Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Expensive Boozehoundery...

Stretch sent me this link:

Glenlivet 70 Year Old Whiskey
There's aged whiskey, and then there's the Glenlivet 70 Year Old Whiskey (£13,000; roughly $21,000). The second release in Gordon & MacPhail's Generations range, this rare spirit was distilled on February 3, 1940, and comes in a gorgeous tear-shaped, hand-blown crystal decanter, with a silver stopper and base, and a handmade box crafted from Scottish Elm. If you want some, you'd best hurry — only 100 bottles were made.
MMMmmmmm. Seventy year old whiskey...


At $21K, though, it's far too rich for my gullet...

That is all.

16 comments:

North said...

That would be fun to shoot.

Bubblehead Les. said...

February 1940? Why, that's a WW2 Original! Bottled when Churchill was holding off the Nazis, just think of the stories it could tell.
Too bad it's not Bourbon.

Dave H said...

Too bad they had to put it in that frou-frou bottle. It looks like something you'd buy overpriced sparkling water in.

A whiskey that old deserves more respect.

Tam said...

$21,000?

For something you'll be flushing down the toilet in an hour?

"A ____ and his _____ soon are ______." Fill in the blanks. Ready? Go!

North said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Weer'd Beard said...

I couldn't enjoy a drink that cost me that much.

Also given that Speyburn 10yo single-malt is one of my favorite scotches, I prefer them on the younger side...

Robert said...

I bought a bottle of hootch once that cost me a day's wages. Upon inspecting the merchandise, the sales clerk volunteered that he was available for adoption. The first sip was very, very, good. The rest of the evening is a bit fuzzy. I can't afford it anymore. Sigh.

Brad_in_IL said...

Weer'd,

Give Macallan 12 yr sherry cask aged a try. One of my fave's. And not horribly $pendy at about $45 a bottle.

- Brad

Anonymous said...

All aged in used white oak barrles from the American Burbon Industries. Scotch, tastes second hand too. Just my flavor buds speaking and a little trivia.

Stickman

Bram said...

For the price of a new car? I couldn't enjoy it either. With every sip, I would be thinking about what part of the car I was swallowing.

Dragon said...

Ummm....not *all* the Scotches are aged in former Bourbon casks.

ANd Weer'd....if you want a truly superb Scotch...Lagavulin Double Wood.

First aging is in cognac casks, then its transferred to Sherry Cask.

I once had a double wood (I forget who made it, tho...bummer) that was first aged in a bourbon cask for 7 years, then transferred to a cask that held Sweet Vermouth to finish out 5 years. It was, literally, like drinking honey.

greg said...

I felt guilty every time I had a sip from my $150 bottle of Crown Royal XR...I can't imagine how much I would have to be worth to justify spending $21,000 on a bottle of liquor.

That Crown XR didn't taste 6 times better than a bottle of regular crown...I doubt that stuff is 400 times better then regular Glen.

North said...

I agree - Crown XR.

Crown Black.

Crown.

Good stuff.

Maura said...

I need to find me a rich sugar daddy, because I have a serious case of Want.

I know, shocking, huh? Irish woman drinks whisky. Film at 11. But not that whisky. I want to try it...

Anonymous said...

That's why John Walker made his Blue Label. Gold label for company, but the Blue for those really special folk.

-Don F

Weer'd Beard said...

My #1 spendy Whiskey is Booker's reserve bourbon. About $40 for a bottle, and filthy tasty.

Bourbon because I'm from America, damnit!

(LOL, I also keep a bunch of scotch, some English gins, and I actually find Segram's 7 on the rocks on a hot summer night to be quite lovely )