Women in Whiskey Bring Back a Lost Art

Women in Whiskey Bring Back a Lost Art
Blaise Kelly, national sales and marketing director (L), and Louise McGuane, founder (R), of Chapel Gate Whiskey Company. (John Kelly)
Crystal Shi
6/7/2018
Updated:
10/8/2018
On a family farm in a small village in Ireland, Louise McGuane is leading the world’s only all-female Irish whiskey company in resurrecting the art of whiskey bonding.
The practice of sourcing whiskey from third-party distilleries, maturing it, and then custom-blending it once lent a huge variety of flavors and styles to Irish whiskey, but died out in the 1960s. The Chapel Gate Irish Whiskey Company, founded in 2015, is Ireland’s first bonder in 50 years.
“It’s a part of Irish heritage and a way of whiskey making that needs its time in the light again,” McGuane said.
J.J. Corry “The Gael,” the company’s first release, is a classic Irish whiskey full of fruity flavors—tinned mandarins, lime juice, lemon bonbons, gooseberries—a 60 percent malt, 40 percent grain blend of sourced rare, mature whiskey as it waits for its own stock to mature.
Built “in a similar fashion to making perfume,” McGuane said, the blend took two years to develop. It has won gold medals in the San Francisco World Spirits Awards and the Irish Whiskey Awards, and scored 90 points in Whisky Advocate.
Retails for around $75 in limited stores and online. ChapelGateWhiskey.com
J.J. Corry 'The Gael.' (Courtesy of Chapel Gate Whiskey)
J.J. Corry 'The Gael.' (Courtesy of Chapel Gate Whiskey)
Crystal Shi is the food editor for The Epoch Times. She is a journalist based in New York City.