Sujet : Re: Bourbon Barrels
De : Bruce (at) *nospam* invalid.invalid (Bruce)
Groupes : rec.food.cookingDate : 08. Apr 2025, 00:01:55
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vt1lh3$r934$3@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3
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On Mon, 7 Apr 2025 17:02:51 +0000,
dsi100@yahoo.com (dsi1) wrote:
On Mon, 7 Apr 2025 16:01:09 +0000, flood of sins wrote:
>
On 2025-04-07, Ed P <esp@snet.n> wrote:
60 Minutes tonight had a segment on bourbon barrels, how they are made
and used. Last year, Kentucky distillers bought 3.2 million charred oak
barrels.
>
For a whisky to be called bourbon, it must be aged in a charred oak
barrel. It gives the spirits color and flavor and is aged from months
to many years. The bourbon is emptied, but the barrel lives on.
>
The used barrels are shipped around the world to Europe, India, China
where they are used to age other spirits. They showed a warehouse that
just takes them in and re-ships by the thousands.
>
The episode had some influence on me. As I'm typing this, I'm sipping a
wee bit of 7 year old Whistle Pig bourbon.
>
i don't like Bourbon at all. when i started drinking whisky i
tried many different brands and don't like any of them. i love
Scotch and i do like several Scotches that spent some time aging
in used Bourbon barrels though.
>
Whistle Pig makes a great rye whisky. my fav is Crown Royal. go
Canada!
>
My younger brother drinks Scotch. He also likes to smoke fine cigars.
He's a connoisseur of fine things. He also likes to run many miles in
the mornings and evenings. He's even raised show dogs. He's a rich guy
and a lot different from my brother and I. I wouldn't like to be him -
it's way too hard of a life.
Couldn't you have been as rich but have skipped the running and the
kryptonite?
-- Bruce<https://i.postimg.cc/5NvHwfF0/trumpputin.jpg>