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-   -   What Are You Drinking Tonight? (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=28491)

Glinda 03-07-2018 06:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gravdigr (Post 1005233)
I'm gonna have a Jack & Coke for Glinda's pop, but, it'll prolly be Ginger Crown tonight.

Wait, tonight's bucket night...So, a Jack & Coke and Bud Light by the bucket.

Hear! Hear! :yesnod:

monster 03-07-2018 10:56 PM

same thing I drink every night, Pinky.....

Clodfobble 03-07-2018 11:39 PM

1 Attachment(s)
...try and take over the

xoxoxoBruce 03-07-2018 11:40 PM

Who the hell could afford it? :eek:

JuancoRocks 03-08-2018 04:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 1005224)
But that would require shopping at Walmart. :crone::ninja::thumbsdn::smashfrea:madmoon::redcard::footpyth::runaway::rant:

Worth it for the sheer entertainment.
The people of Wal-Mart in real time.......:cool:

"Why are you returning these diapers?"
"It says 10 to 12 pounds and they only hold eight"

JR

Gravdigr 03-08-2018 03:08 PM

You ask me for $8 for a can of beer and I am throwing that can of beer at you.

Gravdigr 03-08-2018 03:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gravdigr (Post 1005233)
...So, a Jack & Coke and Bud Light by the bucket.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Glinda (Post 1005251)
Hear! Hear! :yesnod:

It was actually 2-for-1 mixed drinks last night (in addition to $7 buckets), so I drank to Pop twice.:D:beer:

Dude111 03-14-2018 03:23 AM

Im having chocolate Milk :)

monster 03-14-2018 03:43 AM

A good old British Cuppa. For a change. :D Of course it's 3am so technically it's more like morning, but this time i am ctually just going to bed, not getting up

Flint 03-14-2018 01:34 PM

Equal parts:
Midori (melon liqueur)
Momokawa Pearl sake (nigori--unfiltered)

Dude111 03-15-2018 12:17 AM

Im drinking some Milk :) (Organic whole)

Gravdigr 03-17-2018 04:19 PM

Beer.

RFN, ginger ale.

EDavis63 04-13-2018 07:13 AM

Hot chocolate and yuzu sake (doesn't taste well combined...) :)

BigV 04-13-2018 10:44 PM

Hi EDavis63!


Welcome to the cellar!

Those two do sound like two great tastes that taste great... In different meals.

Glinda 04-13-2018 11:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EDavis63 (Post 1006967)
Hot chocolate and yuzu sake (doesn't taste well combined...) :)

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigV (Post 1007011)
Hi EDavis63!


Welcome to the cellar!

Those two do sound like two great tastes that taste great... In different meals.

Haha! You know, when there isn't anything else in the cupboard, hot chocolate and sake has to be good enough.

;)

Me? I'm imbibing in my usual - bourbon and diet Coke. Oh, and a couple of UW + Sour Tsunami bong hits.

Happy Friday the 13th! w0Ot!

fargon 04-14-2018 01:38 PM

Welcome EDavis63. I hope you like Googly Eyes.

Gravdigr 04-14-2018 04:33 PM

Seagram's V.O. shots. Caffeine-free Pepsi back.

fargon 04-14-2018 06:15 PM

Iced cold press coffee. Ice Cold and Black, like my heart.

Urbane Guerrilla 04-24-2018 04:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Big Sarge (Post 848442)
Getting back to the theme of this thread - I'm about to go to the liqour store. Any suggestions?

If Big Sarge is a scotch drinker and still around to read this thread, try my favorite Speyside: Balvenie's DoubleWood 12yo. Gets the usual bourbon-cask maturing for the usual kind of time, then gets a finish stored in port and sherry casks before being let out into the world.

This stuff is as complex as a red wine. Layers upon layers upon layers.

Get outside of enough of this and you'll take up the bagpipes.

BigV 04-24-2018 08:51 PM

UG, what is it that distinguishes Speyside from Islay? I've found it lighter, more floral, and vexingly, somewhat peppery. I didn't care for it. In fairness, I am smoke-smitten, Laphroaig has ruined me for any Scotch not made at the water's edge.

Undertoad 04-24-2018 10:15 PM

Quote:

Balvenie's DoubleWood 12yo
~ I hereby endorse this product or service ~

Urbane Guerrilla 04-25-2018 12:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigV (Post 1007454)
UG, what is it that distinguishes Speyside from Islay? I've found it lighter, more floral, and vexingly, somewhat peppery. I didn't care for it. In fairness, I am smoke-smitten, Laphroaig has ruined me for any Scotch not made at the water's edge.

