I had a pour of a ten year old Rip Van Winkle 107 over new years at a friends house, immediately thought vanilla and caramel. I mention this as its exceedingly unusual for me to think flavor notes when consuming alcohol.ronnie_suburban wrote:I had a pour of the VW 2018 15-year last night that was one of the tastiest bourbons I've had in a long time. There were some really beautiful notes of caramel, vanilla and butterscotch. The smooth finish was absolutely glorious
Vitesse98 wrote:That said, I've never paid more than retail for bottle, but as the prices of more conventional bourbons creep up and up the retail price of Pappy seems more and more reasonable.
Vitesse98 wrote:107? Oh, the Old Rip 10 Year? A couple of years back the 10 (technically not Van Winkle) was super-great, so I assume it's still great.
ronnie_suburban wrote:The Old Rip 107 is still wonderful, and seems to be the same juice as it always was, even though it's been migrated to a taller, narrower, rail-friendly bottle (a few years back). Fwiw, this is the first bourbon I ever loved, drinking from G Wiv's private stock, in his backyard, over a decade ago in what I believe was 2006 or 2007.
G Wiv wrote:Ronnie, those were the good old days, 107 was $27.50 per bottle. If I remember corectly, and I may not, those were 7-year, not ten.
ronnie_suburban wrote:G Wiv wrote:Ronnie, those were the good old days, 107 was $27.50 per bottle. If I remember corectly, and I may not, those were 7-year, not ten.
And yes, definitely the good old days. Under $30 and on the bottom shelf at Binny's, collecting dust because almost no one liked bourbon . . . yet.
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champs2005 wrote:Bumping this because this morning I snagged a bottle of Weller green label for $23.99 at Valli Foods in Evanston. Was tempted to stock up but I left the six or so remaining bottles on the shelf. This is one of the best values in whiskey; an absolute steal given the great taste of this stuff...
ronnie_suburban wrote:Weller Antique 107 is now up to $60/bottle at the least expensive retail outlets . . . if you can even find it. I'm told that BT's been holding back stock in order to produce the new 114-proof Weller Full Proof, which is slated to drop in June.
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jhdouglass wrote:RIP 6 Year Heaven Hill Bottled in Bond
On the bright side, maybe all that aging whiskey that would have gone into this will = a boom in McKenna 10 in the near future. That's one of the brands Heaven Hill is committed to.
ronnie_suburban wrote:jhdouglass wrote:RIP 6 Year Heaven Hill Bottled in Bond
On the bright side, maybe all that aging whiskey that would have gone into this will = a boom in McKenna 10 in the near future. That's one of the brands Heaven Hill is committed to.
It's baaack . . . and to no one's surprise, the price is expected to nearly triple, at ~$40/bottle. Predictably pathetic. It's now 7-year, fwiw. I guess that 7th year is the expensive one.
Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond Bourbon Returns To Store Shelves
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Vitesse98 wrote:We've discussed it here, but it's actually imo a subversion of fair market value if you restrict supply and distribution of your product. It's one thing if you can't find PVW on the shelves, it's another if you can't find, say, a NAS Weller. Distribution of that product has been throttled, and what does make it to shelves disappears quickly because of its association with PVW (which Buffalo Trace does not play down). Good bottom-line business, sure, as long as you don't turn off customers (which clearly is not happening), but as a business practice it's a little ... gross, I guess.
ronnie_suburban wrote:I had to laugh when I was out to dinner last night up in the northern burbs. First visit to a decent place and I asked what bourbons they had. Server hands me a list and boasts that their impressive (his description, not mine) list has over 30 bourbons on it. I order a Blanton's. A few minutes later, he comes back and and apologizes that they're out of it. So, I order an Elmer T. Lee. Longer wait this time but he comes back and admits "This is embarrassing. We're out of that, too." I ended up with an Eagle Rare, which was fine, though certainly something that can be had almost anywhere.
I told my companions that I fully expected they'd be out of the first two but it costs me nothing to ask for them. But the outcome was entirely predictable. Too many places are run like this. To be a great place, having them on your list isn't enough. You have have to actually have them on the shelf, too. Or at least have the humility to remove them from your list. I'll bet that if I went back in two weeks, they'd still be 86'd and still be on the list. The moral of the story is that having a solid list doesn't mean shit. If you don't have something, you don't have it. Accept reality. Take it off your list now, please.
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BT in '17 wrote:
$59.99 – Old Rip Van Winkle Handmade Bourbon 10 Year Old 107 proof
$69.99 – Van Winkle Special Reserve Bourbon 12 Year Old
$99.99 – Pappy Van Winkle’s Family Reserve Bourbon 15 Year Old
$169.99 – Pappy Van Winkle’s Family Reserve Bourbon 20 Year Old
$269.99 – Pappy Van Winkle’s Family Reserve Bourbon 23 Year Old