21 May 2018
Giant's Causeway at Cobh, Northern Ireland
Stop at the Giant's Causeway, Northern Ireland's only Unesco WHS. Rainy day but fun to see this unusual site and waves crashing on the shore!
Tags (click on a tag to read posts on same topic):
archeo,
cruise,
Ireland,
TRAVEL,
United Kingdom
20 May 2018
Killybegs, Ireland
Biggest hand-operated loom in the world made with Canadian pine wood. The lady said she can do 1000 knots per hour!
These carpets are in Irish embassies around the world and other major public places.
At a local pub, some musicians and crew singers from our ship fraternize.
The town sports a small "cathedral" and lots of fishing boats. A quiet walk under the warm drizzle.
These carpets are in Irish embassies around the world and other major public places.
At a local pub, some musicians and crew singers from our ship fraternize.
The town sports a small "cathedral" and lots of fishing boats. A quiet walk under the warm drizzle.
19 May 2018
Isle of Skye
Some consider it the most romantic island of Scotland, and maybe it is, but kind of windy and cold for that purpose today.
We take a leisurely tour of the perimeter and soak in the landscape.
Peat cutting was a major industry for centuries, was then abandoned as uneconomical but it's been resurrected by demand of peat for whisky.
The tomb of Alexander McQueen is a highlight, the fashion genius rests here.
Royal Dinner for the wedding of Harry and Meghan
Evening "Royal" ball on our chip Queen Victoria :)
We take a leisurely tour of the perimeter and soak in the landscape.
Peat cutting was a major industry for centuries, was then abandoned as uneconomical but it's been resurrected by demand of peat for whisky.
The tomb of Alexander McQueen is a highlight, the fashion genius rests here.
Royal Dinner for the wedding of Harry and Meghan
Evening "Royal" ball on our chip Queen Victoria :)
Tags (click on a tag to read posts on same topic):
fashion,
TRAVEL,
United Kingdom
Location:
Skye, United Kingdom
16 May 2018
Stirling Castle, Scotland
Bits and pieces from our visit to Stirling Castle in Scotland.
Lucky to get (like every day!) forward seats in our bus. They are reserved for disabled tourists but there are never any and we board last so they are available! Pleasant ride to Greenock, the name means "sunny place" Forty-five thousand people, the economy developed on sugar from the Caribbean. This thanks to the 1707 union treaty, grow by trading with British colonies in America avoid French and Spanish pirates further south.
James Watt from here
Britain's oldest dry docks, now build submarine for Australia. Only 2.5% of the people now speak Gaelic. Scotland issues its own own banknote GBP but sometimes it is not accepted abroad
We hear a story about the local kelpie, a horse/human figure that haunts the lakes of Scotland...
In the evening chat with Axel, our waiter from the Philippines. She's been on this ship for 2 years, before that 9 years on Queen Mary 2, that was her home. Once she had a serious problem with one eye lost sight. Cunard paid all treatment for two years during which he could not work. then took her back on Queen Victoria.
Tags (click on a tag to read posts on same topic):
castle,
Scotland,
TRAVEL,
United Kingdom,
VIDEO
Location:
Castle Esplanade, Stirling FK8 1EJ, UK
15 May 2018
Whisky Museum in Dublin, Ireland
What better way to spend a rainy day in Dublin than in the whisky museum?
Notes from a guided tour.
Uisce is the Irish word for water
beatha means of life
book of Kel 1405 first record of the word whiskey, it was then made by monks.
Was the original purpose communion, instead of wine?
Used as perfume, originally from Iran came with with moors to Spain
must be aged at least 3 years by law
Angel share lost to evaporation is about 20% per year, therefore old whiskey expensive: you pay for lost whiskey!
the more you lose to angels the faster whiskey ages
Shibeen illegal distillery in Ireland
Pogee? unaged whisky
malting, germinating by soaking in warm water 3 days, starch changes into sugar
Stop the process by drying with hot air or burning peat to make smoky flavor get grist.
Yeast to transform grist to alcohol, about 12pc beer is the result
Whiskey is distilled beer in a nutshell
In Ireland cìit is allowed to make whiskey at home but not sell or even give away because fear of methanol.
... and also because of tax revenues suffered!
There 8192 illegal stills in Ireland in 1834 , more than ten times more than in Scotland
Triple distillation in Ireland makes for smoother alcohol.
Stills made of copper
Add sulfites as in wine to stabilize
Toasting barrels just 20 seconds or so to get flavor caramel and vanilla from America oak barrels, only use barrels once.
Also continuous still, can get as much alcohol in one week as normal in nine months. Started in 1937 with continuous stills.
Learned to blend now 18 stills up from only 2 before they turned to continuous, more to open soon
no spitting in whisky tasting! must get ending with swallowing
can dilute however, only reason to swirl is to look fancy! no use...
Tasting today:
1. glendalough single grain see photo, double barrel
Smooth
2. powers gold label
malted and raw barley together
started because maltée barley was taxed more traditional
aged in bourbon barrels only
round long
3.the Irishman power reserve
70 pc single malt
spicy
4. Tullamore 12 yo
youngest whisky in bottle is 12yo.
60pc single grain 20pc single malt
smoothness because sulfites lose burn over time.
Just next to the whiskey museum is the famous Peterson pipe shop, I cannot not go in, and after a good chat with the salespeople who give me a good discount I end up buying two pipes to add to my collection.
End the day with a walk around town looking at some typical architecture.
Location:
Dublin, Ireland
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)