Whiskey Review: Wild Turkey Forgiven

I sometimes wonder what my grandmother would think to know that multiple people at my liquor store know me by name the minute I walk in. Would she approve? Would she be sad? 

Should I be?

Not when they say: "Eric, it's in," the moment I open the door, I shouldn't. 

A month or so ago, I was talking to the assistant manger at my local store. We were talking bourbon, like we do every time we are both there. He was telling me about all the new products he was getting in. I'd heard of most of them and had varying levels of interest. There was one though that I was really interested in. I'd heard rumors on twitter of a blend of rye and bourbon whiskies that Wild Turkey was going to put out. It turns out that this was one of the ones he was getting in. He just didn't know when.

Now, Minnesota is normally not on the early list for getting new whiskies, I usually get to see blog posts about them to whet my anticipation. This time though, he thought he'd be getting it in within a couple weeks. And joy of joys, he offered to pull one and hold it for me. 

After stopping in a few times over the course of the month to see if it had arrived, today was the day. "Eric. It's in," the lady behind the counter called to me when I opened the bright red door and walked into the store.

"It is?" I countered. "Well, that's why I stopped in!" Of course, while she grabbed the bottle, I asked the store manager who happened to be standing nearby if he could get me a bottle of the Four Roses 2013 Limited Edition Small Batch. 

I'm never satisfied, it seems.

Wild Turkey Forgiven

Stats: This is a blend of bourbon and rye straight whiskies. It is bottled at 45.5% ABV. It has a nice toffee color in the glass. The bottle is the same shape as their Rare Breed bourbon and comes in a nice embossed paper and metal tube shaped box.

Nose: Initially caramel, then after a while I get a floral scent and faint black pepper.

Mouth: My first note from after my first sip just reads: "SPICY!" If you hold it in your mouth while trying to tease out it's flavor, it tingles. After spending a little more time with it, I'm hit with cinnamon and a hint of vanilla. But this isn't an overly sweet whiskey.

Finish: Tannic bitterness which fades into a peppery tingle.

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Overall: I like this whiskey a lot. Wild Turkey Forgiven is a tasty whiskey. It is not, however, an easy-drinking, card-playing whiskey. This is kind of an aggressive whiskey and wants you to devote your full attention to it.

 

Head-to-head review: Elijah Craig 12 Year vs. Elijah Craig Barrel Proof

Ever have one of those days where you know you really should come home from work and drink bourbon, but aren't sure that you want to?

...

No?

Normally I don't either. But today...today I was tired. Tired and hungry. And a little cranky. And did I mention hungry? I mean, analyzing a bit of bourbon means pushing supper off so you can save your taste buds for the finding of all those flavors in the bourbons. 

It's been a while since I did an analytical tasting. You can tell because these thoughts were actually going through my head at first. I was looking at it as if it were something I had to do not something I should want to do.

But that's the beauty of bourbon. Pouring the samples, nosing them. Making notes along the way... yeah I got right back into it. Irritation? Gone. Hunger...still there, but manageable. Bourbon? Oh yeah. It smelled so good.

I've been doing a lot more beer drinking this summer than I have bourbon drinking. But tonight I realized again why I love bourbon. I love the smell. I love the way it hits you like a wave of sweetness that is a mix of caramel, vanilla and tannins. I love how it feels when you breathe in after you swallow, how the air cools your tongue and the burn lingers in your throat. I love that every bourbon is similar, yet different. They are all speaking the same language, but the dialect is different. 

Oh geesh, think of the difference between someone from Minnesooota, like me, don'tcha know...and...someone from Chahlston, South Carallina, where I might, someday, move. 

They both speak English, but you'd know they were different. Bourbon is the same way. Each one is similar, but each one is a variation on the theme. 

I love that!

And as a continuation of the theme of similar, yet different, tonight I decided to taste two that are supposedly the same except for proof. Elijah Craig 12 year and Elijah Craig Barrel Proof. These are supposed to be exactly the same, but at they are different proofs. Does it make a difference. Yeah, yoo betcha. I didn't do it blind tonight because, if you've ever seen Elijah Craig Barrel Proof you know it's as dark as a cup of coffee. You'd know them apart just by looking at them.

