Hi and welcome to whiskey! A place where we discuss, review, and read articles about whiskey. Any style goes, including Bourbon, Scotch, Rye, Wheat, Canadian, Irish, White Dogs, and everything in between. Please consult the guides and rules before posting
Rules
Be respectful of discourse
No Trading/Buying Alcohol
No Valuation/Dating Bottle Requests
No Advertising/Spam
No URL shorteners (bit.ly, tinyurl, etc)/Affiliate Links.
The Kentucky distillery's newest offering is a capsule of five different bottles that are recreations of those made in the days of "medicinal whiskey."
Hello, I received as a gift a beautiful glass carafe. Which bourbon would you fill it with? Are there any suggestions for example where the bottle makes nothing but the whiskey is good?
Nose: Delicate custards and marmalade. A citrus of bitter sort, with under-ripe figs.
Body: Rich honey over apricots and oranges. A light, English muffin sort of biscuit. As it goes on, a rich dark chocolate encroaches.
Finish: A bold, malty surprise. Loses nearly all the delicate fruit notes in favor of wheats and grains and fresh baked bread.
Activation: Really opens up some of the rich juicy fruits. Oranges, grapes, pears. Recommended.
Notes: I've always been fond of Compass Box, but they went through a phase for a while where seemingly every new limited release was (over) aged in a sherry cask. I'm glad to announce that Canvas breaks this pattern- in fact, there’s no sherry here at all! Just some Spanish orange wine, a be
So, I love me some smoky, peaty, briny Islay... but for a variety of reasons I'm looking for something without the booze. I'm not expecting a whole lot here, but hoping there's something better than what I've investigated so far.
Things I've looked at:
Teas. There are a couple (Edinburgh & Harney) that do reasonably well as a general 'lightly smoked tea with a hint of whiskey flavor,' probably the best option I've found. The Harney & Sons in particular has enough smoke to it, though it's more of a bourbon than a scotch, so nothing there for peat/brine.
Non-alcoholic spirits. For my nickel these are basically the same as teas, just dramatically more expensive- not on the level of a good bottle of scotch, but still a chunk of change for what's really flavored water. Some of them try to replicate the ethanol burn with peppercorn or capsaicin, which is interesting, but I've not found one that really excites me.
Extract. Yet to actually try this, it'll be here next week. At best I c
Distiller: Bear Face Product: Elementally Aged Bottle: Triple Oak Category:
Canadian Aged: 7 years in ex-bourbon American oak barrels, then finished in
French oak red wine casks and air-dried virgin Hungarian oak. Nose: Thick with
caramel, butterscotch, and call me crazy but is that maple syrup? Bod...
Just turned 21 and my father is the only whiskey enthusiast I know personally. But he's into some really expensive and "acquired" tasting bourbons. From my limited googling, Jameson is the way to go? I only really have had Evan Williams from my college days