Whisky weekend

Curby

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2012
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You guys are too eclectic with your bourbons/whiskeys.

I am good with any of the following standards:

Jim Beam Black
Gentleman Jack
Makers Mark
Four Roses
 
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ETK99

Well-known member
Jul 30, 2019
5,112
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In a blind taste test, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between it and your favorite. It's all marketing.
17 off rookie/puss*
You guys are too eclectic with your bourbons/whiskeys.

I am good with any of the following standards:

Jim Beam Black
Gentleman Jack
Makers Mark
Four Roses
I'm a Makers fan and some Four Roses. Jack Daniels is charcoal water. Beam is the basic like Elijah.
 

greenbean.sixpack

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2012
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17 off rookie/puss*

I'm a Makers fan and some Four Roses. Jack Daniels is charcoal water. Beam is the basic like Elijah.
Just for funsies are you going to be in the junction for any game this year? If so, let's do a blind taste test.

My former neighbor (RIP) considered himself a bourbon connoisseur and even he understood you can't tell most apart. He organized a blind taste test during a neighborhood party for the (6 or 7) men who had a favorite brand. Guess what? Picking their favorite out of four they were less than 50% accurate.
 

Villagedawg

Well-known member
Nov 16, 2005
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Just for funsies are you going to be in the junction for any game this year? If so, let's do a blind taste test.

My former neighbor (RIP) considered himself a bourbon connoisseur and even he understood you can't tell most apart. He organized a blind taste test during a neighborhood party for the (6 or 7) men who had a favorite brand. Guess what? Picking their favorite out of four they were less than 50% accurate.
On a related note, I’ve done the same for friends but with light lager beers usually Miller, bud, coors light. I’ve done it dozens of times. So far 0% have been able to pick their brand much less tell the difference.
 
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was21

Active member
May 29, 2007
9,643
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You guys are too eclectic with your bourbons/whiskeys.

I am good with any of the following standards:

Jim Beam Black
Gentleman Jack
Makers Mark
Four Roses
...yep...and add Evan Williams Black for bourbon and for a whiskey Johnny Walker Red. I gave up hard liquor long time ago but still pick a bottle up just to look at it
 
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PooPopsBaldHead

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2017
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Just for funsies are you going to be in the junction for any game this year? If so, let's do a blind taste test.

My former neighbor (RIP) considered himself a bourbon connoisseur and even he understood you can't tell most apart. He organized a blind taste test during a neighborhood party for the (6 or 7) men who had a favorite brand. Guess what? Picking their favorite out of four they were less than 50% accurate.
Well they probably suck.

Now if you line up 4 similar bourbons that use a similar mash bill(let's say 4 versions of Maker's) it could get tough.

But if you don't think you can line up a Blanton's, Weller, Stagg Jr, and Sazerac (all from Buffalo Trace) and a dozen or more of us in this board can't bat .1000 on picking out which is which, you would lose a lot of money. I know @Raiderdawg, myself, @NTDawg and a few others will take that bet.



That said if you're point is expensive doesn't mean better, I concur. I have done a personal blind tasting between Eagle Rare 10 year, Buffalo Trace, Benchmark, and Benchmark bonded. They are all the same juice going in the barrel and are just aged different times, in different rickhouses, and are cut with more or less water.

Results

Benchmark Bonded #1 - $17.95
Eagle Rare 10 year #2 - $35.95
Buffalo Trace #3 - $25.95
Haitian refugee porta potty water #4
Benchmark a distant #5 - $14.95

Turns out I prefer the higher proof of the bonded even at only 4 years of age vs a lower proof 6-8 year old BT or even 10 year old ER. The regular benchmark is 80 proof and approximately 18 months old. It tastes like fermented Cheerios. I prolly drink 5-1 Benchmark Bonded over everything else these days.

All that said, best sip I have ever had was a neat glass of King of Kentucky that will sell for $2k plus by the bottle usually.
 

M R DAWGS

Well-known member
Apr 13, 2018
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You guys are too eclectic with your bourbons/whiskeys.

I am good with any of the following standards:

Jim Beam Black
Gentleman Jack
Makers Mark
Four Roses
Agree, Angel’s envy is great, but calling it cheap seems like a cover for some other deficiency

I’ll drink and enjoy all of the ones you listed and they all do the same thing.
 

greenbean.sixpack

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2012
6,141
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On a related note, I’ve done the same for friends but with light lager beers usually Miller, bud, coors light. I’ve done it dozens of times. So far 0% have been able to pick their brand much less tell the difference.
We did that in the Junction several years ago, most folks couldn't pick "their" beer out of four.
 

NTDawg

Well-known member
Mar 2, 2012
2,090
670
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You guys are too eclectic with your bourbons/whiskeys.