Elijah Craig 12 Year

Color: Amber in color as are most bourbons.

Nose: At first sniff, this hits with a alcohol burn to the nostrils. After that, it reminds me most of standing in the aging warehouse at Heaven Hill's Bourbon Heritage Center. It smells like oak and dust and bourbon. Digging just a little deeper I get some toffee and a clove/allspice scent.

Mouth: This has a vague sweetness. Carmel, vanilla, etc. But there is also some oak and a bit of spice. Not a one-note wonder.

Finish: dry, tannic with a bit of a burn.

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Overall: I like this, but just barely. It's not bad by any means, but it's trending a bit too hot and dry for my tastes. Not so far outside the realm that it's meh, but it's the closest like to a meh, I've ever given.

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof

Color: this is brown. Like cup of coffee brown.

Nose:  Very sweet and much less burn than the regular release. I'm getting a buttery baked apple loaded with cinnamon and warm brown sugar.

Mouth: Very sweet with some spicy clove. A bit fruity on the tip of the tongue. 

Finish: sweet again with a warmth that sits right over your heart for minutes. After my first swallow, I got a burst of a burn coming back up my throat.

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Overall: Hoo momma, this is strong. I recommend water. But don't water it down to the 94 proof of the regular release, that's a bit much. But when not adding any, I burned out my tongue pretty quick. This one is really good. 

I was curious so I added water to bring it down to about 95 proof. On the nose, the alcohol burn came back but it was fruitier with bigger clove/allspice than either of them right out of the bottle. The taste just fell apart. Though, my mouth was plenty burned out by this point so who knows.

These are both good, but for my money I'd go barrel proof if you can find it anywhere.

Exploring Bourbon Myths

Bourbon is fascinating. There are rules, regulations, international treaties, books, magazines, television and blogs that all talk about it. It's a bit of history in a glass. It's at the same time very simple and amazingly complex. Is it any wonder that people are confused? 

Myths abound, but sometimes it's nice to have a little clarity as to which are true, which are plausible and which are false. The myths that follow are ones that I've run across in the wild recently. I've done research to find the truth of the matter as I see it. But for each I'm relying on my interpretation of the regulations as they are published or a historian's interpretation of primary sources (as I do not have access to them myself). As more information is discovered or new laws are made, I might be proved right or wrong. Laws and histories, like bourbon are both very simple and amazingly complex.

Myth 1

"It can only be called bourbon if it's made in Bourbon County." Or more expansively "...in Kentucky."

It seems that I hear some version of this every time I start talking bourbon with someone new. And the fact of the matter is that this is simply not true. As far as the federal government is concerned bourbon can be made any where in the United States. 

The US government's Code of Federal Regulations has an entire section devoted to the labeling and advertisement of distilled spirits, including a subpart known as the Standards of Identity which defines what each spirit is or is not. For example, Scotch Whisky is listed as: "a distinctive product of Scotland, manufactured in Scotland in compliance with the laws of the United Kingdom." Canadian Whisky is listed as: "a distinctive product of Canada, manufactured in Canada in compliance with the laws of Canada." Irish Whisky is "whisky which is a distinctive product of Ireland, manufactured either in the Republic of Ireland or in Northern Ireland, in compliance with their laws regulating the manufacture of Irish whisky." You get the picture. 

Now for bourbon whisky the entire definition is as follows: "“Bourbon whisky”, “rye whisky”, “wheat whisky”, “malt whisky”, or “rye malt whisky” is whisky produced at not exceeding 160° proof from a fermented mash of not less than 51 percent corn, rye, wheat, malted barley, or malted rye grain, respectively, and stored at not more than 125° proof in charred new oak containers; and also includes mixtures of such whiskies of the same type."

