Everyday Drinking

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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 12,914
    s1e4-did-james-bond-cause-a-whisky-depression.jpg
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    Did James Bond Cause a Whisky Depression?
    Season One | 12.06.2019
    Normally chasing villains himself, 007 James Bond is often credited with causing the decline in whisky sales in the 70's and 80's. But is that true?
    Show Notes
    An in-depth look at the causes of the decline of whisky in the 70's

    007 James Bond often takes the blame for the decline of whisky sales in the 70's and 80's. But is he really to blame? We'll take a look at the man who defines cool for many and see how much influence he really wielded. And we'll look at the man who personified cool before Bond, James Bond. A fun story looking back Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack in Las Vegas.

    Listen to the full episode with the player above or find it on your favorite podcast app under "Whiskey Lore." The full transcript is available on the tab above.
    Transcript
    Transcript
    Francis Albert Sinatra. As Paul Kyriazi, the writer of How To Live The James Bond Lifestyle said, before there was James Bond, the personification of cool was Frank Sinatra. Men wanted to be him and women wanted to be with him.

    His ability to croon a song was unquestioned. Mimicking the technique of his one time boss and band leader Tommy Dorsey, he learned incredible breath control, that allowed him to captivate an audience throughout a song. And while many recording artists of the day were taking advantage of sound booths, tape machines, and multiple takes - Sinatra always recorded his vocals in the same room with, and right in the middle of the orchestra. His goal was to get maximum energy out of every performance.

    He had a knack for making things great. It was Lauren Bacall who first used the moniker Rat Pack, in describing Humphrey Bogart’s friends - but it was Frank Sinatra who would make the name and his own cast of friends - unforgettable.

    But Sinatra wasn’t always the coolest guy in the room. After being fired from his MGM movie contract and released from his Columbia Records recording contract - Sinatra had lost his way and he was at such a low point that he could be seen walking down a street in New York without a single person calling out to him for an autograph.

    But he swallowed his pride and fought with everything he had to get back on top. After reading the book From Here To Eternity, he reached out to the studio that was going to turn it into a movie and auditioned for the part of Private Angelo Maggio. But he had never played a dramatic role before - and had to take pennies for the role to outbid a more seasoned actor. After putting every once of himself into the role, he surprised even himself by winning the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. And that success would continue with stunning performances in The Man With The Golden Arm, the Manchurian Candidate, not to mention his rat pack films like in Oceans 11 or musicals like Guys and Dolls and Pal Joey. And he went from the man no one hung around, to redefining what it meant to be cool

    Yet, like Bond he also had his flaws. He chased women, he loved his Jack Daniels (sometimes too much), he had nefarious friends, and he admitted to fighting self-doubt at least 10 times a day.

    But those were just bumps in the road. The stories of his fun loving nature, his loyalty to his friend, and his understated generosity have become the stuff of legend.

    It took me a long time to finally realize the talents of Frank Sinatra. My parents were never big fans of his. I remember my mother saying “he had a marvelous voice, but he was into some bad stuff.” So, I just let him pass me by.

    Then in 2014, a friend introduced me to the “How to Live the James Bond Lifestyle” audiobook. I was hooked. Having always lived a very conservative and frugal lifestyle, it got me interested in expanding my horizons a bit. I started planning trips I’d always dreamed of, including a 16 day - 10 country jaunt across Europe hunting down James Bond locations, or heading to Las Vegas and learning to play Baccarat.

    It was while planning one of these trips to Las Vegas that I decided to load my mp3 player down with Frank Sinatra music. Especially the Come Fly With Me album. I really wanted to get into the Sinatra mood. The James Bond lifestyle book mentioned Sinatra quite frequently and I wanted to soak in some of that “cool” vibe while in Vegas.

    So with Billy May’s orchestra playing in my head, and looking down at the lights of Vegas below me, I grew determined that I was going to find some of Sinatra’s old Vegas hangouts.

    Well, I can tell you, that’s not easy. The Stardust is was lost to a fire; the Sands has been replaced by a plaque. And the only things Sinatra I could find - A Rat Pack review and a themed restaurant in the Wynn Casino Hotel.

