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January 3, 2023

The Best Canadian Whiskies of 2024 to Drink, According to Experts

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 11:42 pm

When you think of the best whiskey, what’s at the top of your list—or, I guess I should ask, atop your bar? If you’re like most American whiskey lovers, you’ve got a healthy amount of bourbon and maybe a few bottles of rye. If your taste skews international, perhaps you’re well-versed in Scotch, Japanese whisky, and Irish whiskey. But there’s probably one type you’re overlooking: the best Canadian whiskies.

“Americans don’t know much about Canadian whisky,” says Noah Rothbaum, author of The Art of American Whiskey and the upcoming The Whiskey Bible. “But in the last few years, the perceptions of drinkers, bartenders, and connoisseurs have changed, and we’ve had to totally rethink Canadian whisky.” 

The craft spirits revolution hit Canada later than it did the U.S., but it’s since taken hold—inspiring the emergence of new brands and renewed interest in longstanding ones. At last, imbibers are getting up to speed with what industry insiders have known for decades: the nation that gave us basketball, Wayne Gretzky, and Neil Young, can make a damn good bottle of whisky.

From high-end bottles that make excellent whisky gifts to the best cheap whiskies of today, it’s a new world for Canadian whisky. Our top pick for the 2023 Men’s Journal Spirits Awards, Canadian Club 15-Year-Old Sherry Cask Invitation Series, adds the rich, sweet flavors of sherry to the classic Canadian whisky taste.

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Related: The 9 Best Whiskey Bars in America for 2023

Best Overall Canadian Whisky: Canadian Club 15-Year-Old Sherry Cask Invitation Series

Canadian Club 15-Year-Old Sherry Cask Invitation Series

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“This is new and my clear favorite,” De Kergommeaux says about Canadian Club 15-Year-Old Sherry Cask Invitation Series. It’s Canadian Club 12-Year that’s undergone a second aging in oloroso sherry casks for an added layer of complexity. Bottled at 42 percent ABV, it’s low enough to enjoy with just a single big cube. It’s obtainable both in terms of availability and price, and a whisky worthy of sipping and appreciating on its own as much as any fine bourbon or Scotch. I was totally blown away by craft expressions from Found North, one of which is on this list, but the lower price, wider availability, and nod from De Kergommeaux nudged this newly released whisky into the top spot. 

$120 at Cask Cartel

Best Crown Royal Canadian Whisky: Crown Royal Barley Edition

Crown Royal Barley Edition

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While De Kergommeaux is also a big fan of Crown Royal 18, he singled out Crown Royal Barley Edition as particularly excellent. The 100 percent barley Canadian whisky uses a mix of malted and unmalted barley, which gives it a distinctive mouthfeel and flavor. Enjoy this one neat or on the rocks.

$82 at Total Wine

Best Canadian Whisky to Gift: Pendleton Whisky Director’s Reserve

Pendleton Whisky Director’s Reserve

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Pendleton Whisky Director’s Reserve is aged 20 years in American oak, then cut with glacier-fed water from Mount Hood in Oregon. Thanks to its rustic wooden box, the bottle’s leather neck, and a cork topped with a bronze cowboy, this is the best Canadian whisky for gifting. At 40 percent ABV, it’s a very easy sipper.

$139 at Reserve Bar

Best Rare Canadian Whisky: Found North Batch 007 18-Year-Old Cask Strength

Found North Batch 007 18-Year-Old Cask Strength

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For die-hard whisky fans, I strongly suggest hunting down a batch of Found North. And if you can get your hands on any of its limited batches, snap it up. Found North Batch 007 18-Year-Old Cask Strength sits at 62.2 percent ABV, so it can handle dilution from ice. It’s a mix of 83 percent corn, 12 percent rye, and 1 percent barley, aged in Madeira casks. Flavor-wise, it’ll take you places not even the best bourbon or Scotch has taken you before.

$270 at Cask Cartel
$180 at Frootbat

Best Single-Barrel Canadian Whisky: Caribou Crossing Single Barrel

Caribou Crossing Single Barrel

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Caribou Crossing Single Barrel is the first single-barrel whisky produced in Canada since the 19th century. While the age and blend are not stated, the single barrel gives every batch—which is bottled twice a year—its own subtly different personality. It’s distilled at Old Montreal Distillery and bottled at Buffalo Trace. At 40 percent ABV, it’s an easy one to sip neat, and doesn’t require dilution to tame it.

$110 at Wine.com
$131 at Caskers

Best Canadian Rye: Alberta Premium Cask Strength Rye

Alberta Premium Cask Strength 100% Rye

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Alberta Premium Cask Strength Rye is distilled in Calgary and made of 100 percent prairie rye and Rocky Mountain water. This is a clear and elegant example of Canadian terroir in a glass, bottled at a range of 65.1 to 66.1 percent ABV. While we have some favorite bourbons for old fashioneds, this is a stellar Canadian whisky for a Manhattan.

$79 at Flaviar
$95 at Total Wine

More Canadian Whiskies We Love

Best Canadian-Ish Whiskey: Fraser & Thompson

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Fraser & Thompson is a North American whiskey, as it’s a mix of 92 percent Canadian whisky and 8 percent bourbon. It’s owned by Canadian singer Michael Bublé, and bottled at Heaven Hill in Kentucky. It’s approachable, affordable, and as smooth as Bublé’s baritone.

$32 at Total Wine

Best Splurge Canadian Whisky: Lock, Stock, and Barrel 21-Year

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Lock, Stock, and Barrel 21-Year sourced this 100 percent rye whiskey from Canada. It was double distilled in copper pots and barreled in 1999, then cold-weather matured. It’s bottled at a potent 55.5 percent ABV, and is astonishingly rich, viscous, and complex, offering just enough sweetness to make the 111 proof go down easy. That said, its spicy notes ricochet off the palate and let you know with every sip this is something special. 