You notice there is no mention of a place of origin at all. Not Kentucky, not even the US as a whole. For that you need to look at the various trade agreements that the United States has with other nations. A good example of this is NAFTA, which in Chapter 3, Annex 313: Distinctive Products defines bourbon as follows: "Canada and Mexico shall recognize Bourbon Whiskey and Tennessee Whiskey, which is a straight Bourbon Whiskey authorized to be produced only in the State of Tennessee, as distinctive products of the United States. Accordingly, Canada and Mexico shall not permit the sale of any product as Bourbon Whiskey or Tennessee Whiskey, unless it has been manufactured in the United States in accordance with the laws and regulations of the United States governing the manufacture of Bourbon Whiskey and Tennessee Whiskey."

As you can see this one is false. That doesn't mean that most of the bourbon isn't made in Kentucky. It just means that there is no reason (other than inertia, tradition and possibly terroir) why it happens to be that way.

Myth 2

"Bourbon is named after Bourbon County, KY"

If you've ever been on a distillery tour in Kentucky, you've probably heard a version of this. It's pervasive, it's a source of local pride. It might even be true. Maybe. But we very probably will never know for sure. People in the Ohio River valley in the early 1800's had a hard enough time just scraping out a living. It's hard to fault them for not taking the time to document why the whiskey they were making was being called what it was. It was enough to know that it was called bourbon. 

Enter the internet. Enthusiasts today have casual access to more knowledge than any scholar had throughout history. And, of course, we use that casual access to knowledge to drill down and explore the options (argue about) such hard hitting topics as "where did bourbon get it's name?"

There are a couple of conflicting theories about this. In chapter 3 of his book, Bourbon, Straight: the Uncut and Unfiltered Story of American Whiskey, Chuck Cowdery tells the story of American settlers moving into the part of Virginia known as Bourbon County (after the French royal family and the part that would eventually become Kentucky) and starting to make whiskey from the native corn they grew there. He goes on to state that "when the region was divided into smaller counties, the region continued to be known as 'Old Bourbon' and the corn whiskey made there came to be known as 'Old Bourbon Whiskey." (1)

A variant of this that I've heard on tours is that the whiskey was shipped to New Orleans in barrels marked with the port of departure "Bourbon County" and that as it traveled south on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers it mellowed and took on the red hew of the aged bourbons we are familiar with today. They then fell in love with it and clamored for some more of that Bourbon County Whiskey, eventually shortening it to Bourbon whiskey. There's a problem with this variant though and that brings us to another prominent theory. 

In his book, Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey: An American Heritage, Michael Veach tells us that while there was trade between the ports of Kentucky and New Orleans, there wouldn't have been enough to catch the attention of New Orleanians and more importantly, the ports were not in Bourbon County while that trade was happening so they would be unlikely to have been labeled as such. Veach posits just the opposite theory, that people traveling the river out of New Orleans fell in love with the spirit while on Bourbon Street and asked for some more of that "Bourbon Street whiskey." Eventually abbreviating it to bourbon whiskey as well. (2)

Veach does not dismiss the Bourbon name for Bourbon County connection out of hand though. He also mentions that it is entirely possible that a bunch of clever marketers noticed it and it stuck. Having worked in marketing for over a decade, this is the one I'm most inclined to believe. You can make people believe almost anything if you throw enough money at it and tell it to them often enough. 

So was bourbon named after Bourbon County? It's plausible, but for the time being this is a question without a definitive answer.

Myth 3

"Bourbon needs to be aged for two years"

I can't tell you how many times I've seen someone on Twitter proudly announce this only to be firmly swatted down by someone who knows better. But it's no wonder that people are confused. I've even heard tour guides on large distillery tours making this same pronouncement. It's time to check the Standards of Identity again. The relevant part is near the end: "stored at not more than 125° proof in charred new oak containers." And it is relevant for what it doesn't say. You'll notice it doesn't state a time. Hence there is no time requirement as long as it was put into that new barrel. If you had unlimited funds and liked wasting a lot of money you could make a white bourbon by putting it into the barrel and dumping it right back out. But since you couldn't use that again to make bourbon, why would you throw that kind of money away?

