[MM-MALTS-L] CELP & seaweed

Kraaijeveld A.R. A.R.Kraaijeveld at soton.ac.uk
Thu Aug 30 11:52:01 CEST 2007


Hi Michel

Yes, 'waterpest' is exactly what I mean. I don't want to get into a
botanical discussion as to whether it's Elodea densa or Elodea
canadensis, because the two species are not always easy to tell apart.
What's important is that it appears that "Celp - The Seaweed Experience"
does not contain any seaweed whatsoever.

 
slainte, Lex
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Fly, you greatest fool
Why can't you say what they want you to
Why can't you do what they taught you
And show what they wanted of you      
       
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Dr Alex R Kraaijeveld
School of Biological Sciences
University of Southampton
Bassett Crescent East
Southampton
SO16 7PX
United Kingdom
tel: (+44)-(0)23-80593436
fax: (+44)-(0)23-80594459
http://www.sbs.soton.ac.uk/staff/ark/ark.php
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

-----Original Message-----
From: mm-malts-l-bounces at grsnet.net
[mailto:mm-malts-l-bounces at grsnet.net] On Behalf Of Michel van
Meersbergen
Sent: 30 August 2007 09:51
To: MaltManiacs operated former 'MALT-L' Whisky List
Subject: Re: [MM-MALTS-L] CELP & seaweed

Hi Lex,

I had the same reservations when I saw the bottle for the first time.
It's
certainly not celp inside the bottle, I have it as Elodea canadensis
('waterpest' as we say in Holland).

AFAIK all the celp bottles have waterweed inside them.

Best!

Michel



op 30-08-2007 10:31 schreef Kraaijeveld A.R. op
A.R.Kraaijeveld at soton.ac.uk:

> Hi all
> 
>  
> 
> I got a bottle of "CELP - Seaweed Experience" for a tasting I'll be
> running at the university later this year. For those who have never
> heard of this one, it's either a young Lagavulin or a vatting of
> Lagavulin and Laphroaig to which seaweed is added. So legally it's not
> whisky anymore and the label doesn't claim that it is.
> 
>  
> 
> The spirit is clearly greenish and there is a twig of a plant floating
> in the bottle (bottle won't be opened until the tasting). Now as soon
as
> I saw the twig, I got suspicious. To me, the plant which is floating
in
> the bottle looks remarkably like Common or Brazilian Waterweed, which
is
> a very common freshwater plant. Does not grow in the sea and is not a
> seaweed by any stretch of the (botanical) imagination. I've attached a
> small picture of this plant and I'm asking those of you who have/had a
> bottle of CELP to tell me whether the plant inside the bottle looks
like
> the plant in the picture. Just so I know whether all CELP bottles
> contain waterweed rather than a seaweed or whether there ARE indeed
CELP
> bottles with (possible) seaweed.
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> slainte, Lex
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> 
> 
> Fly, you greatest fool
> Why can't you say what they want you to
> Why can't you do what they taught you
> And show what they wanted of you
>        
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> 
>  
> 
> Dr Alex R Kraaijeveld
> 
> School of Biological Sciences
> 
> University of Southampton
> 
> Bassett Crescent East
> 
> Southampton
> 
> SO16 7PX
> 
> United Kingdom
> 
> tel: (+44)-(0)23-80593436
> 
> fax: (+44)-(0)23-80594459
> 
> http://www.sbs.soton.ac.uk/staff/ark/ark.php
> <http://www.sbs.soton.ac.uk/staff/ark/ark.php>
> 
>  
> 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> 
>  
> 
> _______________________________________________
> MM-MALTS-L mailing list
> MM-MALTS-L at grsnet.net
> http://lists.grsnet.net/mailman/listinfo/mm-malts-l


_______________________________________________
MM-MALTS-L mailing list
MM-MALTS-L at grsnet.net
http://lists.grsnet.net/mailman/listinfo/mm-malts-l




More information about the MM-MALTS-L mailing list