rich
Palate: Malty, with notes of barley and vanilla, smoky, and full of flavour. A powerful, interesting combination of malty sweetness and peaty smokiness.
Finish: soft, smoky
Score 76