So where does the confusion come from? I think it is two-fold. First, the definition of whiskey in most of the whiskey producing places around the world requires the distillate to be aged for three years. So there's that bit of knowledge mucking things up. Secondly, there is a requirement for "straight whiskey" to be aged for at least two years. The regulation reads as follows: "Whiskies conforming to the standards prescribed in paragraphs (b)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section, which have been stored in the type of oak containers prescribed, for a period of 2 years or more shall be further designated as 'straight'; for example, 'straight bourbon whisky.'" It goes on to describe other types of straight whiskey as well, but that the important part for this discussion.

This one is false.

Corollary to Myth 3

"Bourbon can only be made in Charred, New, American White Oak Barrels."

This is a nit-picky one on my part. It's mostly spouted by those that know a bit about bourbon and have mistaken what happens most often for what is allowed. I listed the definition for bourbon above. Once again, you can see the relevant part is near the end: "stored at not more than 125° proof in charred new oak containers." It says charred new oak. It doesn't specify the species or the country of origin. Buffalo Trace recently put out a bourbon aged in French Oak barrels. American white oak works very nicely for barrels and is most commonly used in bourbon making, but that doesn't mean it has to be. I say false.

Myth 4

"Jack Daniels isn't Bourbon"

Just kidding... that would be trolling too hard for this time around. Maybe I'll tackle this one in the future.

1. Charles K. Cowdery, Bourbon, Straight: The Uncut and Unfiltered Story of American Whiskey (Chicago, IL: Made and Bottled in Kentucky, 2004), 28-29.

2. Michael R. Veach, Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey: An American Heritage (Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky, 2013), 24-29.

Raising a Glass to Whisky Friends

Today, the bourbon world lost an innovator and a legend. I'm not going to eulogize the man, I never met him. I know him as the guy who introduced us to the idea of the regularly released single barrel bourbon, but that's it. I've had his namesake bourbon. It's quite tasty.
The passing of a legend is sad. You realize that even though you know the barest minimum about the person, there are a lot of people to whom he was dad, brother, grandpa, uncle, mentor, coworker or friend. It's those people who are really feeling the effects of the loss. 

Tonight I stopped by my liquor store to buy a bottle of Elmer T. Lee single barrel. It seemed like the right thing to do to honor the man. While I was there, they had a bottle open behind the tasting bar. We stood there for a little bit, toasted Elmer's memory and talked bourbon for about a half hour. I've been talking to the guy who works there for a while now. I brought him a sample of Russell's Reserve Single Barrel because he'd mentioned he'd never had it. It reminded me that whisky has a way of bringing friends together. And the great news is that whisky friends don't have to be people you've ever met in "real life." Because, if you haven't met them by now, you probably will someday. And we all know that. So why get hung up on the minor detail just because life's happening out of order.

I'd like to take this time to thank my whisky friends: Keith and Nicole, (@KeithB18 and @ndsteckman), G-LO (@boozedancing), Coop (@cooperedtot), Josh Wright (@sipologyblog), Jordan Devereaux (@cocktailchem), Johanne McInnis (@Whiskeylassie), Matt Wunderle (@mattwunderle), Draper Pryce (@Draper_Pryce), Paul Jahn (@paulj), Mike McCarron (@GamleOde), Paul and Mary Beth (@MBRDISTILLERY) and so, so many others both on twitter and off. 

Thank you all for keeping whisky fun and interesting, each and every day. I raise this glass of Elmer T. Lee to all of you.

Book Review: Alt Whiskeys

It's been a fun summer for me so far. I've made it my personal goal to try 100 new beers this summer. I think I'm going to make it, between mixed-sixes and brewery sampler flights, I've already tasted 50. (Follow me on Untappd if you are interested in my progress.)