$470 at Total Wine

Best Value Canadian Whisky: Pendleton Whisky Midnight

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Pendleton Whisky Midnight is partly aged in ex-American brandy barrels for added richness. It’s smooth and full-bodied, with notes of baking spice like nutmeg and cinnamon, black pepper, dark berries, dried fruits, apple, and vanilla. The proof is amped up to 90, which brings a bit of heat, but also helps to augment the character of this lovely and assertive whisky. Even so, it’s still a smooth sipper you can enjoy on its own or in a cocktail.

$43 at Wine.com
$37 at Total Wine

Best Elementally Aged Canadian Whisky: Bearface Matsutake 01

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Bearface Matsutake 01 was “elementally aged” inside ex-wine and ex-sherry casks housed within shipping containers in the Canadian wilderness. Making a batch of whisky go on its own season of Alone yields a smoother, more complex sipper than you’d expect for the price point.

$43 at Royal Batch

Best Canadian Whisky for Newbies: Forty Creek Confederation Oak Reserve

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Canadian Whiskey expert Davin De Kergommeaux, who just released a new edition of his definitive book, Canadian Whisky, called Forty Creek Confederation Oak Reserve one of “the most enjoyable Canadian whiskies to introduce whisky lovers to the category.” Rich, complex, and balanced, it’s finished for up to two years in Canadian oak casks, which impart spicier wood notes than American oak. Bottled at 40 percent ABV, it’s enjoyable neat.

$80 at Total Wine

Best Cask-Finished Canadian Whisky: Pike Creek 10-Year-Old Rum Barrel Finished

After a 10-year aging process during which oak casks experience frigid Canadian winters and scalding summers, Pike Creek 10-Year-Old is treated to a finish in ex-rum casks. The typical spicy Canadian whisky flavors are balanced by the rum’s dried fruit and vanilla influence, culminating in a smooth but interesting sipper. Try it in an old fashioned or just on the rocks.

$35 at Flaviar

Why You Should Trust Me

I’ve been writing about bars, cocktails, and spirits for 16 years—and, before that, I bartended for more than a decade at Hollywood’s legendary Chateau Marmont Hotel. In one way or another, I’ve been employed in the realm of booze since the turn of the millennium.

Despite all that experience, while working on this piece, I realized I possessed some of the same glaring blind spots about Canadian whisky that many Americans do. So, I reached out to one of the top spirits experts in the world, as well as the top Canadian whisky expert to put this list together, factoring in their recommendations and embarking on a lot of tastings of blends, ryes, and barleys.

The biggest asterisk on this list is that many great craft Canadian whiskies are not available in the U.S., so some great bottles are excluded due to a lack of accessibility. Moreover, there’s a slight bias in this list to more high-end connoisseur’s whiskies because that’s the side of the category that felt the least understood by whisky lovers in the U.S. There are more affordable whiskies, such as Windsor Canadian and Canadian Hunter Rye, that were also recommended by our experts.

What We Look for in the Best Canadian Whisky

To understand what makes Canadian whisky unique, I spoke to Davin de Kergommeaux, who’s book, Canadian Whisky: The Essential Portable Expert, dropped in March 2024. He’s been writing about whisky for more than a quarter of a century and is the founder of the Canadian Whisky Awards.

Canadian whisky has a reputation for being light in flavor, although De Kergommeaux says that tastings reveal a broad range of flavor profiles ranging from “austere and elegant to bold, muscular, and brazen,” and that what really matters for Canadian whisky is “balance, subtlety, and complexity.”

The flavor profile of good Canadian whisky has its own personality. “At first sip, Canadian whisky is often quite sweet, much like bourbon, though with less vanilla and more oak caramels,” De Kergommeaux says. “Then comes a spicy, peppery blast, often accompanied by floral tones and baking spices and, finally, a cleansing pithiness like the white of grapefruit skin.”

These are the basic touchstones of Canadian whisky, which blenders then add hundreds of subtler notes to. “Less expensive Canadian whiskies also show these three flavor markers,” says De Kergommeaux, but “if you pay just a little bit more, you experience a much fuller range of flavors.

What Is Canadian Whisky?

Most Canadian whisky is made from corn, wheat, and rye, just like bourbon, De Kergommeaux says. With bourbon in the U.S., distillers mix these grains together in a mash bill, then distill them. Canadian distillers, by contrast, mash, ferment, and distill each of these grains separately, then blend the mature whiskeys together. 

“This practice allows distillers to maximize the flavor of each grain,” says De Kergommeaux. “For example, corn matures best in heavily charred barrels, while rye is much tastier when matured in toasted barrels.” He says that distillers make strongly flavored single-grain whiskies, then blend these with lighter corn whiskey matured in re-used barrels, therefore giving it a more neutral flavor as the canvas on which the stronger-flavored whiskeys can be painted.

Related: The Best Sipping Tequilas of 2023

Types of Canadian Whisky: Blend Versus Rye

The appreciation of 100 percent Canadian rye in the U.S. is what jumpstarted Canada’s craft spirits movement. The more we bought it and bottled it (for WhistlePig, for example), the more Canadians realized what they had was something special.  

You might hear people refer to Canadian whisky as “rye,” even when it only has a small amount of rye grain. De Kergommeaux says the reason for this is simple: In the early days of whisky-making in Canada, most whisky was made from wheat, and European immigrants who knew rye-grain spirits from home suggested that Canadian whisky makers add a bit of rye to their mashes to improve the somewhat bland flavor of wheat whisky—especially since most whisky in those days was not aged. People buying whisky and wanting that flavor would specify “rye” and the name stuck. 

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June 22, 2022

50 Best Whiskeys in the World 2023

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 10:22 am

It’s no easy task to cherry-pick the right whiskey to warm your chest on a chilly fall day—especially because whiskey drinkers have never had it so good. Over the past decade or so, the number of fine varieties has exploded, presenting tipplers with a mind-boggling aray of options. You can now drink bourbon that’s aged entirely on the ocean, top-rated rye, or Japanese single malts that beat the Scots in blind taste tests. 

Certain whiskey trends have also become more prevalent. There are bottled-in-bond expressions from new and established distilleries; bourbon, ryes, Irish whiskey, Scotch finished in every type of cask you can think of; more focus on the oft-ignored art of blending; and the rise of American single malt (which will be getting its own legal definition any day now). 