    Then I read about a restaurant called The Golden Steer. Apparently, after shows at the Stardust, the Rat Pack would come over to unwind and eat dinner at this fine dining steakhouse. I also learned that Sinatra had his own table, #22. I was hyped and ready to go check it out.

    When I arrived, I felt like I had just stepped back in time. Adorned with stained glass, dark wood panelling and studded red leather booths - it looked like something right out of the original Oceans 11. I loved the place. As I walked up to the maitre d, I was thinking I might request to be walked past table 22. But as I listened to her chat with her associates, I heard numbers in the 20’s being bounced around, so I waited to see where I’d land.

    I felt like I was being taken into the kitchen as I walked through the swinging doors. But we made a quick turn to the right and suddenly I was staring at four circular booths adorned with autographed photos of the Rat Pack and I was offered a seat at one of them.

    As I looked at my booth, I saw a name plate that said Sammy Davis Jr. I was fascinated. I wondered if this was Sammy’s favorite table.

    I patiently waited and then my waiter came up and asked me what I wanted to drink - three fingers of Jack Daniels with 2 ice cubes just like Ol Blue Eyes would do - nectar of the gods, as Frank put it. No, I just ordered it neat.

    When he brought the drink to my table, he asked me if I would like a caesar salad. I agreed and he wheeled a cart over, cracked an egg, and began freshly preparing my salad in front of me. Now was my chance.

    “Hey, where was Sinatra’s table?”

    “Over there,” he pointed to the table directly across and over from me in the opposite corner. “But you’re sitting in the coolest booth in the place.”

    Really, I said, how so?


    The story went something like this.

    During those days when the Rat Pack was playing the Stardust, Las Vegas was still segregated. Black people were not allowed to sit in the same area as white people. So when Sammy Davis, Jr. was the first to arrive after a show, he asked for a table, and they told him that they would love to serve him in the front, but because of the law, they had to give him a table in the back. And they gave him this very booth that I was sitting in.

    Moments later Frank Sinatra walks in and his first question is, where is my friend Sammy? Sorry Mr. Sinatra, because of segregation laws, we had to sit him in the back. Sinatra said, well, if he’s got a table back there, I want a table back there.

    When Dean Martin walked in, he asked where his friends were. When they walked him back, he said, if they had tables back there, he wanted a table as well. Joey Bishop, the same.

    When John Wayne caught wind that the Rat Pack had their own tables in the back of the Golden Steer, he asked for his own table too. Suddenly, you weren’t anybody, if you didn’t have your own table in the back room of the Golden Steer. Even the cowboy Sheriff Ralph Lamb had a booth at the back of the restaurant.

    In my recent education on Frank Sinatra, I had always heard of his loyalty and support for black performers like Sammy Davis, Jr., Nat King Cole and others. So this story rang true. And it cemented my appreciation for what cool really was.

    We know that Frank Sinatra’s favorite drink was Jack Daniels. How do we know? He was actually buried with a bottle of it, a pack of Camel cigarettes, a Zippo lighter, and a dollar's worth of dimes - in case he needed to use a pay phone.


    So what was James Bond’s favorite drink?

    If you said a vodka martini, shaken not stirred, then you’re likely a fan of the James Bond movie series. Although the first time the word’s “shaken not stirred” are uttered in any of the films, it’s actually the villain Dr. No who suggests it.

    But in the movies, 007, as portrayed by Sean Connery or George Lazenby, is just as at home popping the cork on a bottle of Dom Perignon - later to be replaced by Bollinger Champagne - which also makes an appearance in the book Diamond’s are Forever. In Flemings other books Taittinger is his preference, also making a brief appearance at the beginning of the movie From Russia With Love.

    He’s also at home drinking rum, wine, beer, and cognac. He’s definitely an equal opportunity drinker.

    But what about whiskey? Many times, I’ve heard James Bond’s “shaken, not stirred” love for the vodka martini is one of the reasons for the decline in whisky sales between Bourbon and Scotch in the 1960’s and 70s. But is that really true?

    Before we look at Bond’s whiskey drinking habits, let’s talk a bit about some other theories as to why whiskey might have taken a dive during this time period.

