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Starward Co-Ferment

Will Starward’s new Co-Ferment create a new category?

by Andy Young

Starward has launched a new, Australian-first spirit, with its Co-Ferment Grape x Malt Australian Spirit, and Bars & Cocktails spoke to Starward’s Head Distiller and Blender, Carlie Dyer about how this new spirit came about and, of course, how it tastes.

The Co-Ferment has been crafted using freshly-crushed (Cabernet Sauvignon) grape juice and Starward’s signature malted barley wash, which were then co-fermented, distilled and matured in Australian red wine barrels, and Carlie talked B&C through the process from concept to bottle.

“Before I started at Starward I worked in the wine industry and I started thinking about the concept for Co-Ferment when I started at Starward in 2018,” Carlie said. “Then in early 2019 I got some juice from a winery and I did a small trial run to see how co-fermenting with grape juice and our single malt would look and if it would work.

“Then I distilled it and that spirit was very, very fragrant with lots of red berries, and it had the body of a single malt spirit. Once I showed that to the team, it got approved really quickly, and we put it through our stills that April, so it all happened pretty fast and it was really exciting.”

Co-Ferment is created with equal parts Cabernet Sauvignon and Starward’s wort, as Carlie explained.

“We brewed our regular single malt wort on top of the juice in tank and added our same yeast, fermented it and then distilled it through our pot stills, with all the same parameters that our regular spirit gets made. Then I matured it in red wine casks, with an equal split of French oak and American oak, because at that point we didn’t really know how it was going to interact with wood, but they both had promising characters.

“Then six years later we have blended it, bottled it and now we are releasing it.”

While often producers of any product can find challenges in making a concept a reality, Carlie said Co-Ferment was actually pretty straightforward.

“It was,” she said, “from its inception it was such a cool product and both elements of grape and barley really complemented each other. There have been fermentations before, with breweries doing hybrid wine-beers and things like that, but no distillation and maturing it like a whisky.”

So is it a whisky? Carlie says “no”, adding: “It’s its own category. It doesn’t have a formal category, it’s just an Australian spirit drink at the moment. But it will be interesting to see if we could make a new category, and who knows if people jump on-board and want to do it too, I think the could be potential there.”

Important factors in enticing other producers to jump on-board with this new spirit is how it looks, smells and tastes, Carlie talked B&C through some of Co-Ferments characteristics.

“The nose is quite different [to whisky], it has a lot of grape character there that isn’t just coming from the wine barrel, but from the spirit itself. So it has a brandy-like character on the nose, and yet it also has whisky there too on the palate. You can definitely tell that it’s not either a whisky or a brandy, or wine, it is its own thing, and we’ve had a lot of positive feedback from people who don’t drink whisky, but also from a lot of whisky lovers.

Tasting notes describe an aroma of “blackberries, cinnamon and vanilla”, with a “burst of cabernet flavours on the front palate with flavours of fig, blackcurrant, and vanilla, drawing out to a malty round finish”. The finish is described as “long with flavours of toasted oak, black fruits and chalky tannin”.

In terms of its serve, Carlie said: “I think it looks really good on ice, and it’s great, neat, too. You could play around with it in a cocktail, I think in something like a Manhattan or a Boulevardia could be cool.”

Starward Co-Ferment Grape x Malt Australian Spirit is available in limited quantities through Starward, but watch this space for future collaborations and development of the new, exciting Australian spirit.

Andy Young

Andy Young is an experienced journalist and editor having made a start as a sports journalist with The Sun newspaper in the UK. Since then he’s worked in major newspaper and television...

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