I am good with any of the following standards:

Jim Beam Black
Gentleman Jack
Makers Mark
Four Roses
Wrong. I cant tell everything but I would never ever pick Gentlemen Jack in a blind, trash. I do love JD SiB barrel proof, JD SiB BP rye and the JD 10 and 12 year old but they are in a different class from their bottom shelf stuff. When you say Makers and Four Roses, I assume you are talking about there bottom self options. They are fine but you would be wrong. I recently bought a Maker Heart Release and it is good but it is also off profile for Makers. Four Roses has a wide variety of products from “yellow label” to their Limited Editions. I’ve never been lucky enough to get a LE but I have several single barrel barrel proof bottles and they are some of my favorites. I love their small batch select. It is one the best shelf available bourbons on the market.

This week I was lucky and found a Sagamore 9 year and a Remus Repeal VIII. I’ve have already cracked open the Sagamore and it is very good.
 
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L4Dawg

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Oct 27, 2016
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On a related note, I’ve done the same for friends but with light lager beers usually Miller, bud, coors light. I’ve done it dozens of times. So far 0% have been able to pick their brand much less tell the difference.
Swill is swill.
 
Oct 7, 2022
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Don’t do bourbon. But. Four Roses is as smooth as I’ve ever had. Boo me all you want. Closest thing to a bourbon being like a single malt I’ve found.

Balvine man myself(among many others ). Partial to 17 Doublewood and 21 Portwood

eta portwood
 

hdogg

Active member
Nov 21, 2014
927
399
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I fully agree that most lite beers taste the same, as do most ipas, etc.
I'm sure I can tell a nice Angel's envy (not cheap) from evan Williams. But yeah you may get me on Elijah craig vs makers vs 4roses. I'd still try.
 
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STATEgrad04

Active member
Mar 3, 2008
546
309
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The wife was in Lexington this week for work, and went to the Buffalo trace distillery and got me a bottle of E.H. Taylor small batch. Looking forward to trying it soon. Was hoping for their single barrel, but apparently they do their special releases different each day of the week, you don't know what it's going to be, can only buy 1 bottle, and can't buy again for 30 days.
 

skipperDawg

Member
Dec 23, 2023
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Well they probably suck.

Now if you line up 4 similar bourbons that use a similar mash bill(let's say 4 versions of Maker's) it could get tough.

But if you don't think you can line up a Blanton's, Weller, Stagg Jr, and Sazerac (all from Buffalo Trace) and a dozen or more of us in this board can't bat .1000 on picking out which is which, you would lose a lot of money. I know @Raiderdawg, myself, @NTDawg and a few others will take that bet.



That said if you're point is expensive doesn't mean better, I concur. I have done a personal blind tasting between Eagle Rare 10 year, Buffalo Trace, Benchmark, and Benchmark bonded. They are all the same juice going in the barrel and are just aged different times, in different rickhouses, and are cut with more or less water.

Results

Benchmark Bonded #1 - $17.95
Eagle Rare 10 year #2 - $35.95
Buffalo Trace #3 - $25.95
Haitian refugee porta potty water #4
Benchmark a distant #5 - $14.95

Turns out I prefer the higher proof of the bonded even at only 4 years of age vs a lower proof 6-8 year old BT or even 10 year old ER. The regular benchmark is 80 proof and approximately 18 months old. It tastes like fermented Cheerios. I prolly drink 5-1 Benchmark Bonded over everything else these days.

All that said, best sip I have ever had was a neat glass of King of Kentucky that will sell for $2k plus by the bottle usually.
Tell us your wealthy, without telling us your wealthy 🐬🌊🌴
 

aTotal360

Well-known member
Nov 12, 2009
18,778
7,565
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The wife was in Lexington this week for work, and went to the Buffalo trace distillery and got me a bottle of E.H. Taylor small batch. Looking forward to trying it soon. Was hoping for their single barrel, but apparently they do their special releases different each day of the week, you don't know what it's going to be, can only buy 1 bottle, and can't buy again for 30 days.
EHT is my favorite pour. If you can find the single barrel, jump on it.
 
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The Cooterpoot

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2022
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Some of you are classless lightweights or Liteweights. If you can't distinguish your drinks, why are you buying what you drink? Just buy the cheapest "bourbon" made in like Michigan and you'll figure it out fast. Try a Beast Light and you'll quickly figure out it's not Miller Lite or Bud Light, or that low carb puzzie beer stuff. When my smell got screwed up for about a year by covid, it was misery drinking new bourbon because I couldn't get the full flavor.
 

She Mate Me

Well-known member
Dec 7, 2008
9,653
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In a blind taste test, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between it and your favorite. It's all marketing.

Without being needlessly rude, or arrogant, I think there are plenty of folks on here that could pick out various bourbons from others made by different producers with different mashbills.