    Bourbon and Scotch Decline
    In his blog post "Causes of Bourbon's Decline" Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame Historian Mike Veach theorizes that because whiskey production was put on hold during World War II so distilleries could support the war effort - it created a post-war bourbon shortage.

    Just 5 years later, the Korean Conflict surfaced and a major bourbon creator, Schenley Distilleries didn't want to get caught without any product to sell, so they began over-producing bourbon at a rapid rate. This flooded the market and to get rid of supplies, they devalued bourbon by selling longer aged whiskies at lower prices, just to move them. And then, it put the squeeze on many distilleries because there was too much aging in warehouses, there was no reason to produce at the same rate. This shuttered the doors of many distilleries and forced others to sell out to larger, more stable distilleries.

    You see, the problem with whiskey, no matter where it comes from, is unlike vodka, gin, rum or just about anything else - it needs time to age. And it’s very hard to predict the popularity of a product years into the future. Yet these distilleries get caught up in boom cycles, or get desperate after droughts, and decisions are made with no knowledge of what’s to come. So when the boom happens, there is overproduction, then when supply overwhelms demand, needs for production decrease and you find these little whisky depressions.

    So what about Scotland and Ireland during this time? For Irish Whiskey, it was in steep decline already and was entering a period of major consolidation that would see only 5 distilleries remaining in the whole country. As for Scotch, during World War II, the British government reduced the amount of grains available to distillers as a ration to make sure food would be available for her citizens. Just like with bourbon, coming out of the war, distilleries ramped up their production but found their old customers in the UK gone and American drinkers coming home from the war with a taste for scotch.

    Scotch whiskies total output to the UK slipped from 50% in 1945 to 25% in 1954. Meanwhile the American market climbed to 42% of the world market. So now, the scotch whisky industry became dependent on American’s continued taste for scotch whisky.

    And this was all well and good through the 1950s and early 60s, and while Madison Avenue was dousing itself with afternoon whisky breaks - the Beat Generation was embracing the cool vibe of a whiskey on the rocks while digging some Dave Brubeck or Miles Davis at the jazz club. And crooners like Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra were always seen with a bottle of whiskey.

    But when John F. Kennedy was assassinated in November of 1963, everything changed. The sock hops and drive-ins - the teen heartbreak songs, the dreams of Camelot - all died out and there were murmurs of another war escalating. Suddenly American's were looking for escapes, something new, something different, and first it came in the form of the British Invasion, with bands like the Beatles and Rolling Stones setting a whole new sound trend. Then the fashions became more daring, hair was growing longer, colors were getting brighter, skirts were growing shorter - and anything your parents were doing was considered unhip or square.

    And so whiskey lost all of it’s allure. The stylish drink for beatniks quickly became that stuff your father drank. Vodka, rum, cocktails, these were different, creative and free from those stodgy old ways.

    Between 1960 and 1975 whiskey’s share of the liquor market dropped from 74% to 54%, while the “whites” — vodka and unaged rum and tequila — climbed from 19% to 35%.

    Yet when we look back, we immediately look at James Bond with his shaken not stirred martini - an icon of the times - and we say, hey - maybe it's his fault. I mean, did the guy ever touch a glass of whiskey?

    James Bond: The Whiskey Drinker
    First, let’s talk a little bit more about James Bond, the character. Initially, Ian Fleming’s vision was to have his protagonist be a dull and uninteresting man, who exciting things just happened to. In fact, when looking for the perfect name for the character, he saw James Bond as the name of the author of one of his bird watching books. Fleming said, “by God, it is the dullest name I ever heard.” A pretty inauspicious beginning for the future personification of cool.

    As for the spy-centric storylines of the novels, these came from some of Flemings own experiences working in and developing covert operations for the British government during World War II. It’s not well known, but he assisted in writing the blueprints for President Roosevelt’s intelligence and propaganda agency known by the unsexy name Office of the Coordinator of Information, which would later become the OSS, and finally the CIA.

    Just like his character James Bond, it can easily be said, Fleming himself was quite friendly with the bottle. In fact, it was written that he would consume almost an entire bottle of gin per day while retreating at his Jamaican home Goldeneye.

