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Micil Connemara Poitín is a small-batch Irish spirit made by a family distillery on the west coast of Ireland, reviving a tradition that predates Ireland's legal whiskey definition by centuries. If you've never heard of Poitín, that's exactly the point. This is the discovery pour of the year. |
This week's drop we're featuring a spirit that predates Irish whiskey as a legal category, spent over 300 years banned by the British crown, and is still being made today by the same family that kept the recipe alive for generations. Welcome to Poitín and to Micil Distillery in Connemara.
Last week we covered Jameson Black Barrel - the Irish whiskey built for bourbon drinkers. This week is for the curiousity tasters who want to go further.
Poitín (pronounced puh-CHEEN) is Ireland's original distilled spirit - an unaged grain or malt spirit that predates the legal definition of Irish whiskey and was made in Irish homes and hillsides for centuries before formal distillation laws existed.
The British Crown banned Poitín in 1661, making it illegal to produce without a license for over 300 years. That didn't stop people from making it. It drove production underground, into remote farmhouses and coastal villages, where families passed recipes down quietly through generations. Ireland legalized Poitín again in 1997, and the category has been slowly reemerging ever since — most visibly in the hands of small producers like Micil.
Think of it as the Irish equivalent of American moonshine, but with a longer documented history and a lot more cultural weight.
Micil Connemara Poitín is a small-batch spirit made by the Micil family distillery in Spiddal, County Galway, on the rugged west coast of Ireland.
The distillery is named after Micil Ó Confhaola, the great-great-grandfather of current distiller Pádraic Ó Griallais, who kept the family recipe alive through generations of prohibition. The Ó Confhaola family has been distilling Poitín in Connemara for at least five generations. What Pádraic has done is bring that tradition into a licensed, craft distillery context, preserving the spirit's character and historical roots without sanitizing what makes it interesting.
This is not a heritage brand built on marketing copy. The recipe is real, the family is real, and the coastline it comes from is as remote and rugged as the spirit itself.
Image Source: Micil Distillery
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Poitín was outlawed in Ireland in 1661 under British rule as part of a broader effort to tax and control distillation, and it remained illegal for 336 years until Ireland lifted the ban in 1997.
The ban was never about safety, it was about tax revenue and political control. Rural Irish communities, particularly in the west and northwest, continued producing it in secret because it was part of their culture, their economy, and their identity. Connemara, with its remote geography and Irish-speaking communities, was one of the regions where the tradition held strongest. Micil's family was among those who kept it going.
The 1997 legalization opened the door for producers like Micil to bring Poitín back into the open but the category remains almost entirely unknown in the American market, which is part of what makes this bottle so interesting right now.
Poitín is unlike anything else in the Irish spirits category; raw, grain-forward, and unapologetically alive.
Nose: Fresh barley, green apple, light floral notes, and a coastal minerality that's difficult to manufacture
Palate: Creamy grain sweetness, green herbs, subtle citrus peel, and a clean heat that builds gradually
Finish: Dry and earthy with lingering grain and a faint oceanic salinity
There's no barrel character here: no vanilla, no caramel, no oak. What you're tasting is the raw material: the grain, the water from the Connemara landscape, and the distillation itself. For drinkers who've spent time exploring single malt Scotch or unaged mezcal, this will feel immediately familiar in spirit, if not in flavor.
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Micil Poitín and Irish whiskey share the same island and many of the same raw materials, but they are fundamentally different spirits in process, history, and character.
Irish whiskey must be aged in wooden casks for a minimum of three years. Poitín carries no aging requirement; it comes off the still and goes straight to bottle. That absence of wood aging is what gives Poitín its raw, unfiltered character: brighter, more grain-forward, and more transparent than a matured whiskey. Where Irish whiskey is smooth and approachable by design, Poitín is immediate and honest. You taste the grain, the water, and the craft directly, without the softening influence of oak.
For anyone who's curious about the four stages of professional whiskey tasting, Poitín is one of the most instructive pours you can find - because without barrel influence, there's nowhere to hide.
At $35 to $45, Micil Poitín is one of the most genuinely interesting bottles you can add to a home bar right now, and almost nobody in your circle has tried it.
This isn't a bottle you recommend to someone who wants familiar comfort. It's the bottle you open when the conversation turns toward discovery. When someone asks what's different, what's interesting, what they haven't had before. The answer is this.
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