I'm a giant fan of Islays myself -- and you've noticed every year there seems to be another one setting up. They're gonna get as thick as all those Speysides if they keep it up...

Not only that, the Islays are getting all cute, and introducing notions like "vatting" -- stirring together all or most of the separate Islays, like blend Scotch minus the grain alcohol extender, and itself a return to the sort of thing well-fixed gentlemen and clubs did with various Scotches back in the nineteenth century, maybe as early as the late eighteenth. If you can find it, a vatted bottling is Big Peat -- I understand this to be all the Islays, just as smoky as ever you like, with a rather comic label on it that seems to depict that Islay is a very windy place, very windy indeed.

To compound the mischief and the bewilderfying, the sundry distilleries in the several regional styles are trying their hands at producing other regions' styles of whisky. Speyside and Highland styles are seriously beginning to blur into each other, leaving the Northern, Campbelltown (I think C'town whiskies may be poised to expand back into many brands; there used to be a hundred twenty-odd distilleries in Campbelltown and I see no reason with the single malt market as it is for them not to grow like a fairy-ring again), some Lowland now, and the Isles/Islay mode. More on this after a para on Speysides. Who in keeping with the above, are tackling making Islays just for fun. And so on, round and round Scotia...

Speysides are rather more united by geography than by flavor these days. That said, the backbone of the Speyside style of whisky is a pretty light body, a faint sweetness, and something grainy about its flavor too -- Glenlivet being an example of all that. Glenfiddich is a distillery just up the road from Glenlivet that tried to be a Glenlivet copy -- and wasn't, and isn't. I'm not Glenfiddich's biggest fan, but opening a dram of it up with a sparing few drops of your favorite designer water makes all the difference in the world. Damned if I understand how, but it does; consider a little splash of water as always worth a try if you're not quite liking taking it neat. Straight up, in the American dialect. The River Spey is a wide valley, a big watershed generally northeast-flowing, and with the explosion of the single-malt market, there seems now to be a duly legal distillery up every single tributary creek in the watershed; Speysides are all over the place. Many are wonderful, a few expressions of whisky less so -- I've something the Auchentoshan people put out, and didn't show a lot of character, that I generally use to spike my hot chocolate. It's terrific for that. For consistently enjoyable Speysides, you can't go wrong with any variety of Glenmorangie, the varietal-bottling specialists -- finish with this cask, finish with that, or don't multicask at all. Should you explore Speyside whiskies further, see Balvenie Doublewood -- or their other whisky, the simple Balvenie -- as above. The Speysides are accessible, approachable, friendly spirits. Not lapel-grabbers the way many of the Islays are.

I find too I'm a big fan of the whiskies finished off in used sherry or port casks, after the standard treatment of ageing Scotch in once-used bourbon barrels. Used barrels are big business! Yet the barrel trade is not celebrated in any Scottish folksong I've ever heard -- hardly just. But man, am I keen on sherried Scotches. I miss that flavor if a Scotch is made without it.

Rather scarce, but available by online order, is a whisky out of Taos -- as in New Mexico -- sold in rather small bottles @ US$50ish and in cask-strength 92 proof, named Colkegan. The New Mexico Distillery does not smoke its barley malt with peat fires. It uses mesquite. Man! -- Scotland just came to the barbeque! It is a whisky to squee for.

At my elbow right now is an Isles: Jura 10yo, from the concern located on the next island up from Islay in the Hebrides. I'm thinking it will show a kinship to the Islays. There's only the one distillery, which figures, as Jura has a population of roughly two hundred souls. You couldn't say Jura whisky's operation is some giant and faceless corporation -- for all that the holding company's headquarters is in the Philippines. Where they do not despise whisky. Globalism.

The capsule is blessed with the accommodating tear-strip to get it off... got my Glencairn glass out... it's in tolerable shape, not dusty; sometimes I use a snifter, for the same scent-concentrating reason Glencairns are around these days... stopper out... typical of whisky corks, cork body with a prominent cap atop it, shaped like a rivet. This batch of this whisky is a warm greeny-brown-amber color... mild, rather spiritous nose but little smoke... ahh, the smoke is on the palate and tongue. Not quite fiery, as with Finlaggan from Islay just across the water; lightsome body; not a lapel grabber, but a strong, confident flavor. Sherry finished. Smooth as silk. Wonder what barreling the stuff for fifteen years would do. Guess you can now find out. The wife and I will surely enjoy this bottle. Is there indeed a regional resemblance with the variously smoked Islays? -- some resemblance; you're not likely to confuse Jura 10 with the Islays though. Would recommend, price is not too heavy.

