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#21
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On Sep 21, 12:14*pm, George Cleveland
wrote: So my question to the ROFFians here is what else is there that is tasty and less than $50/bottle? Anyone have a favorite? Does this make me another elite, snobbish, flyfishing poseur, the kind I used to pity and mock? And how should I feel about that? Geo. C. * Plenty have gone before me, Geo. but there are a LOT of whiskys for less than $50 a bottle. I'd suggest, without becoming too elitist or snobbish, just cruise your local duty free next time you fly, and take a chance. Some of my favorite bottles, before I got inexorably and inevitably tangled up in name recognition and Jackson's Whisky Book ratings, were products of unknown little mock distilleries. It might be easier to ask what is worth avoiding rather than what's worth targeting...the list is considerably shorter. As a whisky beginner, I'd avoid any of the peatier Islays (BTW, if your talking to the seller, its pronounced "EYE-luh", not "eye-LAY"). That includes some well-bantered brands such as Lagavulin, Laphroaig, Bowmore, Bruichladdich, Bunnahabhain and Coal Ila. These are excellent brands, but unless your palate is ready for the salt and peat, they might have too much character for you. Of course, I could be entirely wrong...try a few drams and see if they appeal to you. My own palate wanders around fiercely, but if I were to have only one bottle on the shelf, it would not be an Islay. My suggestion: start with a least-pricey Speyside or Highland. These tend to be more 'feathery' and easier to drink, especially when cut with cold water (the distillers suggest 1:1, although that seems to be a bit watered down for me: I tend to cut it to 1 part water to 3 parts whisky. Again, the only criteria...beyond price, beyond name recognition, and beyond snob factor....is if you like it. And if you find yourself acquiring several bottles of under-$50 whisky that you picked up and really were not enamored with, then consider that you are merely stocking your cabinet for a later time when your tastes change. YMMV, of course. --riverman |
#22
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On Sun, 27 Sep 2009 05:22:31 -0700 (PDT), riverman wrote:
On Sep 26, 10:05*pm, wrote: In the 10-15 year pairings I am partial to the following in order - Highland Park 12, I'm surprised no one picked up on this... :-) Um, well, for one thing, I didn't write any such thing for anyone to "pick up"... HTH, R --riverman |
#23
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On Sep 27, 8:38*pm, wrote:
On Sun, 27 Sep 2009 05:22:31 -0700 (PDT), riverman wrote: On Sep 26, 10:05*pm, wrote: In the 10-15 year pairings I am partial to the following in order - Highland Park 12, I'm surprised no one picked up on this... :-) Um, well, for one thing, I didn't write any such thing for anyone to "pick up"... HTH, R --riverman Yeah, chalk that up to lazy editing. My bad...it wasn't you who said that. You were just unlucky enough to be on the first line of the source tags. Still, you missed an easy one. :-) --riverman |
#24
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On Sep 27, 7:36*am, riverman wrote:
On Sep 21, 12:14*pm, George Cleveland wrote: So my question to the ROFFians here is what else is there that is tasty and less than $50/bottle? Anyone have a favorite? Does this make me another elite, snobbish, flyfishing poseur, the kind I used to pity and mock? And how should I feel about that? Geo. C. * Plenty have gone before me, Geo. but there are a LOT of whiskys for less than $50 a bottle. I'd suggest, without becoming too elitist or snobbish, just cruise your local duty free next time you fly, and take a chance. Some of my favorite bottles, before I got inexorably and inevitably tangled up in name recognition and Jackson's Whisky Book ratings, were products of unknown little mock distilleries. It might be easier to ask what is worth avoiding rather than what's worth targeting...the list is considerably shorter. As a whisky beginner, I'd avoid any of the peatier Islays (BTW, if your talking to the seller, its pronounced "EYE-luh", not "eye-LAY"). That includes some well-bantered brands such as Lagavulin, Laphroaig, Bowmore, Bruichladdich, Bunnahabhain and Coal Ila. These are excellent brands, but unless your palate is ready for the salt and peat, they might have too much character for