Despite what some may think, my whisk(e)y tastes are not
exclusive to any particular level. I enjoy top-shelf, hard-to-find, exclusive
selections and dusty, often-ignored ones. Top-, mid- or bottom-shelf, I've
tasted winners and losers.
One of the great whiskey subsets is Bottled in Bond. Often, but
certainly not always, these are quite affordable. There are very strict
guidelines in order to be qualify as Bottled in Bond. Aside from being a
100-proof American whiskey, it must be the product of one distillation season
from a single distiller, and everything must come from a single distillery.
There's no blending of different whiskeys. The whiskey must age in a federally
bonded warehouse under US government supervision for at least four years.
Finally, the label must identify the distillery and, if bottled elsewhere,
where it was bottled.
I have known about Old
Fitzgerald Bottled in Bond for a few years, but have never seen it on the
shelf. Some have praised this, others have panned it. However, while visiting a
newly discovered liquor store today, I saw and picked it up.
There's a lot of wheat and vanilla on the nose, wheat, nuts and
spice on the palate. This one MUST have time to breathe, or you can use a
spirits aerator to speed the process along. Otherwise, if you drink it straight
from the pour, there's not going to be any flavor.
While not an earth-shattering whiskey by any means, it is
decent. To those who poo-poo this Bourbon, I suspect you've not given enough
time for this to breath. Perhaps you'll give it another shot.
The point I am trying to make is to not be a whisk(e)y snob, and
know there are both treasure and trash to be found amongst all price points.
Respect the bottom shelf.
Comments
Post a Comment
As we should drink in moderation, all comments are subject to it. Cheers!