Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Gregg Wallace is in Ireland at an enormous liqueurs factory that produces 540,000 bottles a day.

Gregg Wallace is in Ireland at an enormous liqueurs factory that produces 540,000 bottles a day. He follows the production of cream liqueur from the arrival of maize to make Irish whiskey right through to dispatch of the finished liqueur. It is the show's longest ever production timeline, taking more than three years. Along the way, Gregg learns that it is the barrels whiskey is matured in that create around half of its flavour and discovers that a milk protein is the secret to mixing cream and whiskey together.

Meanwhile, Cherry Healey is at the plant where 85 per cent of Ireland’s bottles and jars are recycled. They process 500 tonnes every day. Cherry also investigates the science behind aperitifs. There is nothing special in these beverages that stimulates appetite - it is something common to all alcoholic drinks. Cherry puts it to the test with a team of rugby players and discovers they eat 8 per cent more – or an additional 320 calories – when alcohol is involved. Cherry is also getting a lesson in the rules of whiskey, learning that single malt must be made from 100 per cent malted barley from a single distillery, whereas bourbon must be 51 per cent maize, and blends can be the product of a mix of grains from different distilleries. The one thing they have in common is that they must be matured in wooden barrels for a minimum of three years in order to be called whiskey.

Historian Ruth Goodman is getting spiritual with the history of liqueurs. She learns that their origins are to be found a world away from funky downtown bars. She visits a former monastery and discovers that the drinks were invented by monks looking for the elixir of life. Ruth also visits a distillery in Ireland, where she learns that 100 years ago Irish whiskey held an astonishing 60 per cent of the global whisky market. Today, it is just 5 per cent. This drop was largely due to resistance to adopting the modern column still method of distillation.

59 minutes

Last on

Tue 28 Dec 2021 19:00

Music Played

  • David Guetta

    Titanium (feat. Sia)

  • David Guetta

    Titanium (feat. Sia)

  • Stereophonics

    C'est La Vie

  • MC Hammer

    U Can't Touch This

  • Yeah Yeah Yeahs

    Sacrilege

  • OutKast

    Hey Ya!

  • The Dave Brubeck Quartet

    Take Five

  • Link Wray

    Rumble

  • Foster the People

    Pumped Up Kicks

  • David Guetta

    I Can Only Imagine

  • James Yuill

    This is Sweet Love

  • Patrick Street

    Music For A Found Harmonium

  • Thin Lizzy

    Whiskey In The Jar

  • Kodaline

    Worth It

  • Little Mix

    Always Be Together

  • Little Mix

    Always Be Together

  • Avicii

    Fade Into Darkness

  • Ed Sheeran

    Castle On The Hill

  • The Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra & Mike Townend

    Star Trek

  • Khalid

    8Teen

  • Broken Bells

    After The Disco

  • Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros

    Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ

  • MK, Jonas Blue & Becky Hill

    Back And Forth

  • MARINA

    Froot

  • Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds

    The Man Who Built The Moon

  • MIKA

    Relax, Take It Easy

  • MIKA

    Relax

  • Focus

    House of the King

  • Jonas Blue

    Perfect Strangers

  • Franz Ferdinand

    Can't Stop

  • Take That

    Greatest Day

  • Lemon Jelly

    Homage to Patagonia

  • Vampire Weekend

    A-Punk

  • The Coral

    Dreaming Of You

  • Fatboy Slim

    Santa Cruz

  • Olly Murs

    Stick With Me

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Gregg Wallace
Presenter Cherry Healey
Presenter Ruth Goodman
Executive Producer Amanda Lyon
Executive Producer Sanjay Singhal
Series Producer Michael Rees
Production Manager Samara Friend
Production Company Voltage TV
Music Steve Tait
Actor Steve Bonser

Broadcasts

Featured in...

Learn more about the history of the factory and how it has evolved with an interactive from The Open University.

The fascinating stories behind the production of some of our favourite products.