you. Of course, I could be entirely wrong...try a few drams and see if they appeal to you. My own palate wanders around fiercely, but if I were to have only one bottle on the shelf, it would not be an Islay. My suggestion: start with a least-pricey Speyside or Highland. These tend to be more 'feathery' and easier to drink, especially when cut with cold water (the distillers suggest 1:1, although that seems to be a bit watered down for me: I tend to cut it to 1 part water to 3 parts whisky. Again, the only criteria...beyond price, beyond name recognition, and beyond snob factor....is if you like it. And if you find yourself acquiring several bottles of under-$50 whisky that you picked up and really were not enamored with, then consider that you are merely stocking your cabinet for a later time when your tastes change. YMMV, of course. --riverman I've heard that a boy can get some pretty good fares from Tomah to Black River Falls these days. g. course, that's prolly just hearsay. |
#25
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On 26 Sep, 04:30, wrote:
On Sep 21, 12:14*am, George Cleveland wrote: So my question to the ROFFians here is what else is there that is tasty and less than $50/bottle? Anyone have a favorite? The Knappogue Castle is an Irish Single Malt WhiskEy while Laphroaig is a Single Malt Scotch Whisky (no "e"). There are distinct differences between the two other than the insertion of the vowel before the "y". The malts of Scotland are distilled in different areas of the country and have distinct characteristics. In case you haven't heard, there's now a Welsh whisky, a single malt called Penderyn, to go with the Scotch and the Irish. Details at www.welsh-whisky.co.uk. No "e". Described as "dangerously smooth"... Limited supply, so probably more than $50 a bottle. It's about £30 in the UK. -- Nogood Boyo |
#26
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On Sep 28, 7:11*pm, Nogood Boyo wrote:
In case you haven't heard, there's now a Welsh whisky, a single malt called Penderyn, to go with the Scotch and the Irish. *Details atwww.welsh-whisky.co.uk. *No "e". *Described as "dangerously smooth"... *Limited supply, so probably more than $50 a bottle. *It's about £30 in the UK. 79.99 at Sam's Wine and Spirits in Chicago (no relation to Sam's Club) |
#27
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#28
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On Mon, 28 Sep 2009 21:25:37 -0600, rw wrote:
wrote: On Sep 28, 7:11 pm, Nogood Boyo wrote: In case you haven't heard, there's now a Welsh whisky, a single malt called Penderyn, to go with the Scotch and the Irish. Details atwww.welsh-whisky.co.uk. No "e". Described as "dangerously smooth"... Limited supply, so probably more than $50 a bottle. It's about £30 in the UK. 79.99 at Sam's Wine and Spirits in Chicago (no relation to Sam's Club) Hmmm. £30 should be about $48 (@ 1 GBP = $1.59 USD). Sam's Wine and Spirits in Chicago, and maybe Uncle Sam or the State of Illinois or the city of Chicago, are taking a nice 67% cut off retail in the UK. THAT'S OUTRAGEOUS!! Especially after the good folks at FedEx shipped it over to Chicago for free, the payment methods involved were gracious enough to exchange with commission, the local distributor waived their commission, etc., etc., etc. HTH, R ....OTOH, it's probably yet another crooked Illernoise pol trying to raise cash to buy a Senate seat or something... |
#29
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On 29 Sep, 04:25, rw wrote:
wrote: On Sep 28, 7:11 pm, Nogood Boyo wrote: In case you haven't heard, there's now a Welsh whisky, a single malt called Penderyn, to go with the Scotch and the Irish. *Details atwww.welsh-whisky.co.uk. *No "e". *Described as "dangerously smooth"... *Limited supply, so probably more than $50 a bottle. *It's about £30 in the UK. 79.99 at Sam's Wine and Spirits in Chicago (no relation to Sam's Club) Hmmm. £30 should be about $48 (@ 1 GBP = $1.59 USD). *Sam's Wine and Spirits in Chicago, and maybe Uncle Sam or the State of Illinois or the city of Chicago, are taking a nice 67% cut off retail in the UK. I should have mentioned that £30 retail in the UK includes excise duty and sales tax (VAT), which wouldn't apply to exports. The UK retail price excluding duty and VAT would be about £20. Cheap whisky in the UK is about £10, inc duty and taxes (70cl). -- Nogood Boyo |
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