Blended Malt #4 6 Year Old (That Boutique-y Whisky Company) Blended Malt Whisky
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£47.95
Whisky Price comparison
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E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£47.95
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£60.95
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£1000
E150A Free
Our best price:
£199
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£12.83
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£2000
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£87.95
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£87.95
E150A Unknown
Our best price:
£51.95
Whisky Bottle | Rating | Reviews | Price |
---|---|---|---|
JJ Corry The Flintlock 16 Year Old Irish Single Malt Whiskey | 5 | 2 | £96.95 |
Premium Whisky Advent Calendar – Classic Style (2019 Edition) Blended Whisky | 0 | 0 | £ |
Loch Lomond 19 Year Old Portrush Open Course Collection | 0 | 0 | £145 |
Secret Stills No: 2.2 (Cragganmore) 1966 Gordon & MacPhail | 0 | 0 | £1200 |
Kinclaith 1967 /1993 Connoisseurs Choice | 0 | 0 | £1200 |
Speyburn 8 Year Old 2008 (cask 12068) – Clan Denny (Douglas Laing) | 0 | 0 | £ |
Loch Ile 19 Year Old 1996 – Crafted Blend (Murray McDavid) Blended Whisky | 0 | 0 | £ |
Tomintoul 1977 38 Year Old Sherry Cask | 0 | 0 | £ |
Glen Mhor 1966 The Costumes /1988 | 0 | 0 | £ |
Glenrothes 1978 Centenary Reserve | 0 | 0 | £ |
Bowmore 29 Year Old 1988 – Edition No. 2 | 0 | 0 | £ |
Brora 1981 22 Year Old Duncan Taylor | 0 | 0 | £1200 |
E150A is a food colouring agent created by burning sugar, it’s permitted as a food colour world wide and can be used to colour whisky. It’s the same stuff that’s added to Coa Cola and Pepsi to give them their dark brown colour and it’s regularly added to a number of grain whiskies, blends and even single malts.
Spirit caramel is added to whisky for two reasons; firstly to normalise the colour between different batches of whisky and in some cases to enhance the natural colour of the whisky. How much of each occurs is a rather complex question as no brand would readily admit to manipulation of their whisky to mislead consumers.
Because blends, and even single malt whiskies, use a mix of different casks in order to try and replicate their signature whisky styles. As every cask is different blending purely to replicate flavour can lead to colour differences between batches. A Laphroaig 10 from 5 years ago might taste virtually identical to one produced today but may be much lighter, or much darker depending on the casks used. To avoid confusion among consumers distilleries many distilleries ‘normalise’ the difference through the addition of E150A.
At the other end of the spectrum is the role of enhancement and this is particularly prevelant among the lower priced supermarket blends. When whisky is first distilled it’s crystal clear and looks like water, or vodka. The golden or even brown colour is a result of interaction with the barrel it is stored in. For cheaper whiskies older barrels are used and these impart less colour, they often favour larger barrels as well which means less interaction with the liquid (as a smaller barrel offers more liquid to surface area). To avoid these bottles ending up on the shelf looking like off-colour vodka spirit caramelis added to ensure the anticipated golden brown is present. In other instances such as Dalmore
Yes, E150A does change the taste of a whisky. That is our decided opinion, while countless brand ambasadors will dispute this point, or denounce us and refuse to debate the point we’ve done the leg work and are firmly of the position that E150A does change the flavour of the whisky.
We’ve conducted blind and double blind taste tests using E150A from multiple suppliers, and even using minscule amounts the taste profile does shift slightly. Interestingly this change is not always detrimental and E150A seems on occasion to round out a whisky. In most cases the whiskies are identified as being different, in some the whisky with caramel is preferred, in others the whisky without. There’s no added sweetness (E150A is very bitter) but no obvious bitterness added to the whisky unless absurd amounts are used, so we’re not condemning anyone for the use of spirit caramel. That said in the interest of consumer fairness we feel that consumers should be able to find out what’s in their bottle.
By law any whiskies containing E150A sold in Germany have to list it as an additive, on their websites this usually appears as ‘mit Farbstoff’ or ‘enthält Farbstoff’ both meaning the spirit contains dye. We’ve scraped a number of German whisky websites and matched their ‘EAN’ and bottles details against the bottles we pricecheck using multiple validations to confirm*.
*Ultimately this system is far from perfect, distilleries change their output and bottles that did contain spirit caramel may change their process. It’s also not completely inconceivable that a whisky could contain caramel for one market and not in another, however unlikely this might be. So until the distilleries are prepared to have a grown up conversation, we’ll do everything in our power to keep our DB up to date. Let us know via the contact form if you find any issues.