On tasting: Sullivans Cove American Oak TD0001 and TD0165, Sullivans Cove American Oak Refill Cask 14 Year Old TD0045, Sullivans Cove Special Cask 7th Edition, Sullivans Cove French Oak TD0274 and Sullivans Cove Double Cask DC109
When Patrick Maguire took the reins of Tasmania Distillery (Sullivans Cove) in 2003 with the backing of several investors, there was a lot to do.
He wanted to completely redesign most of what he saw with how the whisky was made and branded, and the first step was moving the distillery from the old Gasworks in Hobart to an industrial park in Cambridge.
From there, Maguire developed the modern day Sullivans Cove you see today. He shored up Sullivans wash supply (which is still produced at external breweries), refined the old pot still, and took a more considered approach to distillation.
Crucially, he also decided to fill large format tawny (300 litre) and Bourbon (200 litre) casks believing that the whisky inside them wouldn’t hit its straps until the 10+ year mark, minimum.
His thinking was long-term, small batch, high quality. And it worked.
When the accolades and awards started accumulating in the early 2010s, it was vindication, finally, for years of patience and hard graft.
Consumers started to get on board, too, assured by the consistent core range Maguire had introduced – the American Oak, French Oak and Double Cask – but intrigued by the traceability and variety that each single cask presented.
All the intricate details were there on the bottle (another Maguire decision). So when the French Oak HH0525 won world’s best single malt in 2014, that bottling, and the entire back catalogue of whiskies, quickly turned into a collectors dream.
Nowadays, the question for a lot of die hard Sullivans Cove fans is, do the whiskies taste different depending on when and where they were produced?
Are the modern era Maguire whiskies, starting with TD0001 reviewed below, better than the whiskies distilled under the Highland Holdings regime? Are the new unflocked and unfiltered Sullivans whiskies (which started in 2019), more flavourful than the old? And what will happen to future whiskies now that Sullivans is returning to the cove?
It’s nerdy, obsessive stuff, and single malt fanatics and collectors are eating it up, shelving and storing anything Sullivans Cove as soon as its released.
And that’s the rub. Is anyone actually drinking Sullivans Cove these days? I hope so, because the work the team has done in recent years has all been about improving the quality and consistency of how the whisky tastes.
And as you see below, I think it’s worked.