
American peat bogs have a more biodiversity than their Scottish counterparts.
How One Craft Distiller Is Making Single Malt With American Peat
December 18, 2017 –––––– Whisky Advocate
"We make single malt in Seattle because we have the perfect climate for barley, peat, and oak trees,” says Matt Hofmann, master distiller and co-founder of Westland Distillery. When he set out to make a peated single malt whisky, however, he ran into trouble immediately. “Nobody in the U.S. knew how to make peated malt,” admits Hofmann. Peat was never used as a fuel in the Pacific Northwest like in Scotland: no need, there are plenty of forests. As a workaround, he imported heavily peated malt from Bairds Malts in Scotland.In 2016, Hofmann partnered with Skagit Valley Malting to make peated malt on (and from) American soil. “We filled 70 casks which we are pretty ecstatic about,” he grins. “We just tasted the stuff that has been in cask for 5 or 6 months. It's much less medicinal, and a little bit spicier compared to the Bairds peat [used in current bottlings of Westland Peated].”