Showing posts with label Irish Apple Brandy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Irish Apple Brandy. Show all posts

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Taste of the Week. Longueville House Irish Apple Brandy


Taste of the Week
Longueville House Irish Apple Brandy

The Longueville House Irish Apple Brandy, our Taste of the Week, is quite a while in the making. In Autumn, the apples, all from their own estate, are crushed and pressed within hours of harvesting. Four months of fermentation produces a cider and that is double distilled on site in copper pot stills. A four year maturation follows in French oak. Then it is bottled and sold.

No need for a mixer. “No mixer needed,” says Rupert Atkinson of Longueville Beverages.“It is very smooth, no burning and good for digestion, best after a good meal. If it feels a little cool, just warm it in the palm of the hand.” 

I can agree with all of that as I paid a lot of attention to my most recent encounter with this marvellous spirit. Certainly there is a hint of orchard in both aroma and flavour but there is more too, some spice included, all before a lingering and pleasing finish. No rush here, just sit back and savour each little sip!

There are 25 acres of apples and the orchard is close to 25 years old. No pesticides are used. One way they counter the aphids, a tiny bug that can do enormous damage, is to encourage the hoverfly by planting the likes of Fennel, Angelica and Yarrow. These attract the hoverfly, a natural enemy of the aphid.

The brandy comes from apples grown in the orchards of Longueville. The apples used are cider apples namely, Michelin (Normandy) and Dabinett (Somerset), grown in their orchards in the beautiful Blackwater Valley.
Harvest time at Longueville 


Thursday, October 10, 2013

Taste of the Week

Taste of the Week
Apple Brandy on the Double!
What a few days for William and Ashling of Longueville House.
Their Irish Apple Brandy, smooth and mellow, won two Golds.
The first came on Saturday at the Blas na hEirann Awards in Dingle
and the second followed on Tuesday with a win
in the Natural Food Categrory of Georgina Campbell Awards 2014
The apples are harvested from the extensive orchards in Longueville
 in the autumn every year. Once picked, the apples
 are crushed and pressed in an oak cider press machine on the farm.