These days, it’s no hyperbole to say that there’s a good whiskey for everyone, no matter what your preferred flavor profile is. It seems that even within strictly defined categories, there’s still room for innovation from brands and distilleries with a creative bent.

All this poses a serious—if highly welcome—dilemma: What the hell should I drink?

Related: Best Bourbons to Drink in 2023

Fear not: Men’s Journal is on the case. In addition to putting our own taste buds to work, we recruited top experts from the wide world of whiskey—writers, bartenders, restaurateurs (and in some cases, all three)—who have collectively sampled over 1,000 bottles. Somehow, we narrowed them down to these 50 best-tasting whiskeys, most of which can be found at any good liquor store and none of which should fail to please.

So whether you’re looking for massive peat smoke for a frigid autumn night, a sophisticated weekend sipper to enjoy on the rocks while the kids trick-or-treat, or a budget bourbon for a pitcher of old fashioneds at your next Halloween party, we’ve got the perfect bottle for you. Meet the standout whiskeys of 2023. 

But How Should I Drink the Whiskey?

If you happen to be newer to the world of fancy whiskey imbibing, don’t fret. And definitely don’t overthink it.

“No matter how inexperienced you are with whiskey, there’s no need to be intimidated. Trust your palate, because there’s no right or wrong when it comes to taste,” says Men’s Journal whiskey contributor (and one of our assembled experts, below) Jonah Flicker.

Flicker recommends gathering bottles from a few different categories to sample. “Consider using a Glencairn glass if you can get one—this helps with nosing and tasting. But don’t get too precious and ignore the experts who have a ritualized method of tasting. A lot of that is just for show,” he says.

“The most important thing is to just nose and sip each whiskey individually, drink a little water in between to clear your palate, and go ahead and add a little water or ice to your whiskey if you prefer.”

Related: Best Mezcals of 2023 to Drink Neat and in Cocktails

Once you let any preconceived notions fall away, the real enjoyment begins.

“Often a whiskey will surprise you and bring something unexpected to your tasting experience,” Flicker adds. “Mouthfeel is important—some whiskeys are too thin, while others are creamy or oily (in a good way). Proof is a factor as well. There’s nothing wrong with 80 proof, the minimum required strength to be considered whiskey, but seasoned whiskey drinkers often enjoy higher-proof or even cask-strength whiskeys because these are less diluted (or undiluted) with water and therefore deliver a richer flavor.”

Meet our experts: Nick Blue, executive chef at Brasserie by Niche; Seth Brammer, beverage director at Filament; Brendan Dorr, beverage director at B&O Brasserie; St. John Frizell, owner of Fort Defiance; Anna Hezel, Men’s Journal and Lucky Peach contributor; Bridget Maloney, general manager of The Sexton; Jack McGarry, owner of The Dead Rabbit; Paul McGee, beverage director at Chicago Athletic Association; Julia Momose, head bartender at Green River; Phil Olson, bar manager at Longman & Eagle; Nicholas Pollacchi, acquirer of rare spirits and owner of The Whisky Dog; Ben Rojo, bartender at Angel’s Share; Jaya Saxena, author of The Book of Lost Recipes; Mike Shain, general manager at Porchlight; Eric Simpkins, beverage director and partner at The Lawrence; Tommy Tardie, owner of The Flatiron Room; Bill Thomas, owner and whiskey curator at Jack Rose Dining Saloon; G. Clay Whittaker and Jonah Flicker, Men’s Journal whiskey contributors.

50 Best Whiskeys in the World

Melissa Kirschenheiter

Since its founding, WhistlePig has sourced whiskey from Canada and Indiana, then blended, finished, and bottled it at its Vermont farm and distillery. Nowadays, it’s also distilling its own whiskey, but the best remains its 10-year-old rye with big, bold, warm flavor notes reminiscent of clove, nutmeg, and toffee—perfect for an autumn sipper.

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Elijah Craig Barrel Proof is perhaps the ultimate whiskey for bargain hunters. It’s aged for 12 years, bottled uncut (proof depends on the batch, which is released three times per year) and unfiltered. It sells for about $50 (if you can find it). It has all of the characteristics of Heaven Hill bourbons (Evan Williams, Elijah Craig, Henry McKenna), with flavors of caramel, apple, vanilla, and cinnamon, but with more depth and intensity. In addition to the flavor profile being perfect for a Halloween hangout, this bourbon goes down easy. It can be quite dangerous as it doesn’t drink as hot as the proof may suggest. It also makes a phenomenal Old Fashioned with just a touch of sugar and a few dashes of bitters.

Melissa Kirschenheiter

No rust belt residue can be found on this ridiculously smooth 94-proof small-batch Watershed Bourbon from Ohio. It’s incredibly drinkable (watch out) with hints of butterscotch. Bold notes remind you it spent four years in char #4 (the heaviest char) American oak barrels, and was given a final finish in apple brandy casks. This spelted bourbon—made with a mash bill of corn, rye, wheat, malted barley, and spelt—proves that craft bourbon need not hail from Kentucky.

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Winter is around the corner, and the spicy blend of Bushmills Black Bush is a favorite of Jack McGarry, co-founder of The Dead Rabbit in New York. “Due to the heavy sherry component, the blend possesses wonderful Christmas cake notes of dried fruits and the prerequisite spices,” McGarry says. Despite its festive wintertime flavors, it’s suitable for year-round consumption.

Melissa Kirschenheiter

A great blended malt should be more than the sum of its parts. Monkey Shoulder pulls that off in spades. It was originally a blend of single malts Glenfiddich, Balvenie, and Kinivie; now there are a few more in the mix. It makes a solid match for some ice cubes and a splash of soda, and it’s one of the best damn Scotch and limes we’ve ever had.

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Mention the word “bourbon,” and most of us immediately think “Kentucky.” After all, the spirit has been made there for more than 200 years. But, according to The Flatiron Room founder, Tommy Tardie, there’s also great bourbon coming out of New York. “My current favorite? Field & Sound Bottled in Bond Pot Still Edition,” he says. “Long Island Spirits distills this out on the Long Island Sound. They’ve been doing fantastic stuff and I’m a big fan of a lot of it. Several bottles have a permanent home in my liquor cabinet.”

