Not So Neat: Why You Should Add Water to Your Whiskey

Not So Neat: Why You Should Add Water to Your Whiskey lead image
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(Inside Science) -- Many whiskey drinkers know the trick: add a small amount of water to your liquor to improve its aroma and flavor. It’s counterintuitive, though, since water usually dilutes the taste of food and drink. But researchers from Sweden now say they can explain why it works in liquor.
Before aging, distilled malt Scotch whisky, for example, is about 70 percent alcohol by volume. Some of the alcohol evaporates, and as the whisky ages in wooden barrels, it drops down to about 55 to 65 percent alcohol. When it’s ready to be bottled, distillers add water, typically diluting the whisky to about 40 percent alcohol by volume.
“People claim that’s when you get a dramatic change in the taste and smell of whiskey,” said Björn Karlsson
If that’s not enough, some whiskey drinkers add another splash of water into their glass before sipping. According to connoisseurs, adding water opens up the drink, giving it fuller, more complex flavors.
Whiskey is indeed a complex liquid. While water and alcohol, namely ethanol, are the primary components, there are hundreds -- if not thousands -- of other chemical compounds that give whiskey its range of tastes and aromas. And the factors that affect those flavors -- such as dilution -- are complicated.
Whiskeys often contain molecules called fatty acid esters, and the addition of water causes those molecules to clump together into spheres called micelles. Scientists have hypothesized that the round chemical structures change the flavor because they trap certain flavor compounds, preventing them from evaporating and reaching the smell receptors in your nose or touching the taste receptors on your tongue. By masking these compounds, extra water changes the flavor of the whiskey.
But Karlsson wasn’t convinced. Many kinds of whiskeys don’t have enough fatty acid esters to form micelles, he said.
Curious for a better explanation, he and Ran Friedman
Because guaiacol and ethanol share similar properties, they associate with each other. Both molecules have one part that’s attracted to water and another part that’s repelled by it. So to avoid contact with water, ethanol gathers at the surface -- and so does guaiacol. At the surface, the guaiacol is more likely to touch your tongue or evaporate into your nose.
Diluting whiskey, then, may simply make flavor compounds like guaiacol more readily available to be sniffed, sipped and savored.
This explanation, published today in the journal Scientific Reports
But because whiskey is so chemically complex, it’s likely that this is one of multiple reasons why dilution enhances flavor, said Eric Simanek
And while the researchers simulated a wide range of dilution levels, it doesn’t explain the effect of adding a tiny amount of water, as some whiskey aficionados do. “What the paper doesn’t address is this phenomenon when you add just a single drop -- the slightest dilutions and the impact that has on flavor and perception,” Simanek said.
Still, he noted, the new work adds invaluable insight to understanding whiskey. “It’s a new way to look at the whole problem,” he said. “I find it delightful.”