So what does this have to do with a bourbon blog? Well, this increased interest in beer got me to thinking about a book I bought a year or so ago. It's called Alt Whiskeys and is written by Darek Bell, owner of Corsair Artisan distillery in Bowling Green, KY. At the time, I'd never had anything produced by Corsair. But after reading the book, I wanted to. (I got my chance at the Kentucky Bourbon Festival last September.) I was also interested to learn that the author came to the idea of distilling with a background in home brewing beer. 

For some reason the idea of making whiskey and the idea of making beer hadn't clicked as things that the same person would be interested in. I knew that the processes were similar up to a point and that both were creative processes that hopefully ended up with something fun and tasty at the end of it. I will admit now, a year later, that I was pretty self-centered in that outlook. I have an intense fascination with the distilling process, but I have no desire to ever make my own home-brewed beer. And I'd projected that upon others. 

So after all this thinking about beer, I picked up the book and started to reread it. The first thing I have to say is: I loved this book. It's a technical book, but is written in a conversational style. And I'll admit, having never home-brewed, I didn't understand some of it at first. With a little research though, I was able to muddle my way through until I got up to speed. 

The book covers topics such as what brewing and distilling equipment you'll need and how to build your own (and warnings about doing it without the proper licenses), alternative grains you might use (millet, oats, sorghum, etc), inspirations from outside the world of whiskey (beer inspired, hopped and smoked whiskeys) and alternatives to malt, yeast and hops that you might use. It also includes recipes including both ingredients and instructions for brewing, distilling, barreling and bottling. 

All in all, the content in this book will be really interesting to anyone who has an interest in how whiskey is made and what else you might do beyond a traditional version. 

And if all you are interested in is the content, you can stop here. The photos are beautiful, the type choices are interesting, in a good way, and the information provided is top-notch. But I am a designer. And for me how information is presented is almost as big of a deal as the information itself. I've mentored young, inexperienced designers for almost ten years (and was a young, inexperienced designer for years before that). I have some serious issues with the design of this book. I'll just go over a couple of them. 

First, it has practically no margins. The margins of this book are a quarter inch (6.3 mm). That is barely in the safe zone that most printers ask for. They ask for this so they don't accidentally cut off your content (page 14 in my copy is a good example, margin size has slid down to an eighth of an inch while being trimmed). From a reader's standpoint, a lack of adequate margins does two things. First the book feels overfull. This can be used to good effect, but isn't in this case. Second and more important to a book of this physical size, the reader has no room to put their thumbs. This is not a one-handed book that you can hold in the middle. Even with my big hands, it needs to be held at the edge and if you have no place to put your thumbs, you cover the content. This is one of the first things I point out to young designers. Think about how the piece will be used and remove all the things that get in the way of legibility. Like thumbs.

Secondly, the body copy type size is widely inconsistent from page to page, and sometimes from the top to the bottom of a single page. It looks like it ranges from 14 point to 10 point and then to 9 point. 14 point is huge, it's the size I use for pull quotes or sub heads. 10 point is what you'd choose if you have a audience over 40 years old as they will statistically have poorer eyesight. So what if the type is huge and inconsistent? Well, if it had been brought down some, there might have been room for bigger margins for a more functional book and more elegant feel or possibly a smaller page count for a cheaper production.

I like this book a lot. Fix just these two functional design issues and this becomes a book worthy of the coffee table. As it stands this is a book I'm glad to have read. Twice. It's a book I keep on my shelf with my other whisky books. And it is a book I will read again if I ever am in a position to use the information contained within. It's also a book I would love a chance to re-layout. So uh, Mr. Bell, if you're ever going to reprint it look me up, ok?

Last Night's Ad-Libbed Cocktail

My wife is in New Orleans this week for an accounting conference. Not that that's going to stop her from having a few cocktails while she's there. 

Since she is in the home of the sazerac, we'd decided I was going to have one at home along with her when she stopped off for one. We're going to sort of have a drink together from across the country (probably via text message unless she's in a place that has wi-fi and we can FaceTime).

Last night I was all set to have a sazerac "with her." But she went to a brewpub instead and had beer. And because I'm a hopeless romantic, I decided to wait until we could have one together to have mine.

