Hard Drinkers, Lets Drink Hard (Spirits, Liquors and Cocktails)
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@SKT For starters,it’s near impossible to get it up North,for any price.The back story for this bottle is that it was aged on the lower/cooler level of the warehouse,which necessitated that it be aged for an additional 8 months,which is supposed to have had an effect on the taste,and if that wasn’t enough it was aged in some specially made barrel. I’m a sucker for a backstory,and since I preordered it,it was only $67 plus tax,which came out to $74 out the door. I haven’t had any Eagle Rare in years and I’d be lying if I said I recognized the taste. At the end of the day,I really wanted to like it ,and it really delivered. Made me glad that I got 2 bottles. Back to your original question…Buffalo Trace owns the brand,as they do Blantons/Pappy etc. I can’t imagine although I don’t know for sure,that they use the same mashbill for all of them. I’ve heard that Elmer T. Lee is like Baby Blantons. P. S. Just did a little googling and it seems that most believe that Eagle Rare and Buffalo Trace are the same mashbill,but all similarities end there.
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Go Eagles, too bad for suspension.
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Please forgive me if this is a stupid question, but it is genuinely something I’ve thought about a few times while reading this thread.. Why is it you guys in the US struggle to buy your own whiskeys? @Jett129
I purchased this bottle of Eagle Rare 10 at my local Tesco on a clubcard offer just before last Xmas for £29 and they had shelves full of it. It’s still widely available and even on Amazon.co.uk for £33. I might need to polish up on my geo-politics but it’s baffling how this can be shipped 4000 miles accross the planet and sold to us for almost half the price you guys are paying?
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@pechelman So is the price you pay inflated due to the scarcity? Meaning you would pay less than us if supply met demand? Also, do the profits from the inflated price go the vendor or the distiller?
It just seems like it would make more sense to not bother exporting it to sit on shelves in the UK and end up selling heavily discounted and save it for yourselves.
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@pechelman Crazy.. I’m noticing I’m putting stuff back on the shelves more and more these days when I realise I’m paying three times as much for it as I did 5 years ago.
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@DeeDee85 Also for reasons beyond my comprehension,some areas of the country get less,significantly less than others. If my local liquor store only gets 6 bottles,even if the MSRP is only about $40,he knows the scarcity of it in this area,and that people sell it for much more on the secondary market,so he jacks up the price,and he does not share the extra money with anyone.
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@goosehd I’m sad to say I’ve played my part in the Rolex scalping game, watches were sort of my OCD hobby which led into OCD Iron Heart purchasing..
I wore them and moved them on when i needed the funds. The fact you could make a bit of profit at the same time was a bonus. But eventually got black listed as a scalper with my local AD for listing a Submariner on eBay. I’d kind of fell out with it the whole thing by then due to the artificial scarcity anyway and there was Iron Heart to fill the OCD hole in my life just when I needed it
The whiskey scalping thing is entirely new to me but I did wonder why you guys seemed to struggle to get the whiskeys we can get at a discount here in the UK. -
@DeeDee85 As far as I know the only time you get to buy bourbon directly from the distillery is in their gift shop. Otherwise all their products are sent/sold to distributors in every state,who in turn distribute the bourbon to the liquor stores. Had to look this up,but Sazerac is the parent company that owns Buffalo Trace along with over 450 brands of spirits cocktails and related products all across the globe,so having their products all over the world is as important to them as the US market. Bourbon isn’t a big deal,or as big of a deal,at this time,as it is in the US,so it sits on the shelf’s in the UK. Let me know if you find any Pappy Van Winkle sitting on the shelf at list price.
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450 brands? Wow.. What is the list price for the Pappy Van Winkle? @Jett129
I’m guessing it’s not £1400 for the 15 year old and £2500 for the 20?that’s what they are coming up at here in the UK. Masterofmalt.com has let me set an email notification for an “arriving soon” bottle of 13 year old Pappy Van Winkle Rye for £200 which is a bit more realistic