But there are also lots of status drinkers who have no idea what they're talking about and do it all for how they think it makes them look to others. More of them in Mississippi favor powder blue uniforms, but not a small number like a particularly suckass team in Mississippi this year.

One thing that's good about knowing bourbon is that you have a large selection of really nice bourbons to choose from in the truly inexpensive category because the status drinkers don't want them.
 
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Drebin

Well-known member
Aug 22, 2012
16,910
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Without being needlessly rude, or arrogant, I think there are plenty of folks on here that could pick out various bourbons from others made by different producers with different mashbills.

But there are also lots of status drinkers who have no idea what they're talking about and do it all for how they think it makes them look to others. More of them in Mississippi favor powder blue uniforms, but not a small number like a particularly suckass team in Mississippi this year.

One thing that's good about knowing bourbon is that you have a large selection of really nice bourbons to choose from in the truly inexpensive category because the status drinkers don't want them.
Strong post. Let's call it 110 proof.
 
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aTotal360

Well-known member
Nov 12, 2009
18,778
7,565
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I've got a bottle of the Barrel Proof I found in an obscure liquor store a few years back. Honestly can't pop it because of what it's supposedly worth on the darker markets.
It's expensive but not crazy like some of there other limited products. I paid $100 for a pour of the 18 Year Old Marriage. I've heard of the "tornado survivor" bottles going for $5K+.
 

PooPopsBaldHead

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2017
7,971
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I've got a bottle of the Barrel Proof I found in an obscure liquor store a few years back. Honestly can't pop it because of what it's supposedly worth on the darker markets.
You should use it as a special pour bottle for occasions when friends who would appreciate it are in town. It's "only" going for $350-$400 online, not $3-4000.

I have a bottle and it's much better than single or small batch. Closest thing I have to a Stagg Jr, or now Stagg I guess, which is my favorite pour from Buffalo Trace.
1000015418.jpg

Save it for special occasions, but definitely drink it. You'll appreciate and so will your friends... If you don't have friends that will appreciate, I am sure you can make some new ones who will on SPS board.**
 

Bulldog Bruce

Well-known member
Nov 1, 2007
3,520
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Well they probably suck.

Now if you line up 4 similar bourbons that use a similar mash bill(let's say 4 versions of Maker's) it could get tough.

But if you don't think you can line up a Blanton's, Weller, Stagg Jr, and Sazerac (all from Buffalo Trace) and a dozen or more of us in this board can't bat .1000 on picking out which is which, you would lose a lot of money. I know @Raiderdawg, myself, @NTDawg and a few others will take that bet.



That said if you're point is expensive doesn't mean better, I concur. I have done a personal blind tasting between Eagle Rare 10 year, Buffalo Trace, Benchmark, and Benchmark bonded. They are all the same juice going in the barrel and are just aged different times, in different rickhouses, and are cut with more or less water.

Results

Benchmark Bonded #1 - $17.95
Eagle Rare 10 year #2 - $35.95
Buffalo Trace #3 - $25.95
Haitian refugee porta potty water #4
Benchmark a distant #5 - $14.95

Turns out I prefer the higher proof of the bonded even at only 4 years of age vs a lower proof 6-8 year old BT or even 10 year old ER. The regular benchmark is 80 proof and approximately 18 months old. It tastes like fermented Cheerios. I prolly drink 5-1 Benchmark Bonded over everything else these days.

All that said, best sip I have ever had was a neat glass of King of Kentucky that will sell for $2k plus by the bottle usually.
I thought Bottled-in-Bond has to be 100 proof.
 

PooPopsBaldHead

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2017
7,971
5,078
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I thought Bottled-in-Bond has to be 100 proof.
It does. Also has to be at least 4 years old.

Eagle Rare is 90 proof and 10 years old.
Buffalo Trace is 90 proof and 6-8 years old (estimated by experts.)
The regular Benchmark is 80 proof and 18-24 months old (estimated.)
The Bonded Benchmark is 100 proof and at least 4 years old.

They all come out of the barrel at a much higher proof and are "cut" with water to get to a steady proof. For me, the lower cutting of the younger Bonded gives a better flavor.

In fact, the Benchmark Bonded is really not far off from EH Taylor in my opinion. Taylor Small batch is the same mash bill going in as all the others, but bonded (cut to 100 proof). It's just 3-4 years older than the Benchmark Bonded.

All of the other benchmarks are very young and not very good IMO.
 

UpTheMiddlex3Punt

Well-known member
May 28, 2007
16,770
1,937
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Alabama liquor prices are absurd. They just went up 8% at the ABC where I live. Moving to Florida on Monday and I did the math. I will save $150 on whisky a month.
They are, but the limited release program is a great opportunity to get rare stuff. Much lower prices than the secondary market. If you win the drawing.
 
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