Sigh, I really wanted a sazerac. 

Not one to let small things get me down, I decided to do the next best thing. I was going to make myself a manhattan. I grabbed a rye whiskey off the shelf. If I couldn't have a sazerac, I'd at least go with rye. 

Then a thought occurred to me...might there be a way to combine my two favorite cocktails? I'm already part of the way there with the rye. I could use the absinthe as the bitters. I like orange bitters in my manhattans, but sazeracs are sweetened, I could combine both of those flavors by using Cointreau. Yeah, this might work.

I hopped on google to do a little research and then I experimented with ratios a bit and ended up with something that turned out pretty tasty. I'll leave it to others actually decide if it was good or if I had just convinced myself by wanting it to be good. 

Here it is: the Sazehattan...the Manzerac...the Manhatterac...

Last Night's Ad-Libbed Cocktail

2 oz New Richmond Rye whiskey
3/4 oz Martini & Rossi Sweet (Rosso) Vermouth
1/2 oz Cointreau
light 1/2 tsp Leopold Bros Absinthe Verte 

Stir with ice until it gets cold and oh so velvety. Strain it into a chilled cocktail glass and squeeze a lemon peel over it to get those oils in the drink. I wipe it around the edges too before dropping it in the glass.

By an odd coincidence half the ingredients I used were craft spirits. New Richmond Rye from 45th Parallel Sprits in New Richmond, WI and Absinthe Verte from Leopold Bros in Denver, CO. So if you can't get those, you'll have to experiment with substitutes, I guess.

A Timely Father's Day Wish List. Please Deliver to My Daughter

Next Sunday is Father's Day here in the US. The one day every year where all I ask for from my wife and child is freedom from projects and chores. Let me watch movies/tv or if you must, take me out to lunch. Preferably for wings and beer.

But this year my daughter no longer lives with me. She got all growed up and moved out on her own last year. That means I've decided that she needs to do something more for me than just get out of the way. I mean, she's doing that every day now. So in a strange shift of events, I want her to visit me on Father's Day. 

And since she asked me what her mother wanted for Mother's Day, I'm going to assume that she has a similar lack of a clue as to what to get me. And since no one ever said I wasn't helpful, I've decided to share this list on the internet where she can be sure to find it. In order to be even more helpful, I've broken the list down by subject.

Whiskey (of course)

Now before you get to wondering how a guy could go asking his kid for booze: she's 21 now. 

Four Roses Small Batch

I know that most people would choose the Single Barrel over the Small Batch. But I'm not one of them. I know that the regular release of the Single Barrel is an excellent bourbon, but I find this very tasty too and the price is right.

Wild Turkey Rare Breed

If she wants to get me something with a bit more oomph to it, this guy comes in at a bit higher proof. I believe the ones on the shelf around here are still hovering at about 54% ABV. I've never been disappointed to see Rare Breed and I won't be if it shows up next Sunday either. 

Willett Rye

Now, I doubt that my just-out-on-her-own child is feeling like spending too much on her dear old dad, but if she's feeling particularly well-off next week, she can place an order at Merwin's for local delivery or store pickup for this five year rye. I have half a bottle on the shelf, but it is my "special-occasion rye" so having another would not be a bad thing.

Books

So maybe she really doesn't feel comfortable buying her daddy some booze. Well what's the next best thing? That's right, books about booze.

Beam, Straight Up: The Bold Story of the First Family of Bourbon

For me, Fred Noe might be one of the most entertaining characters in bourbon today. I might not care for most of the whiskeys he makes, but there are a few I like very much and the teaser pages I've read of this promise to be very entertaining indeed.

But Always Fine Bourbon: Pappy Van Winkle and the Stroy of Old Fitzgerald

I've wanted to read this for a long time. I've got no real reason why, other than it sounds interesting. I'm not a Pappy drinker and do not aspire to be. In fact, if I ever see one on the shelf, I don't know that I'd buy it (not that this unlikely event is going to happen). The price is too high for me to not immediately get buyers remorse for blowing two or more months of my bourbon budget on a single bottle. But the book? That's only $11 on the Kindle. 