Dude111 04-25-2018 10:38 AM

Enjoying chocolate Milk :)

xoxoxoBruce 04-25-2018 03:03 PM

Cut to the chase, Everclear 190.

Gravdigr 04-25-2018 03:11 PM

Beer. By the bucket.

Urbane Guerrilla 04-28-2018 03:59 AM

The Ardmore
 
Tonight's opening is The Ardmore: Legacy (No Age Statement), their main product. Gotten at by a mix of 80% peated malt and 20% unpeated. It's a Highland-region whisky.

Highland style whiskies have, I think, a habit of being... elusive. Subtle. Stealth malts. I've a few Highland malts in my liquor hutch now, just from buying rather randomly. It's a mix of style, and where the distillery actually is, that seems the determinant. I find, reading around tonight, that Glenmorangie is among the Highland region whiskies; hmm. I took a tour of Edradour's distillery, now asserted to be the *second* smallest distillery in Scotland after 2007, and duly took their tour dram -- and can't remember a single thing about Edradour whisky. Nada. From sipping The Ardmore, I begin to think perhaps this elusiveness is the Highland style's characteristic. Dare I say, it's discreet. Mannerly.

Yet the whisky is not characterless. Sweet, rather floral nose. Very moderate smoke, spiritous finish. The trained palates discern vanilla, honey, and toffee notes; I dunno about that. "Toffee notes" seems to come up a lot in whisky-tasting. Doubtless comes out of the barrels' wood.

They of course these days offer numerous fancier expressions, for instance a port wood finished bottling of twelve years stated age, at a price that will not horribly mangle your budget. And a bottling from the 1960s, 25yo, that goes a thousand pounds a pop, that definitely would.

Dude111 04-28-2018 11:00 PM

Chocolate Milk im having :)

sexobon 04-29-2018 12:01 AM

You're going to be reincarnated as a brown cow.

Glinda 04-29-2018 01:15 AM


Gravdigr 04-29-2018 11:53 AM

Oh, yeah...

Dude111 04-30-2018 05:55 AM

Drinking some Ginger Ale..........

xoxoxoBruce 04-30-2018 08:22 AM

Yeah, sure, probably got a chocolate bar on the side. :rolleyes:

Gravdigr 04-30-2018 04:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dude111 (Post 1007774)
Drinking some Ginger Ale..........

Ginger ale works for me, too.

With a little Crown. Y'know, for color.:beer:

Dude111 04-30-2018 07:53 PM

Having chocolate Milk right now :)

monster 04-30-2018 09:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dude111 (Post 1007821)
Having chocolate Milk right now :)


Is that on the porn channel?

xoxoxoBruce 04-30-2018 09:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dude111 (Post 1007821)
Having chocolate Milk right now :)

Couldn't handle the ginger ale, eh?

Dude111 05-02-2018 04:16 AM

No I dont like too much! (It doesnt taste as good as it did in the 80s)


Im having some chocolate Milk again :)

xoxoxoBruce 05-02-2018 07:34 AM

I agree, ginger ale has gotten pretty bland. :yelsick:

Gravdigr 05-02-2018 01:46 PM

Popdigr got nostalgic the other evening and came in with a case of Squirt.

Ima thinking that tonight might be the night to investigate Squirt w/vodka. That should work pretty well I think.

Undertoad 05-02-2018 01:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gravdigr (Post 1007927)
Popdigr got nostalgic the other evening and came in with a case of Squirt.

take that to a family doctor, they can clear it right up

Gravdigr 05-02-2018 01:53 PM

Eww, old man squirt.



















That was ƒucking hilarious, btw.

Dude111 05-02-2018 05:15 PM

Chocolate Milk :)

monster 05-02-2018 08:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 1007930)
take that to a family doctor, they can clear it right up

exactly. I've always wondered who in the hell thought that was a good name for a pop/soda/whateverthfuckyawannacallem




is there a squirt zero?

BigV 05-02-2018 09:26 PM

I haven't started drinking for the night, yet. But, I am well prepared.