    Concerned about his health, his doctors told him he should switch to Bourbon as a healthier option. Not sure a bottle of bourbon a day is an actual improvement over a bottle of gin, but they said it might counteract the damage that nicotine might be doing to him, since he was also a heavy smoker. Interesting advice.

    Apparently it didn’t work. Fleming died of heart disease at age 54.

    However, this life change for Fleming found its way into those 007 novels he was writing..

    In Dr. No, Bond downs a pint of Canadian Club Blended Rye watching a sunset.

    In Live and Let Die, he orders an Old Fashioned mixed with Old Granddad Bourbon and as another in the book Thunderball.

    In Diamonds are Forever, he’s enjoys bourbon or bourbon and branch water. In Goldfinger he has several double bourbons.

    I.W. Harper is a component of Draco’s whiskey and soda offered to Bond in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service and he enjoys a full pint of it later in the book as well. He also pours himself a “stiff Jack Daniel’s sour mash bourbon on the rocks.” That’s actually Tennessee Sour Mash Whiskey, not Bourbon - although, to be technical Tennessee Sour Mash Whiskey is basically bourbon put through an extra process of charcoal filtering. But I digress.

    In the follow up, You Only Live Twice, Bond orders a pint of Jack Daniel’s to go with his other favorite, scrambled eggs. Breakfast of champions.

    Scotch also makes its appearance, usually in the form of Haig and Haig Pinchbottle, a scotch whisky blend. It shows up in Live and Let Die and On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. He also enjoys Black and Black, Johnnie Walker Walker’s DeLuxe, and sometimes just calls out for a generic scotch and soda or mentions a bottle of scotch.

    There is even Japanese whiskey from Suntory in You Only Live Twice.

    So obviously, the literary James Bond was doing everything in his power to promote the consumption of whiskey - or shall we say, the over consumption. Bourbon and scotch were truly safe in the hands of Ian Fleming.

    James Bond: The White Liquor Movie Star
    But then there are the movies.

    As much as it pervades his novels, brown liquor is surprisingly absent throughout Sean Connery’s career as Bond, even though he became a spokesman for Jim Beam. Or when he finally promoted his homeland’s spirit through his 2003 advertising campaign for 12 Year Old Dewars where the vodka drinking Dr. No era Sean Connery is schooled by his older, grey bearded, whiskey wielding self - suggesting ‘some age, others mature’.

    Goldfinger is the only movie where either bourbon or scotch make an appearance and it's probably mostly because it was filmed in Kentucky. It takes until Goldeneye for it to return. But it’s not Bond that suggests whiskey, it is his no nonsense boss M, played by Judi Dench, who suggests she prefers bourbon, and then proceeds to pour him a glass of Jack Daniels. I guess that repeated misstep was in honor of the novels - or at least that’s what I like to tell myself.

    Anyway, it always struck me as odd that a character who is supposed to be Scottish, I’d never seen Bond with a bottle of Scotch. And in reality, it is not until Brosnan’s third firm The World Is Not Enough, that we finally see a bottle of scotch. In this case Talisker Single Malt, which shows itself again in Brosnan’s frequently panned final effort - Die Another Die.

    When Daniel Craig took the role, whisky disappears all over again. It wasn’t until his third film Skyfall that scotch would roar back with a vengeance, in the form of several scenes featuring Macallan, including the most memorable one, where Bond is forced to use a shot of 50 year old Macallan for target practice. And in his next film Spectre, we see our hero enjoying a glass of Macallan while sitting in his apartment. So scotch finally found a way to sneak into the movies.

    But did all of the white liquor focus and lack of bourbon and scotch throughout most of the Connery era and all of the Lazenby, Moore, and Dalton eras really make James Bond a villain for the whisky industry during those years?

    I don’t believe so. And I’ll give you my theory.

    Remember the golden girl from Goldfinger? Jill Masterson, who was killed by suffocation when she was covered in gold paint? Well, if you remember the previous scene, James Bond is walking into the kitchen to grab a fresh bottle of Dom Perignon, when he utters “My dear girl, there are some things that just aren't done, such as drinking Dom Perignon '53 above the temperature of 38 degrees Fahrenheit. That's just as bad as listening to the Beatles without earmuffs."