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Compass Box has elevated the art of blended Scotch. Javelle Taft, bartender at New York City’s Death & Co, counts himself a fan. “It has to be the Artist Blend,” he says. “It’s full of luscious fruit notes with a caramel finish. The blend is mostly single malt combined with some grain whisky, giving it a nice creamy oat vibe with toasted coconut on the nose.”

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There are few bourbons more coveted than Pappy Van Winkle 12-Year Lot B. The problem: That bottle is impossible to find without a tremendous markup. Our advice: skip Lot B and get W.L. Weller 12 instead. “Regaled as the ‘inexpensive’ Van Winkle Lot B, this wheated bourbon is one of the best values on the market,” says Bill Thomas, owner and whiskey curator at Washington, D.C.’s Jack Rose Dining Saloon. While it used to run for just $40, it’s quickly becoming scarce and that price point is rising, but you’ll pay a few hundred instead of more than a grand for Pappy. 

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Maker’s 46 Bourbon Whisky is a lab experiment gone right. “They set out to enhance the iconic Maker’s Mark and succeeded by placing seared oak staves into a small-batch bourbon for 90 days,” says Thomas. “The result is everything you loved about Maker’s [but] with more complexity and an extra shot of well-balanced oak notes.”

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“A question I get a lot is ‘What’s your favorite whiskey?’ ” Tardie says. “Not an easy answer, as my preference changes depending on the season, the temperature, where I’m at, and even my mood.” But there’s one that’s always been in his top five: GlenDronach Allardice 18 Single Malt Scotch Whisky. “It’s brilliant,” he says. “One sip and notes of leather, tobacco, polished wood, and sweet sherry notes linger on my palate.”

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There are many Irish single malts to choose from, but the core expression from The Tyrconnell stands out from the pack. “I love the character in this whiskey,” says Taft. “It’s loaded with toasted nuts and nougat notes,” and makes for a fantastic emerald cocktail (Irish whiskey, sweet vermouth, and orange bitters).

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“I’m a George Dickel fan—heck, I even think the white corn whiskey is good,” says Tardie. His favorite is the 13-year Bottled in Bond—a fantastic whiskey at a fantastic price.”Dickel has a high corn mashbill (84 percent), so it comes across a bit sweeter for me, but that sweetness plays well with the higher proof (50 percent ABV).”

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

​​Rittenhouse Rye originated in the Monongahela River area of Pennsylvania. Today it’s made in Kentucky with a mashbill containing less rye than the original pre-Prohibition recipe. The 100-proof bottled-in-bond whiskey goes down smooth, making it one of the better sipping ryes out there. And you can’t argue with the price tag: less than $30.

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St. John Frizell, owner of Brooklyn cafe and bar Fort Defiance, can’t get enough of Caribbean Cask 14-Year Single Malt. The Scotch is finished in rum barrels. “It’s surprising how much rum character comes through,” he says. “It’s beautiful Balvenie whiskey, but with graceful notes of almond, lime rind, tropical fruit, allspice, and nutmeg. These are rum punch flavors, straight out of the West Indies.”

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This single malt whisky from the Orkney region of Scotland is the northernmost distillery in the country. The whisky there is peated, but not aggressively so, with a heavy sherry cask influence. This cask-strength version, now in its third batch release, is non-chill filtered; boasts a natural color; and is full of nuanced flavors of vanilla, light smoke, and honey. Add a drop of water or two if you’d prefer to cool it down.

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When you walk into a bar and spot Redbreast 12-Year Old Irish Whiskey, order it immediately. Made from the mash of malted and unmalted barley, this traditional pot still whiskey is warm, with a spicy kick you won’t soon forget.

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Blanton’s Original Single Barrel Bourbon is damn tough to outshine. The whiskey blooms with satisfying orange and vanilla notes and comes in the single most iconic bottle to ever grace a bar cart. When booze meets lip, it coats your mouth with caramel and citrus, leaving just a slight burn in the back of your throat.

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The Famous Grouse Scotch Whisky has been renowned since 1842, when its creator was asked to supply a whiskey for a royal dinner attended by Queen Victoria. Today, the regal blend has become Scotland’s best-selling whiskey on account of its storied legacy, its trademark malty flavor profile, and its reasonable price (about $25 a bottle).

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Bulleit Rye should be the first whiskey you buy when stocking your bar. The clean spice and sweet vanilla flavors are complex and smooth enough to be savored neat. Yet this impressively affordable spirit is also a cocktail’s best friend, seamlessly blending and complementing any bitters or liqueurs you throw at it. 

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You’ve probably had Jameson Original at more than a few dive bars, but to get a bottle of the award-winning Jameson 18 Years, you have to hunt. It blends three whiskeys, which are aged in oak casks, then blended for a finishing period of six months in bourbon barrels. The result? An intriguing and pleasing blend of vanilla, almond, and toffee, mingling with a tinge of woodiness.  

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Aberfeldy has been making single malt in the Scottish Highlands since 1896 using only fresh water from Pitilie Burn—the stream that runs alongside the distillery. The whisky has long been a core component of Dewar’s Blended Scotch Whisky, but it stands on its own as a single malt release. The fruity, malty Aberfeldy 12-Year-Old brings invigorating notes of honey and spice to the palate, and can be sipped neat or used in any whisky cocktail you can think of.

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With caramel, coffee, and brown butter notes to finish, Michter’s US-1 Unblended American Whiskey is a reasonably priced and readily available bottle of whiskey anyone can get behind. The main difference between this and Michter’s Bourbon is that the American Whiskey is aged in used barrels (remember, bourbon must be matured in new charred oak). Try this whiskey to see how it compares, and go ahead and make an old fashioned with it.

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Japan has been producing great whisky for decades. Tardie says its popularity, however, didn’t become mainstream until the last few years. “In 2013 the Yamazaki Sherry Cask was awarded ‘World Whisky of the Year,’ and demand for anything Japanese went gangbusters,” says Tardie. Yamazaki 18 Single Malt Whisky is a tremendous expression. Unfortunately, the lack of availability and the steep pricing will limit the number of people who actually get to try it. Good luck.

