Ireland 2025 – Day 3

We started the day by leaving our hotel in central cork and heading towards Midleton for the Midleton Distillery tour (ie where Jameson is made).

Our tour guide was great, and I learned a lot. Here are the main facts from the tour…

-Difference between malt whisky and Irish whisky is that the former just uses grinded malted barley, while Irish uses malted and unmalted barley

-Difference between beer and whisky is that distilling brings the alcohol from 20% (beer) to 40%

-Shoveling the coal to the wash still was the 2nd hardest job (but required skill because they had to slowly increase the temperature)

-Pot still vs continuous distillation…

—Pot still distillation, the beer gets boiled at 78 degrees and rises as vapor. When it cools down the first time, it becomes x %. Doing this two more times brings it up to 84%. This known as triple distillation (how red breast and others are made). These are more full. Bodies whiskies.

—For continuous distillation, I think it doesn’t turn back to liquid, and uses steam somehow to bring the alcohol overage up. Whisky from this process is more light. 

—Mixing in continuous distillation and pot still distillation is how Jameson is made. This is also known as blended whisky

-By Irish law, you need to store it in a barrel for 3 years

-They also produce gin, using some herbal flowers

-For barrels, the use some from America (from the bourbon barrels… and by definition bourbons can only use barrels once, which is why they ship them to Ireland) (notes from American barrels are vanilla). They also use Spanish sherry barrels (fruits notes), and from Porto, 

-Barrels are kept in untouched temperatures. Slight warmer in summary, and colder in winter

-Before putting it to the barrel they need to add water to bring the alcohol from 84% to 64%

-Straight from the barrel is known as cask strength (and alcohol percentage is usually higher since they don’t dilute it????)

-Angel share is the term used when the whisky liquids reduces over time in the barrel (but it gets more flavor the longer it is in the barrel).

At the end of the tour, we had a tasting of regular Jameson, Greenspot, and Redbreast 12. Actually liked Greenspot the best. Liked the Redbreast the least since I thought it tasted like bourbon.

After the tour we did the premium whisky tasting as well. We had a Jameson black barrel, Powers, Redbreast 15, and Middleton 2024 Rare. Liked the Middleton the best, followed by the Redbreast 15, then the Jameson, then the Powers (this one was not fruity at all).

After the tour, I ended up bottling my own Jameson black barrel cask strength (can only get this barrel at this distillery).

Then we got food at this restaurant close by:

Ferrit & Lee

Before leaving Midleton we walked around the downtown area. A mix between Aberlour, but more businesses.

From there, headed towards Dublin. We did stop by Rock of Cashel (which looks like a Castle). According to Google AI “The Rock of Cashel, often mistakenly called Cashel Castle, is a historic site in County Tipperary, Ireland, with a rich history spanning centuries. It was the seat of the Kings of Munster before becoming a significant religious center. While not a traditional castle, it features a complex of medieval buildings, including a cathedral, Cormac’s Chapel, and a round tower.“  And it was said that St Patrick converted the King to Catholicism.

From there headed straight to Dublin. First dropped off the rental car at the the Avis downtown, then checked into our hotel at Radisson Blu Royal.

After, we checked out this Michelin recommended restaurant, called Spitalfields. Details here:

Spitalfields

Then checked out the nightlife in Dublin. Pubs and bars usually close at 1am. “Late night” places like nightclubs close at 2:30 or 3am.

We first visited The Stag’s Head on Dame St to see some comedy. Unfortunately Gunther a bit too late (around 11:30), but still was able to get drinks and listen to some Irish music downstairs. This area in general has lots of nightlife (bars/pubs/clubs).

We then went to Izakaya, where they were playing house-ish EDM music on the lower level, and more main stream at the main level. They are open late. They also are Japanese and serve Toki highballs.

After, checked out the Temple Bar area (yes it’s an area), but went into the actually bar where they had something similar to a piano bar, but with a guitar. Got a Macallan 12 there.

We then checked out an area close by (not sure if it’s name) where there are other dance clubs: Wigwam (this one was sold out), Yamamori (friend did not feel like checking it out, but would have wanted to check out the vibe), and The Grand Social (closes at 1am, and really seems like a pub).

For G areas, the Pawn Shop, and club next to it seem like good candidates (and they’re open at least till 3am). Pawn shop is known for their electronic music in general.

Last area we went to was Camden St. it was happening, but we might have been too late since it was already 2:15am. This is where we ended the night.

Ireland 2025 – Day 2

First part of the day was going around the Ring of Kerry (recommended stop we followed were mainly from chatGPT). We started at our hotel in Killarney, The Lake Hotel, and drove 15 minutes south to our first stop, Torc Waterfall. After parking we followed the yellow trail to get to the waterfall. It was a moderate hike in terms of elevation, but definitely recommend doing it. Waterfall was also a good view. The area in general is a good area for hiking trails (and is part of the Killarney National Park).

We then headed to the next recommend stop, Ladies View. It was a quick stop of a high scenic view of the lakes. Worth the stop.

The third stop was Moll’s Gap. Definitely worth skipping (nothing really to see).

Fourth stop was at a town called Sneem. Main attractions are the scultpure park and the bridge. I would say it’s optional to stop by, but would recommend getting lunch there if you hadn’t eaten yet.

Next stop was Kerry Cliffs (which itself is slightly off the Ring of Kerry. It’s in the Skellig Ring). Definitely recommend visiting it for the views.

Next we visited one other site that was off the Ring of Kerry, Valencia Island, to view the Tetrapod footprints (the animals were supposedly one of the first animals to set foot on land on earth, and they are 1 meter long)). Not sure if it was worth the detour, since not sure if the footprints were real.

Last stop was Roseebeigh beach. Not worth the stop (just a plain beach).

In summary, the must sees are the Torc Waterfall, Kerry Cliffs, and Ladies view. The skippable ones are Moll’s Gap and Rossbeigh beach. If there is a next time might spend 20 minutes hanging out in Glenbeigh along the way. And might try and do the west most European islands, Skellig Michael. Also, fyi, driving the ring is pretty intense because half the time the roads do not fit two cars (you have to give way to people coming on the opposite side).

Afterwards, we headed for a 2 hour drive to our hotel in Cork, the Clayton Cork Hotel, located in the center of the city.

Soon after arriving we had a reservation at a seafood restaurant a block away called Goldie. Details here:

Goldie

In terms of exploring the city for nightlife, you basically have Oliver Plunkett St happening with lots of bars and pubs. St Patrick St is filled with shops, and has the classic Burger King open late. For a touristy Irish dive bar with folk music, we churches out Sin E (recommended by a waitress). It is small, but there was Irish music. For electronic music, Resident Advisor said an event with Katie Butler (no Spotify and many sound cloud accounts with the same name) was happening at Dali. Music was all over the electronic spectrum, but ended up staying there for 1 hour. Crowd was my scene 😉

FYI the above is mainly around the St Patrick neighborhood. There is also the Victorian Quarter as well as others that would be good to visit next time.