Twil and I just got back from a tour that included some time in Oregon. I took advantage of their tax free alcohol sales. I left the store with a big hole in my wallet and they had a good sized hole on their shelves. We were both happy with the situation. I got five handles of Evan Williams black label, one of the (new to me) white label, which is 100 proof, a bottle of Highland Park 12 yr which is a gift for a friend, and a bottle of Laphroaig Select. I reckon I saved about $80, or more, in taxes.

xoxoxoBruce 05-03-2018 10:21 AM

Sooo, you're an alcoholic tax dodger. :lol2:

Gravdigr 05-03-2018 02:56 PM

What office are ya running for?:lol2:

BigV 05-03-2018 07:50 PM

Ice, or my life, otherwise I'll just wait for the next bus.

Gravdigr 05-08-2018 03:32 PM

EverygoddamnthingIcangetmyfuckinghandson.

Fuck this goddamn day.

And the next one.

And fuck you too if you're feeling left out.

Ya rotten motherfucker.

glatt 05-08-2018 03:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gravdigr (Post 1008233)
And fuck you too if you're feeling left out.

even when you're pissed off, you have teh humor.

BigV 05-08-2018 11:28 PM

Bourbon, Evan Williams.

Good night.

(I've wrought enough destruction for one night).

Nicolita 05-11-2018 02:42 AM

I'm drinking Vodka and wine tonight. :cool:

Urbane Guerrilla 05-11-2018 03:15 AM

Aberlour
 
Aberlour 10yo, tonight. And a couple squares of Ghirardelli 86%.

Calls itself a Highland malt on the label. The site also keeps referring to Speyside. Spiritous nose with something fruity in it too -- if there's a sweet note, it is a fruity-sweet one rather than the often-seen Speyside grainy one. They're all smooth these days... and there's that understated quality I'm associating with Highlands.

Maybe I should try Ghirardelli 72%. The 86 had a rather closed-off quality, more suited to red wine or to Balvenie Doublewood. (72% goes better with this whisky -- it's sweeter, so it's more open.)

Not heavily peated -- hardly any at all. Has the sort of finish I keep seeing in Scotch -- difficult to describe, but distinctive when encountered. It tastes of its color; it tastes... golden. Next pass I take at it, I'll try a little splash of designer water, per recommendation on The Whisky Exchange site.

Had this bottle around a long time; had to replace a broken stopper.

Gravdigr 05-12-2018 03:20 PM

Angel's Envy.

Maybe.

lumberjim 05-12-2018 04:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Urbane Guerrilla (Post 1008333)
Aberlour 10yo, tonight. And a couple squares of Ghirardelli 86%.

Calls itself a Highland malt on the label. The site also keeps referring to Speyside. Spiritous nose with something fruity in it too -- if there's a sweet note, it is a fruity-sweet one rather than the often-seen Speyside grainy one. They're all smooth these days... and there's that understated quality I'm associating with Highlands.

Maybe I should try Ghirardelli 72%. The 86 had a rather closed-off quality, more suited to red wine or to Balvenie Doublewood. (72% goes better with this whisky -- it's sweeter, so it's more open.)

Not heavily peated -- hardly any at all. Has the sort of finish I keep seeing in Scotch -- difficult to describe, but distinctive when encountered. It tastes of its color; it tastes... golden. Next pass I take at it, I'll try a little splash of designer water, per recommendation on The Whisky Exchange site.

Had this bottle around a long time; had to replace a broken stopper.


wow. you're super impressive.

xoxoxoBruce 05-12-2018 06:14 PM

Did you say pretentious? :rolleyes:

sexobon 05-12-2018 07:47 PM

When I come across a very good drink, I make sure I have enough for my friends. When I come across a really great drink, I don't have any friends.

Clodfobble 05-13-2018 08:05 AM

Last night it was a hodgepodge of Malbec, sake, and a "snickertini," the last of which I just ate the whipped cream off with spoon and then passed the rest to someone else.

We're not big drinkers in general, but it's been a hell of a month (going to court for the second time on Thursday, whee!) and our regular dinner companion has had an equally shit time in her own life, so we made full use of modern ride app technology.

Nicolita 05-15-2018 04:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gravdigr (Post 1008398)
Angel's Envy.

Maybe.

I like Angels envy. ;)

Dude111 05-15-2018 04:23 PM

Im having some chocolate Milk :)

Glinda 05-15-2018 05:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigV (Post 1008263)
Bourbon, Evan Williams.

Good night.

(I've wrought enough destruction for one night).

Oof. Evan Williams will kick your ass - that shit has some surprising mojo on it.

Sleep well, my friend. :)


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