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There’s a very good reason why Mellow Corn has become such a popular whiskey among mixologists across the country: While it does taste a little like ginger candy and vanilla, Mellow Corn really opens up when combined with other ingredients. Sure, “it’s “funky stuff” on its own,” as Mike Shain, general manager at Danny Meyer’s New York City bar Porchlight tells us. But you’ll cut it some slack as soon as you see what it can do for your cocktails or after your third shot. Whatever comes first. 

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Balvenie’s one of those distilleries that never gets enough attention for its interesting releases. Balvenie Doublewood 12 Whiskey is one of its finished whiskies, where two different barrels have been in play. Tardie explains the whiskey spent over a decade in refill American oak casks, before being finished in first-fill European oak sherry casks. “Balvenie’s Doublewood was the early pioneer of introducing double maturation to the whiskey world,” says Tardie. A great sipping whiskey, the sherry wood adds an interesting layer of intrigue.

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Nicholas Pollacchi, co-founder of Shibui Whisky, thinks Lot 40 Rye is a stellar sipper and worth any world of pain the morning after. He calls this single pot still rye “smoother than a baby’s hiney.” It’s made with 90 percent unmalted rye grain and 10 percent malted rye, which he says gives this whiskey its spectacular aroma and velvet-like mouth feel. “The perfect balance of floral and fruitiness is matched by the peppery earthiness. It’s one of the best ways you’ll ever spend $40.”

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Pollacchi says this distillery has always been close to his heart, and the 2001 vintage is “dangerously easy to drink.” It was originally bottled in 2013 (Speyside distillery Glenrothes releases whisky by vintage year, the year of distillation), and Pollacchi raves over its notes of toffee, dark cherries, and baking spices. “If you have never tried a Glenrothes, start here.”

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Four Roses is famous for its unusual process of combining two different mashbills with five proprietary yeast strains to create 10 bourbons that are blended back together. Its Single Barrel, however, is no blend. It uses only Four Roses’ 35 percent rye mash bill and a yeast known for its smooth, light vanilla and fruit character. The resulting liquid is rich with notes of prune, maple, and toffee.

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This famously smooth, creamy whiskey with soft caramel notes has set the bar high for Kentucky bourbons. Jim Beam Black benefits from a few extra years of aging in white oak barrels, which set it a solid notch above the original. Full-bodied with some hints of warm oak, this whiskey won the Bourbon Trophy at the 2016 International Wine and Spirits Competition.

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Midleton Very Rare is Irish whiskey at its peak. The blend is a combination of pot still and grain whiskey, all of which has been matured for a lengthy amount of time and selected by master distiller Kevin O’Gorman. The 2023 edition is full of fruit, molasses, and spice notes, and is best sipped neat—although go ahead and whip up a decadent cocktail with this if you please.

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If you’re considering barrel-proof whiskey, it’s really hard to go wrong with Booker’s, a bourbon produced at the James B. Beam Distilling Co. that is released in several batches every year. “It’s one of the first cask strength small batches that was forever the standard bearer for a classic Manhattan,” says Ryan Pendergast, head bartender at Bourbon Steak. “It really has a distinct flavor that punches through and makes itself known in a cocktail. It has a personality that makes it stand out.”

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Lagavulin 16 is the standard bearer of the portfolio, and arguably of the whole of peated and Islay whisky world. Thomas has made it his go-to because of the bottle’s balance: “The peat delivered on a bed of sweetness is the perfect introduction to one of the world’s greatest whisky-producing islands.”

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Taft is a big fan of Toki, an affordable blend from Japanese whisky giant Suntory. “It’s a great blended whisky that’s flexible enough to enjoy in a highball and bold enough for an old fashioned,” he says. “I love the savory character of the spirit, it reminds me of mushrooms and kelp.”

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Craigellachie is very selective over its releases, and its 19-year-old is one of its oldest expressions,” says Pollacchi. Bottled at 46 percent ABV, this Speyside distillery gives us a whisky well worth adding to your portfolio. “Bright citrus notes and tropical fruit on the nose are matched by charred oak on the palate,” Pollacchi says, “giving this dram an unusually complex finish that’s rarely seen from this region.” 

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

Our desert island Irish whiskey? Green Spot. This single pot still whiskey, made from a mashbill of malted and unmalted barley, then aged in bourbon and sherry casks, is produced at Midleton—the same distillery behind popular brands like Jameson, Redbreast, and Powers. The palate is spicy, with hints of menthol, and offers a smooth vanilla finish.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

When Ben Rojo, NYC-based hospitality consultant, first got into Scotch whisky, he was drawn immediately to the peat monsters of Islay—stuff his wife claims turns his breath to “bandaids and cigarette butts.” While his tastes have mellowed since then, he says: “Bowmore 15 is still my security blanket.” It’s got all the hallmark smoke and salinity he fell in love with, and its tempered with the fruit and caramel of the finishing sherry casks.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

Thomas calls Willett’s 2-Year “arguably the best young cask-strength rye on the market.” He explains, “it delivers such depth and complexity at such a young age, you can’t wait to watch it grow up.” If you ever get the rare chance to sample something older, expressions as old as 25 years exist. But be prepared to shell out hundreds at that point—or just buy more of the stellar 2-year.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

Hibiki 17 Whisky was discontinued in 2018, meaning it’s difficult to find and very expensive when you do. But it’s a fantastic blend from Suntory that’s a creamy, fruity, flavorful pour. “If you’re lucky enough to run into one of these bottles at your local spirits store,” says Thomas, “buy it!” And remember, this isn’t the brand of spirit you stir in a cocktail.

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There are so many Macallan expressions to choose from, but Tardie is a fan of this new limited-edition release. “Seems you can never go wrong with a bottle of Macallan and there is certainly no shortage to choose from,” he says. “Not too long ago they launched a limited edition series called The Harmony Collection. My favorite is its Intense Arabica edition. This bottle is inspired by Ethiopian coffee beans (one of my favorites). And everyone knows coffee and whisky go great together!”