    The Beatles had dominated the music charts throughout the year 1964 and Goldfinger would have been filmed during a time when the Beatles had several songs on the chart at the same time. Was Bond such a trendsetter that he put a dent in the Beatles career with that statement?

    No, to the contrary. And ironically, Sean Connery would go on to release a music album featuring a Beatles classic “In My Life.” So who was following who?

    And the point I’m trying to make. I believe Bond films (with the exception of this one scene) have a way of following the trends, rather than setting them.

    Let’s take a look at a few examples. First, there is Jaws played by Richard Keel [sic; Kiel]. Released in 1976, it came on the heels of the Steven Spielburg film that had taken the nation by storm.

    Moonraker went completely off the rails and straight for Star Wars with it’s campy space station scenes. Licence To Kill with Timothy Dalton was a dead ringer for a Miami Vice episode. The first Craig films followed in the footsteps of and nonstop action of The Bourne Identity. And even the last Bond film Spectre slid into Marvel comics territory with its modern take on arch nemesis Ernst Stavrold Blofeld.

    So maybe Bond was just a man of the times. Destined to give up his Jack Daniel’s like everyone else was, for the sexier evolving world of cocktails. When bourbon was booming in the 50’s, Bond was a bourbon drinker. When the baby boomers turned away from the whisky of their fathers, Bond followed suit.

    And while Frank Sinatra seemed to have some control over the definition of cool for a little while, even he couldn’t define it forever.

    So I don’t think distilleries need to rush out and reserve their tickets for the next Bond film “No Time To Die” to see if the MI6 agent is going to put the kibosh on this whiskey boom. Instead, they can hope to see him ditch his “shaken not stirred” for a whiskey neat, because the writers know, it’s still the “cool” thing for him to do.
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  • 4EverBonded4EverBonded the Ballrooms of Mars
    Posts: 12,459
    I don't know whiskey from bourbon, but that was interesting to read. Thanks.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited October 2021 Posts: 7,518
    I don't know whiskey from bourbon, but that was interesting to read. Thanks.

    All bourbon is whiskey (made primarily from corn) but not all whiskey is bourbon.
  • 4EverBonded4EverBonded the Ballrooms of Mars
    Posts: 12,459
    Yeah, see, I still don't get it. ha! ;)
  • 4EverBonded4EverBonded the Ballrooms of Mars
    Posts: 12,459
    In a nutshell shot glass, what makes bourbon become a bourbon? Just aging? Has to be more, I think ...
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited October 2021 Posts: 7,518
    In a nutshell shot glass, what makes bourbon become a bourbon? Just aging? Has to be more, I think ...

    Whiskey made from corn makes it a bourbon, AFAIK. Then you have Tennessee whiskey which is sour corn mash, and technically bourbon (but they don’t like to call it that). M in goldeneye refers to Jack Daniels as bourbon, but they prefer to be called Tennessee whiskey. Just like rye makes it a rye, barley makes it a scotch, etc. They’re all whiskey/whiskys; it’s the wheat/sugar that’s used that differentiates them.

    There are certain geographical restrictions as to what can be called what I think as well (like champagne) but I actually don’t think scotch has to be made in Scotland, for example. I could be wrong there.
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,099
    Then there's whisky versus whiskey...
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,518
    Agent_99 wrote: »
    Then there's whisky versus whiskey...

    In my mind, Whisky is better (Canadian and Scottish) than Whiskey (American and Irish)... ;)

    It's not that simple I guess, I think every Whiskey is Whiskey except Canadian and Scottish (like Japanese, for example), but I'm not 100% sure.
  • Junglist_1985Junglist_1985 Los Angeles
    edited November 2021 Posts: 1,006
    My apologies if something similar has been done before, but I’ve invented my own version of the Vesper called the “Smoky Vesper”.

    I’ve never appreciated the addition of vodka in the otherwise gin-forward Vesper, so I’ve substituted mezcal for the vodka, giving the drink a smoky undertone. I’ve also opted for Cocchi Americano over Lillet Blanc since I’ve read it is actually closer to the original Kina Lillet with the quinine flavor. I’ve also added a dash of orange bitters to round out the citrus…

    3 measures of gin
    1 of mezcal
    1/2 a measure of Cocchi Americano
    1 dash of orange bitters

    Shake it over ice, and add a thin slice of lemon peel.

