Ok, so for co-op presumably cheap whiskey it's actually pretty decent, bit sweeter than I prefers but i
t's not too bad.
Ill defo give the bottle a good try.:smile:
Can't call it whisky until it's three years old. Did you know that?
Compared with the brands in the same price bracket, it's really good.
The five-year-old is a good level better.
Aldi's whiskies are incredible bargains. They could easily beat competitors at twice the price.
eg....
http://aberfoodblog.com/whisky-shoot-out/
If you see Glen Marnock at �ã18 in Aldi, buy it all. Incredible.
Here's a decent recipe:
Take:
0 Parts John Lee Bourbon
2 Parts, your favorite Single Malt
Add a drop or 2 of water
Consume
Or just leave out the water and any kind of solid h2o.
Thinking Drinkers: should you add water to whisky?
Ignore the naysayers, whisky is better with a dash of water. Tom Sandham and Ben McFarland explain why
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/men/the-...-Drinkers-should-you-add-water-to-whisky.html
After about 5 minutes i was mumbling just drink the fecking stuff, i guess i don't get it -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zg_pO9pot-o
I know I can mix it with something in a glass, but that's not the point, if I manage to make a decent drink out of it, will it last for any length of time stored in a bottle?
Perhaps starting at no 567 isn't the best intro to his particular style. But as you don't like whisky, it's probably not your bag anyway.
You are right I am not keen on whisky, I was not trying to put the guy in the video down and obviously whisky drinkers find his videos interesting, could I ask is this the way whisky drinkers drink their whisky, is it as much about the bouqhet as the taste do people experiment with water?
............
I think the deal with Whisky, especially single malt, or expensive stuff, is to make the most of it. No point getting hammered on the stuff if you're paying upwards of 30 quid a bottle. Rather, take your time, savour the moment, enjoy the experience, learn about the process etc. Not much different to the approach if you're drinking 'specialist' craft ale really.
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