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

Crown Royal’s Northern Harvest Rye blend quickly grabbed everyone’s attention after writer Jim Murray gave it 97.5 points out of 100 in his annual Whisky Bible. And for less than $50, you can taste for yourself why Canadian whisky is back on top of the world.

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Keeper’s Heart is an interesting blend of Irish and American whiskey. “The O’Shaughnessy family, out of Minneapolis, wanted to create a whiskey that celebrated their Irish-American heritage,” Tardie says. “With Keeper’s Heart, they took a ‘go big or go home’ approach and reached out to legendary master distiller Brian Nation, who, at the time, was the master distiller at none other than Jameson.”

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Since September 2, 2002, Old Forester has been celebrating its founder’s birthday by releasing a limited, small-batch bourbon annually. The aromas are sweet (vanilla, cinnamon, chocolate, and juicy orange), but balanced by a woody richness and robust finish. The 2022 edition was selected from 11-year-old barrels and bottled at 96 proof.

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Truer labels have never been written (or gracefully slapped onto a finer-looking bottle): “I traded my tomorrow to remain in yesterday…whiskey tears are fading now, each one cries another day.” Waxing poetic on imbiber’s dreams of yesteryear aside, Writer’s Tears Copper Pot Whiskey contains pot still and malt whiskey. Sure, it’s aged impeccably and laced with ginger-y, honey-studded notes, but what makes it a real standout in our collection is that it comes to its maturation in flame-charred bourbon barrels. The result? A beautiful amber hue and an unforgettable taste.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

When seventh-generation distiller Fred Noe discovered a cache of whiskey his father, Booker, barreled before his death, the younger Noe decided he would use it to create Knob Creek 2001 Limited Edition as a tribute. Noe’s eulogy in bourbon was left to age five years more than the original Knob Creek, and that extra time in the barrel was well spent. The whiskey is well-balanced and eminently sippable—a near perfect remembrance of a man’s life’s work in whiskey.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

Jefferson’s Ocean Bourbon is better traveled than you will likely ever be. During its six months at sea, the whiskey crosses the equator four times and makes port in 30 cities on five continents. Founder Trey Zoeller locked scores of barrels up in a container, put them on a ship without passports, and slapped on a few return-to-sender labels. Sure, it’s a marketing gimmick—a clever one at that—but the result is a really excellent bourbon. We’ll chalk it up to a half-year of agitation from the swaying ocean, but this whiskey has beautiful notes of vanilla, wood, and char—and we think we can detect just a hint of salt and brine from its long voyage.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

The mash used to create Glenmorangie Signet is made with a portion of heavily roasted chocolate barley—just like what’s used in stouts and porters. As you might expect, the whisky has notes of coffee and cocoa, but also sweetness of apricot and raisins. In short, the perfect nightcap.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

Matured entirely in Spanish sherry casks, The Macallan Rare Cask is a serious no-age-statement whiskey. There’s so much to love here. The citrus and cocoa on the nose; the beautiful red color; the fruity, nutty flavors; and warm, smoky finish. It’s released once per year, and the latest 2022 batch is a collaboration with violinist Nicola Benedetti.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

Cooper Spirits launched its first Lock Stock and Barrel expression in 2012, as a stunning 13-year-old straight rye that quickly disappeared from shelves for its rich, velvety character. The company smartly decided to hold a few of its charred oak casks for further aging, giving us the exquisite 16-Year Straight Rye. While the 13-Year is back, the 16 is rare indeed. The flavor is familiar, yet bold in a way unlike any other rye we’ve tried.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

How do they make Few Bourbon in Evanston, IL? With a whole lotta rye. This epic bourbon has a floral edge—it almost reminds of us gin–that gets washed away by a finish that’s studded with cloves and butterscotch.

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Melissa Kirschenheiter

Laphroaig Lore is further proof not all world-class whiskies require an age statement. A fine addition to the Laphroig line, Lore displays a nearly perfect balance of spiced fruit and honey pizzicato contrasted by smoke, peat, and sea salt. The crescendo lingers on the tongue long after the dram is done and leaves your mouth demanding an encore.

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May 4, 2022

Best Brandies and Cognacs to Drink Right Now

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 7:59 pm

All Cognac is brandy, but not all brandy is Cognac. Before you sip either of these spirits, you should learn that simple phrase. Brandy, in the simplest terms, is the all-encompassing term used to describe a spirit distilled from grapes (and some other ingredients, including apples).

Cognac is technically a brandy, though. It’s just a name for brandy that’s distilled two times in copper pot stills, aged at least two years in French oak barrels, and made in the Cognac region of France (among other rules and regulations). That last rule is the most important. Cognac is a uniquely French product. It’s as ingrained in the country’s drinking culture as bourbon is to the US (maybe even more). Brandy, on the other hand, can be made anywhere in the world, including the U.S.

Just like bourbon, Cognac has a handful of well-known brands that garner more attention than the others. These include Rémy Martin, Hennessy, Courvoisier, and Martell. But just like in the American whiskey landscape, there are a lot more houses than just the household names. There are over 300 different Cocgnac producers, making VS (very special), VSOP (very special old pale), XO (extra old), and other mature Cognacs.

The complexities of brandy

It might seem like Cognac is extremely complicated, but it’s simply one form of brandy. Brandy itself is much more complex. As we mentioned above, brandy is simply a fermented spirit usually made from grapes. But it can also be made using apples, peaches, cherries, pears, and other fruits. There are no strict rules about where and how it can be produced. That’s why you’ll find brandies produced all over the world.

While you could spend hours perusing the aisles at your local liquor store or scrolling through online retailers, reading reviews, we’d rather help push you along on your spirited journey. That’s why we decided to list the best brandies and Cognacs below.

Bottle of Hine Homage Cognac: The Best Brandies And Cognacs To Drink Right Now
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1. Hine Homage Cognac

Literally an homage to its founder, Thomas Hine, an Englishman who launched the brand back in 1763, this is not a Cognac for a beginner. Unless you don’t mind spending a hefty amount of money (around $150) for one bottle, that is. It’s a blend of over twenty Cognacs from Hine’s cellars that are all aged for at least 10 years and made from Grande Champagne grapes. It’s known for its bold, rich flavor profile of sweet chocolate, caramel, and vanilla, with some light fruit notes.