    It’s not half bad…
  • MooseWithFleasMooseWithFleas Philadelphia
    edited November 2021 Posts: 3,332
    First attempt at a new cocktail for NTTD

    No Thyme To Die
    • 3 parts Hendricks Gin
    • 1 part Green Chartreuse (green symbolizing the garden of death)
    • Splash of Thyme Tincture
    1. Make Thyme Tincture by soaking 2 TBSP of Thyme Leaves in 100 ml Vodka (I used 100 Proof Stoli) for 48 hours, then strain to remove Thyme leaves add 100 ml water to complete tincture, which should last a while
    2. Coat Martini glass with splash of Thyme Tincture
    3. Shake Gin and Chartreuse over ice
    4. Strain Gin/Chartruse into martini glass
    5. Garnish with Thyme sprig and 4 juniper berries (symbolizing nanobots)

    https://imgur.com/a/mFRn3n8
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,099
    That looks fabulous, @MooseWithFleas - might have to give it a whirl!
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,518
    First attempt at a new cocktail for NTTD

    No Thyme To Die
    • 3 parts Hendricks Gin
    • 1 part Green Chartreuse (green symbolizing the garden of death)
    • Splash of Thyme Tincture
    1. Make Thyme Tincture by soaking 2 TBSP of Thyme Leaves in 100 ml Vodka (I used 100 Proof Stoli) for 48 hours, then strain to remove Thyme leaves add 100 ml water to complete tincture, which should last a while
    2. Coat Martini glass with splash of Thyme Tincture
    3. Shake Gin and Chartreuse over ice
    4. Strain Gin/Chartruse into martini glass
    5. Garnish with Thyme sprig and 4 juniper berries (symbolizing nanobots)

    https://imgur.com/a/mFRn3n8

    Love this! Well done!
  • JamesCraigJamesCraig Ancient Rome
    edited November 2021 Posts: 3,497
    I'd love to try the stinger: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stinger_(cocktail)

    Thoughts? :-?
  • MooseWithFleasMooseWithFleas Philadelphia
    Posts: 3,332
    Thanks!! @Agent_99 and @NickTwentyTwo . You could also go 4:1 ratio if you want a little less sweet and spice.
    JamesCraig wrote: »
    I'd love to try the stinger: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stinger_(cocktail)

    Thoughts? :-?
    Stinger is a great drink! Just a warning if you make during a watch of LTK, side effects include yelling "WHAT ABOUT THE STINGGGERRRS!!!" for the rest of the day.
  • JamesCraigJamesCraig Ancient Rome
    Posts: 3,497
    Thanks!! @Agent_99 and @NickTwentyTwo . You could also go 4:1 ratio if you want a little less sweet and spice.
    JamesCraig wrote: »
    I'd love to try the stinger: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stinger_(cocktail)

    Thoughts? :-?
    Stinger is a great drink! Just a warning if you make during a watch of LTK, side effects include yelling "WHAT ABOUT THE STINGGGERRRS!!!" for the rest of the day.

    Well, that's a plus lol. :D
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,099
    Stinger is a great drink! Just a warning if you make during a watch of LTK, side effects include yelling "WHAT ABOUT THE STINGGGERRRS!!!" for the rest of the day.

    I missed this on the original read and it's made me laugh way too much - thank you!
  • KenAustinKenAustin United States
    Posts: 226
    I prefer Jack Daniels, I usually keep a bottle of Old No. 7 to mix with a little cola (I prefer RC to Coke), I also keep a bottle of Gentleman Jack to drink straight. Additionally, to go with a nice cigar I keep an 18 y/o bottle of Laphroaig on hand for special occasions. Woodford Reserve has not disappointed but if it ain't broke I say don't fix it, and that leads me back to Jack.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited January 2022 Posts: 7,518
    KenAustin wrote: »
    I prefer Jack Daniels, I usually keep a bottle of Old No. 7 to mix with a little cola (I prefer RC to Coke), I also keep a bottle of Gentleman Jack to drink straight. Additionally, to go with a nice cigar I keep an 18 y/o bottle of Laphroaig on hand for special occasions. Woodford Reserve has not disappointed but if it ain't broke I say don't fix it, and that leads me back to Jack.

