This article originally appeared on June 21, 2016 at Bourbon & Banter. Cheers!
I have a problem. I know
what you’re thinking, but no, it isn’t a drinking problem. In fact, it might be
just the opposite.
I have “invested” a lot of
effort in building my whiskey library over the years. As of this writing, I
have 57 Bourbons to enjoy. My American Ryes, Scotch, Irish, and miscellaneous
American whiskeys don't count. I know that number because I keep an inventory
like any good librarian. Some of these bottles have been around for several
years, and some are fresh faces.
I have bottom-shelf gems,
mid-tier, premium, allocated, and limited edition Bourbons… My collection hits
the whole spectrum. I love it all.
You may think the problem is
I’m a hoarder, but that’s not it, either. Most of my bottles make my sipping
rotation quite regularly. I don’t have a “bunker” like many hoarders do.
I think whiskey is meant to
be enjoyed with friends when possible, not stored and hidden away. When I can
get my hands on something allocated, I want to drink it, not because I want to
flip it on the secondary market. When buying these, I’ve often convinced myself
that I’d save them for a special occasion.
Last year, I acquired a
bottle of George T Stagg. I waited and opened that bottle to toast my
father-in-law earlier this year. When my grandson was born, I opened a Four
Roses Private Barrel found at their Coxs Creek gift shop. A few years ago,
I visited Willett Distillery and picked up a nine-year-old Family
Estate Bourbon bottle from their gift shop. I opened that to toast,
becoming a contributor at Bourbon & Banter.
When
I cracked open that bottle of Willett, I realized I had more special occasion
bottles than likely special occasions to open them.
I
have several other bottles that remain yet unopened. They’re all slated as
drinkers. And therein lies my problem. Whiskey is meant to be enjoyed, right?
So, why do I have those unopened bottles of liquid sunshine? I was excited when
I bought them, and I’m still excited when I see them on my shelf.
Life
is short. I don’t want to be someone who never got around to opening bottles he
longed to get his hands on. This silly wait-for-a-special-occasion attitude
changes immediately… I’m opening one of these bad boys right now. Cheers!
My Simple, Easy-to-Understand
Rating System
- Bottle = Buy It
- Bar = Try It
- Bust = Leave It
Whiskeyfellow encourages
you to enjoy your whiskey as you see fit but begs you to do so responsibly.
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