[$144.99; honecognac.com]

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December 30, 2021

Warm Up This Winter With These Delicious Cream Liqueurs

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 8:03 pm

Cream liqueurs are a wintertime favorite for good reason. They’re a little indulgent, work well in coffees and hot chocolate, and give you the same warm and fuzzy feeling as your favorite sweater.

While Baileys Irish Cream is arguably the most well-known in the realm of cream-based beverages (it is the original, after all), it’s not the only one worth drinking. In fact, a growing number of distilleries are dabbling in cream liqueurs and pushing the boundaries of the style. Some call upon nontraditional spirits, like rum, while others use unusual additions like saffron, peanut butter, and mango to put their own spin on the liqueur and create new flavor profiles.

While there’s nothing wrong with your beloved Baileys—it’s popular for a reason—here are six other options to help you spice up your bar cart.

The Best Cream Liqueurs (Besides Baileys)

Five Farms Irish Cream Liqueur
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1. Five Farms Irish Cream Liqueur

This single-batch Irish cream from County Cork, Ireland has the Goldilocks factor. It’s not too viscous, not too syrupy, and not too sweet. It has a well-rounded flavor with notes of butterscotch, vanilla, stroopwafel, and honey-tinged whiskey, and it’s perfect for drinking all on its own. We’re also fans of the swing-top bottle—it looks just like an old-fashioned milk container.

[$28; drizly.com]

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Somrus Chai Cream Liqueur
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2. Somrus Chai Cream Liqueur

Unlike other distilleries, Somrus uses rum rather than whiskey in its trio of cream liqueurs: coffee, mango, and chai. While each is good in its own right, we’re partial to the chai for its prominent pistachio, cardamom, and saffron flavors that pair beautifully with (and help neutralize the spice of) Indian and Caribbean dishes.

[$25; reservebar.com]

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Bacardi Coquito
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3. Bacardi Coquito

Coquito, which means “little coconut” in Spanish, is a boozy Christmas drink typically found in Puerto Rico. It’s similar to eggnog but generally not as thick. Bacardi’s version is a 13-percent ABV liqueur that combines the brand’s white rum with cinnamon, coconut cream, and vanilla.

[$20; drizly.com]

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Black Button Distilling Bespoke Bourbon Cream
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4. Black Button Distilling Bespoke Bourbon Cream

If you drizzled bourbon over a butterscotch-infused crème brûlée, it would give you a pretty good idea of what Black Button Distilling’s Bespoke Bourbon Cream tastes like. It’s a delightfully smooth standalone sipper, but it also works well in dessert cocktails like a chocolate martini or a mudslide.

[$35; blackbuttondistilling.com]

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Whisper Creek Tennessee Sipping Cream
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5. Whisper Creek Tennessee Sipping Cream

If you’re looking for liquid dessert, this is it. Whisper Creek Tennessee Sipping Cream from Pennington Distilling Company in Nashville, TN makes very sweet concoctions. Each of the four offerings—original, mocha, peanut butter chocolate, and pumpkin spice—is made from the brand’s whiskey base with cream and more than 30 flavors added in. We’d recommend using them in coffee or a dessert recipe like bread pudding.

[$35; winetoship.com]

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Cutwater White Russian
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6. Cutwater White Russian

While not strictly a cream-based spirit (it’s a ready-to-drink canned cocktail made with Cutwater vodka and coffee cream liqueur), this White Russian is worth a mention for the convenience it provides. Creamy with bold vanilla, espresso, and chocolate notes, it’s like a boozy malted milkshake, except you can grab it off a shelf at your local liquor store. You can sip it from the can, but we’d recommend pouring it over ice.

[$14, 4-pack; reservebar.com]

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November 4, 2021

Master the Ultimate Party Trick: How to Saber a Champagne Bottle

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 6:18 pm

In the pantheon of party tricks, sabering a bottle of champagne is arguably the biggest showstopper. And while it’s mainly used for big celebrations and ceremonial events, there’s no reason why you can’t use it to kick off a weeknight dinner—but you’ll need to know how to saber a champagne bottle safely first.

Sabering is something Mark Oldman, wine expert and founder of Bevinars, knows well, so we asked him for his tips for successful sabrage. Read on for his advice, and remember: This is a trick best done while sober.

How to Saber a Champagne Bottle

1. Procure Your Accoutrements: You’ll need a bottle of champagne (American sparkling wine, cava or prosecco can work, but seem to do so less consistently). You’ll also need a large, heavy knife—or a sword.

“It need not be a saber or machete,” Oldman tells Men’s Journal. “A chef’s knife works just as well, even if it bestows less drama.”

2. Chill the Bottle: It’s important that your bottle be very cold.

“This step is vital, because the coldness will make the bottle more brittle and easier to saber,” Oldman says.

Before sabering, give your bottle at least a 20-minute ice bath. You can also pop it in the freezer for a bit, but don’t forget it’s in there. You don’t want it to freeze solid and explode.

3. Remove the Foil and Cage: Be sure to always point the cork away from your eyes and away from other people—you never know when it might spontaneously erupt.

4. Find Your Runway: Glass champagne bottles are constructed from two halves, and there are two seams that run up the length of each bottle where the two halves meet. Find the seams and pick one. That’ll be where you’ll run your knife.

5. Saber Away: When you’re ready, hold the bottle up at a 45 degree angle, making sure to point it away from onlookers and valuable property. Place the blade of your knife (you can also use the back of the knife to avoid damaging the blade) on the seam at the bottom of the bottle’s neck. Then use a forceful but smooth stroke to run the blade along the seam until you hit the lip of the bottle. If you’re successful, the top of the bottle’s neck, with cork inside, will fly off. Remember to focus on smooth movement—it’s not about strength or forcing the bottle open.

“As the romantically included say: It’s not the size of the wave, but the motion of the ocean,” Oldman says.

Note that sabrage doesn’t always work, even for pros like Oldman.

