Kástra Elión vodka is made from a blend of olives and wheat
Vodka has a reputation for being flavorless and neutral, and yet its popularity persists. Much of the marketing that drives the category is focused on lifestyle cachet, rather than aroma and taste. But this reputation is mostly outdated. Because while some brands, even a few of the best regarded, are distilled to the point of flavorlessness and lean into their neutrality, others are packing flavor and texture into each bottle. Some are even experimenting with base ingredients that go beyond the usual grains and potatoes.
Kástra Elión falls into this new crop of vodkas. It hails from Greece, where it’s made from a blend of Greek olives and wheat. It’s named for the ancient castle that stands guard over the hills and olive groves of Nafpaktos, the ancestral home to the vodka and the family that created it.
The brand was founded by master blender and certified flavor chemist Frank Mihalopoulos, who’s spent nearly four decades in product development for companies like Baskin Robbins, Dunkin Donuts and Kahlua, and has also consulted for spirits brands including Absolut and Stoli. He’s joined by co-founder and son-in-law, Mike Camello, who serves as the company’s president.
“We were vodka drinkers and interested in some of the European vodkas made using malted barley and rye, and those who were getting good texture in their vodkas,” says Camello. They thought: Why not try making a vodka from olives?
It took about a year for Mihalopoulos to make it work. He set up a lab and acquired distillation equipment, and began testing olive varieties from all over the world. “I didn’t want to be sentimentally attached to the story, but we settled on a three-variety blend that happens to come from the same region in Greece that I’m from.”
Kástra Martini |
It’s a craft process, and the yield loss is much higher than what most vodka distillers see, but Mihalopoulos explains that tight distillation cuts are necessary to eliminate all the heads and volatile compounds introduced by the olives.
Olives don’t contain a lot of sugar, so the ethanol in vodka comes from the grains. Mihalopoulos explains that the olives enhance the pre-existing qualities in the grain. They do not contribute any flavor to the vodka, and the company had no intentions of creating olive-flavored vodka. Instead, olives add to the vodka’s characteristic mouthfeel and smoothness. Before it is bottled, the distilled spirit is mixed with spring water from the mineral-rich Mount Taygetus in Greece.
The Kástra Elión vodka has a very clean smell, free from any chemical odors or strong alcohol sting. Its aroma is sweet and savory, with predominant scents of vanilla and butterscotch. The taste includes mild fruit notes, citrus, and a slight hint of pepper. The flavors linger on your tongue and stimulate the salivary glands, developing into stronger tastes of butterscotch, vanilla, and toasted bread.
Camello enjoys drinking Kástra Elión straight with olives, though he understands that not everyone prefers to sip vodka. Thankfully, it can be served well in Martinis. When presenting the vodka to bartenders, the brand hopes that they keep the drinks focused on the spirit and don’t overload it with sugar. “We want the vodka to shine and preserve its mouthfeel,” Camello expresses.
Kástra Elión recently launched its own olive brine and cocktail olives. They are available as individual items or in a kit with a bottle of vodka, designed to create the ultimate Dirty Martini. Both the brine and olives come from the same Nafpaktos region where the vodka is produced, enabling one to enjoy a full Greek, olive-centric take on the traditional cocktail.
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