And a Bottle of Rum: A History of the New World in Ten Cocktails

I'm finding that I am getting more and more interested in rum lately. I haven't bought much beyond the cocktail ingredients that many of us have. I've got a white, a gold, and Gosling's Black Seal just in case I get a hankering for a trademark appropriate way to enjoy a Dark 'n Stormy. But that doesn't mean that the interest isn't there. And this book sounds extremely entertaining.

Food

If she is feeling really poor (and I remember feeling that more often than not at 21) there is always food to pair with the bourbon and books I already have in the queue. 

Cheese

I talked a few posts back about the Collier's Powerful Welsh Cheddar and how well it pairs with the Old Pogue that I had. I've also had a Havarti that made Rare Breed taste just like heaven as well. And seeing as I'm from Wisconsin, the gift of cheese is always appreciated.

Chocolate

I've never found a chocolate and a bourbon that pair especially well together. Everyone else seems to though. And I seem to remember that these bourbon truffles made in Lexington were really tasty...and...hey they ship.

Crackers

I have a hard time finding the unsalted crackers to use during a tasting. Oyster crackers work fine, but if she really wants to surprise me and not pay a lot, this is the way to go. Simple.

Of course, all of these ideas are only if she needs to feel like a real capitalist and buy me something. The best gift of all would just be her presence. I sort of like just having her around.

Whiskey Samples & How I Store Them

As you might know, I've been participating in an online Canadian Whisky tasting. It's done a lot for my appreciation for good whisky from Canada. 

Let's step back in time a couple months. It was a fairly normal day. Well as normal as any day can be when you get your first visit from the Whisky Fairy. You see it was on that day I received the samples for the, then, upcoming tasting. Four cute little bottles filled with what I could only assume was tasty goodness (Spoiler: they were). And while for the longest time I was fixated by the idea of what was in the bottles, eventually I got to looking at the bottles themselves. Small, plastic bottles with a tamper proof lid. 

After pondering these bottles for a few days, a thought popped into my head. I had a bunch of full-sized bottles that are running low, but that I didn't want to drink because of some vague notion that I might want to write one of these silly blog posts about them. I was doing the exact thing you shouldn't do: hoarding small amounts of good whiskey in large bottles. Not only could this whiskey oxidize and change, but more tragically, it was whiskey I wasn't drinking taking up space on the shelf from stuff I wanted to drink.

I know, I was shocked too. Drinking whiskey is at the top of my list of things to do with whiskey. 

So after that tragic thought popped into my head I decided that I needed to buy some sample bottles. The theory being that I fill the small bottles from the big. Seal those and set them aside for when I have the itch to write a blog post. Then I can finish any bottle on the shelf at any time without that slight pang of guilt for not blogging about it. 

So where to find these fancy little bottles? Google here I come. After a fairly brief search, here is what I found:

specialtybottle.com At Specialty Bottle I ordered 80 of the 2 ounce boston rounds shown above. They came with caps and I purchased a packet of 250 shrink bands that you place around the cap and then hit it with a hair dryer to shrink and seal the bottle. These bottles work pretty good, but they are about 60 cents each before shipping. So while these work great for storing my samples, I wouldn't want to give them away.

sks-bottle.com Enter SKS Bottle & Packaging, Inc. Here I found: 50 mL PET Nip bottles that also have the tamper proof cap that I saw in those Canadian samples. These work out to about 35 cents each and seem perfect for those samples I send home with friends who visit my home. (I do that some times, now who wants to come visit?)

So far the bottle theory is working. I've poured two samples of each bottle I had open. I emptied two while pouring the samples and about five since. (Yay! shelf space!) As I open new bottles, the very first thing I do is fill two more samples. Now I can enjoy whatever whiskey I want without worrying about blog guilt.

I'm always looking for better or cheaper suggestions. Do you keep/share samples? Where do you get the bottles you use? If you'd like, share that in the comments below.