“Much depends on getting the bottle cold enough and the smoothness of your motion and hitting the bottle’s lip just right,” he says.

But with a lot of practice, it is possible to master the technique—just ask Mirko Rainer, who once sabered 47 bottles in one minute (the current Guinness World Record). Pros can even move on from knives to sabering with other hard objects, like a spoon or the edge of a high-heeled shoe.

For the rest of us, however, it’s best to stick to the basics.

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March 30, 2021

Trust Me Vodka Sends a Message in a Bottle

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , — admin @ 5:07 pm

This article was produced in partnership with Trust Me Vodka

Mankind’s most impressive discoveries and innovations occur at the junction of seemingly disparate areas of human knowledge: biology and technology merge to produce the miracles of biotechnology; genetics and engineering have become inseparable, promising a brighter future. Examples abound, yet one alcohol producer has made a bold move to marry two surprisingly distant elements—spirits and art. Ernst Hemingway was famously quoted as saying “write drunk, edit sober.” Indeed, many famous writers imbibed to find inspiration for their written art. Trust Me Vodka, the producer of one of America’s premium vodka brands, draws inspiration from art. It’s literally displayed on each and every bottle, which in turn inspires those who drink it.


 

Getting noticed in the crowded alcohol market is not an easy task and requires ingenuity, talent, and a core idea capable of moving product to consumers. Visual attraction helps, of course. The spirit of creativity displayed by Trust Me Vodka manifests in truly distinctive branding with a whole story to tell on every bottle. Banksy made a name for himself by putting his art on concrete walls, pavements, and fences—and Trust Me Vodka uses its vodka bottles as a display for talented creators’ works of art.

Since 2017, 15 artists have had the opportunity to create the art seen on each Trust Me Vodka bottle. Trust Me is constantly scouting for up-and-coming artists all over the world. In 2017, the first artist to commit their art was Jeff Soto—a budding artist known for his variation of Pop Surrealism and street art. No empty Trust Me bottle needs to be recycled since they’re also a genuine collectible item. Like postal stamps at the time of the stamp collector craze, each bottle is a limited series that stands a good chance of becoming a collectible item after each of their 20,000-bottle series is sold out. With art that varies from contemporary to modern to abstract, the Trust Me bottega is made up of multitalented artists.


At a time of overall food and drink sensitivity, producers have to cater to different dietary preferences, with alcoholic beverages being no exception. Trust Me Vodka comes in two kinds of spirits—organic vodka distilled from wheat, and vodka for gluten-sensitive drinkers made from a unique sort of Idaho-grown potatoes. Both beverages have distinctive smoothness and a crisp yet kick-free profile. In a bid to expand its range of premium beverages, Trust Me has recently launched a premier line of bottled cocktails that include the famed bloody Mary and sex on the beach, exotic kamikaze, and a pear-cucumber mix, among others. Trust Me mixologists do wonders, as the name would suggest.

The message in a bottle that Trust Me is sending is that of an uncompromised commitment to excellence through rare creativity. To learn more about Trust Me Vodka, visit their website or follow them on Instagram.

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March 4, 2021

Binge-Drinkers Have a Harder Time Feeling Empathy

Filed under: Fitness,Health — Tags: , , , — admin @ 9:41 pm

A glass of wine may be good for your ticker, but too much booze can damage your heart in a more metaphorical manner: Researchers at the University of Sussex in England found that binge-drinking (defined as drinking three-quarters to a bottle of wine at once) impedes people’s ability to empathize with another person’s pain.


 

To study this, the scientists monitored brain activity in binge-drinkers (sober at the time) and non-binge-drinkers as they were shown images of an injured body part and asked to rate the pain experienced by a person with this injury. It took binge-drinkers longer to respond, they perceived the pain to be minimal, and the areas of their brains responsible for feelings like empathy lit up on the screen—suggesting binge-drinkers have to work overtime to imagine someone else’s angst.

Why does binge-drinking mess with your ability to tune into other people’s feelings? “During a binge-drinking episode, large amounts of alcohol enter the brain within a limited time period, followed by a period of no drinking—as opposed to regular drinking in which a person might consume similar weekly amounts of alcohol, but without the extremes of intoxication and withdrawal,” says study author Dora Duka, M.D., Ph.D.

Tthese swings in alcohol levels appear to cause dysfunction in part of the brain. “The pattern of binge-drinking seems to poison the brain both during intoxication and during withdrawal.”


Bottom line: Go steady on the booze and practice moderation.

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January 15, 2021

More Americans Are Participating in Dry January

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , — admin @ 3:30 am

Dry January is officially becoming a trend.

The one-month sobriety challenge has continued to grow in popularity in recent years, and new surveys indicate a surprising number of Americans have adopted this healthy start to the new year.


In a survey of 2,200 U.S. adults, Morning Consult found that 13 percent of people are abstaining from booze to kick-off 2021. Last year, that same survey was at 11 percent. Additionally, another survey of 15,000 U.S. adults from YouGov found that 15 percent of responded were planning to participate in sober January––up from 10 percent last year. And Google provided another sign, with search queries for “Dry January” spiking in recent weeks.

The main reasons for going sober involved being healthier and reducing alcohol consumption, but about half of respondents to the Morning Consult survey stated that Dry January had become an annual tradition for them.

One of the main benefactors of this new trend is nonalcoholic beer companies like Athletic Brewing, who have seen a big spike in interest and sales. And the newfound interest in non-alcoholic beer isn’t just limited to January, the sector actually increased in popularity throughout 2020. In fact, market research firm IRI found that nonalcoholic beer sales grew 37.7% in 2020, to $188 million.

Another major factor to consider is COVID-19. With many folks drinking more over the past year to cope with the stress of the global pandemic, taking a break to start 2021 has become popular. Morning Consult found that 49 percent of people said excess drinking during COVID-19 was a factor in their decision to participate in Dry January.


Though with 2021 already off to a turbulent start, the real question is how many people will actually stick with Dry January. 31 days can feel like a long time, especially with the stress of a global pandemic continuing to wreak havoc on our lives. However, attacking 2021 with a clear mind is a healthy strategy you won’t regret.

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