Hard Drinkers, Lets Drink Hard (Spirits, Liquors and Cocktails)
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I looked it up on their website and they’re selling it for $199. It’s a 5year old which is a little young for me and the 115 proof is definitely going to bring the heat. It’s identical, as far as proces,to what Woodford Reserve do to get their Double Oaked,which is delicious and about $50 a bottle in the US. A lot of bourbons/whiskeys win awards at these events. The problem is you don’t know who they competed against. Good Luck!
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Makers Mark goes for $59.99 but you can find it for sale at $49 - $54. As to my favourite bourbon so far: Blantons. Been drinking it for the last 15 years…I bought bottles at duty free stores and whenever I could find them on sale. I may have a lifetime’s supply (about 10 bottles squirrelled away).
…and I still haven’t spelled Blanton’s yet with the tops…
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I love Blantons, but sadly haven’t been able to get it for a reasonable price in years. When I have seen it the price has been close to $200 a bottle. Last time I bought it I paid $46,and that was in 2014. Do you have any of the gold top bottles or the straight from the Barrel Blantons?
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The whole gambit: Gold top, silver top, straight from the barrel. Best place to buy it was duty free stores, but I haven’t travelled in two years. The price used to be great as you mentioned, but then went through the roof here. It’s $70 here (regular bottle) when/if you can find it.
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Hah late to the party but that bourbon is trying way too hard. It could be fantastic but the packaging is over the top IMO.
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The classics are classic for a reason
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How is it? I haven’t have many samples and haven’t bought. Too rich for my blood but really not bad for what it is
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I haven’t tried it yet,and my nephew ,who sent me the video,is super excited that I got it. I’ve been his introduction to Mezcal,and he’s taken to it like a duck to water.He’s currently in Grad school in Holland,and will be back in December. I might wait for him to get back before I try it. Will let you know when I try it.
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I kind of wish I hadn’t passed on some Mexicana of theirs I saw for a decent price. I may see if they still have it!
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@sabergirl If you get a chance to try either of these, they were some of the best Mezcals I've ever had! The Pal'alma was absolutely mind blowing. A newly found friend had just returned from a Mezcal tasting trip in Mexico with these:
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Finally watching now. Thank you! Logging my thoughts as I watch.
To be majorly nitpicky, it starts with a bit of an inaccurate generalization, implying that mezcal is always cooked in a horno in the form of an underground, earthen pit oven. It’s a little confusing, because the term mezcal is both a superset of all agave spirits, including tequila, and a registered DOM. But there are mezcals that use other methods to cook the piñas, as is common on a few states such as San Luis Potosí, where they use autoclaves as they do for tequila in Jalisco. It is not always smoky as they mention because it is not always cooked the same way.
It was fascinating to see what looked like arroqueño and other long, narrow piñas mixed in to the same horno as what could have been espadin piñas. I never thought that they might mix varietals in the same roast, though they certainly do that in the distilling process with ensambles. I would have assumed the different varieties had different cooking requirements so that was interesting to see.
While the growth rate in popularity didn’t surprise me (at low scales a growth rate being extreme is to be expected), it was sobering to hear that the US market had already surpassed Mexico’s 3 years ago. I’m not sure how long we will have some of the wild cultivars around, like my favorite, Tepeztate. So far no one has figured out how to cultivate them, the gestation periods can be decades, and no maguey renews seasonally: once you harvest the piña, it’s gone. So enjoy them while you can, as a lot of these will get very expensive and then be very gone. I’ve seen what look like agave plants in the Mediterranean, so maybe production can continue to expand our side of the ancestral home.
Very sad that some producers don’t even want to be associated with the term “mezcal” given what they’ve done with the DOM. You can see how special this spirit is to these producers, and to see their government and outside influences come in and impact it in such a way, while exploiting them, is a terrible thing to see. Same old story of corruption and cronyism hurting the little guy to the benefit of wealthier and more powerful entities. I have tried to find producer owned labels but they are difficult to find. There are a few like Dixeebe and I hope more of them find success and make it to the US. You see how hard these people work in these videos and for foreign businesses to pay them pennies on the dollar for all that sweat equity and the sacred output of it is so vile. But none of that was new to me. I want my money going to the producers, not middlemen who have inserted themselves into the picture to exploit them.
Interesting to learn about the ways the plants protect themselves, from thorns that work their way into you to toxins. Hardy beasts!
I didn’t know they used waste product as an insulator in the horno and for cleaning bottles and floors. For a process that is often unsustainable beyond what I mentioned about harvesting (e.g., wastewater and what they called inquiche traditionally has been dumped into streams, where it can contaminate the water table and damage farmland’s ability to produce), it is good to hear of this reuse. There is a company down there that is forming bricks to be used for construction out of waste products (Sombra, which I think is another one of these sort of colonial enterprises started by a white American, but at least they’re looking at a sustainable practice).
Love Satan the horse
Amazing that mosquitos infest the fermentation tank and I loved how that fact filled the producer with mirth.
All in all a terrific video, thank you for the share @Jett129