Indian trio in Scotland invent device to identify fake whisky
November 3rd, 2011 - 1:34 pm ICT by IANSLondon, Nov 3 (IANS) A team of three Indian researchers in Scotland have designed a laser test to identify fake whisky from genuine Scotch malt.
Praveen Ashok, Kishan Dholakia and Bavishna Praveen, physicists at St Andrews University, Scotland’s first university founded six centuries ago, said their test has made possible the development of a hand-held device that could test counterfeit drinks and deliver authoritative results within seconds, The Telegraph newspaper reported.
In the report published in the scientific journal Optics Express, the Indian researchers said the test could also establish the origin, cask type and age of a whisky — a skill few human palettes have mastered.
The device fires a micro-laser beam through a tiny drop of the suspect Scotch to establish its alcohol content and colour clarity.
The daily said their invention could save distilleries and bars millions of pounds in Asia, “where counterfeit whisky is big business” but knowledge of single malts is rare.
“Police in India and other Asian countries regularly uncover fake whisky rackets in which organised gangs buy empty bottles, print their own labels, and mix genuine Scotch with cheap local whiskies, or even whisky-flavoured rums, to pass them off as aged single malts,” it said.
The report said they have established the exact alcohol levels of several different whiskies of various ages, including Highland whiskies like Glenmorangie, Speysides like Macallan and peaty Islay drams like Ardbeg to compare them with potential impostors.
- Brit pensioner who has smoked 292,000 ciggies celebrates 100th b'day - Sep 25, 2010
- Telling real whisky from the fake - Jul 26, 2011
- Scotch whisky industry unaffected by recession - Jan 02, 2012
- Bottle of whisky auctioned for $460,000 - Nov 17, 2010
- Simpson tips 60 percent over bill - Jan 11, 2011
- World's oldest malt whiskey on sale in UK - Mar 12, 2010
- Cutty Sark launches blended malt scotch in Indian market - Jul 24, 2008
- Now, four, not ten-year-old malt whisky comes of age - Apr 19, 2009
- Nuke bomb tests can help to identify fake whisky - May 03, 2009
- Scotch makes 3.5 bn pounds in worldwide exports - Mar 31, 2011
- Single-malt Scotch whisky named world's best - Oct 25, 2011
- Illicit liquor manufacturing unit unearthed, six held - Feb 05, 2011
- Spurious Scotch lands six in Goa jail - Oct 04, 2011
- Macallan 50th anniversary whiskey sells for record 11,750 pounds - Aug 07, 2009
- 'Johnnie Walker favourite with counterfeiters in Goa' - Aug 04, 2010
Tags: alcohol content, alcohol levels, ardbeg, ashok, dholakia, distilleries, drams, empty bottles, impostors, indian researchers, kishan, laser beam, laser test, macallan, optics express, single malts, st andrews university, st andrews university scotland, tiny drop, whiskies