    The other night I was looking for something to drink and was woefully underequipped, but I did have a few ounces of Jack left, which I drank straight on the rocks. It was the first drink I ever really started with in my younger years, so I took a long break from it, but it was actually really nice revisiting it.

    My go-to drink at home is the Godfather, which I make as 1 to 1 scotch (the cheapest blend you can find) and amaretto. Delicious, but it can be a pain to keep both ingredients around, especially when amaretto sours are also on the menu. So, a few months ago, I resolved to make my new at home go-to the single-liquor Old Fashioned. It helped too that I "borrowed" a few bottles of good bitters from the restaurant where I work.

    I made a big batch of demerara syrup, and made the mistake of using Woodford Reserve as the bourbon. Now it's all I like in an Old Fashioned.
  • KenAustinKenAustin United States
    Posts: 226
    KenAustin wrote: »
    I prefer Jack Daniels, I usually keep a bottle of Old No. 7 to mix with a little cola (I prefer RC to Coke), I also keep a bottle of Gentleman Jack to drink straight. Additionally, to go with a nice cigar I keep an 18 y/o bottle of Laphroaig on hand for special occasions. Woodford Reserve has not disappointed but if it ain't broke I say don't fix it, and that leads me back to Jack.

    The other night I was looking for something to drink and was woefully underequipped, but I did have a few ounces of Jack left, which I drank straight on the rocks. It was the first drink I ever really started with in my younger years, so I took a long break from it, but it was actually really nice revisiting it.

    My go-to drink at home is the Godfather, which I make as 1 to 1 scotch (the cheapest blend you can find) and amaretto. Delicious, but it can be a pain to keep both ingredients around, especially when amaretto sours are also on the menu. So, a few months ago, I resolved to make my new at home go-to the single-liquor Old Fashioned. It helped too that I "borrowed" a few bottles of good bitters from the restaurant where I work.

    I made a big batch of demerara syrup, and made the mistake of using Woodford Reserve as the bourbon. Now it's all I like in an Old Fashioned.

    Running with a quote from my grandfather that I shared in another thread or two..."if it ain't broke, don't fix it"...I'm a creature of habit and stick to the things that work for me. Another great JD product to keep long term to have straight is Single Barrel. Either way, I really like JD, it's about as smooth as it gets for Whiskey/Bourbon. My go to has never been to drink straight, but the ones I do drink straight pair really well with a good cigar, which lately my choice has been Rocky Patels
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    As it s a day off here, I am having a few peach and raspberry ciders, made of fruit wine and arctic water. The first wasn t to my liking, but the second made the third delicious.
    Cheers.
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,099
    There's a pub near me that has a lot of draught ciders (it's unusual to get more than one or two) and a couple of nights ago I tried their 'raspberry mojito cider'. I was sceptical but it was really good - a proper cider but with hints of raspberry, lime and mint.
  • ImpertinentGoonImpertinentGoon Everybody needs a hobby.
    Posts: 1,351
    A couple of nights ago, my girlfriend suddenly informed me that she was in the mood for a cocktail after an annoying work day. That left me slightly flat footed, as I didn't really have any mixers in the house except for some juice and a very old bottle of diet coke I probably should get rid of. So spirits with spirits it is. After trawling around a recipe search site - put in what you have around and it tells you what you could do with that - I settled on an "Ann Sheridan", which I'd never heard of but is made out of orange liqueur, lime juice and white rum shaken over ice. The recipe I had called for 4 parts rum, 2 parts liqueur and 1 part lime juice. Interestingly, I have since found various recipes that have all kinds of different measures. One even has the lime juice as the largest component.
    It was a nice little, quickly done cocktail. For my taste - and that might have been down to only having very basic Havana Club in the white rum department - it was a bit heavy on the rum. So I would maybe go for 3-2-1 or something similar in the future.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
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    I like the motive on the box as well as the beverage.
  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 12,914

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    The Vegetable Martini is the Hottest Plant-Based Cocktail on the Rise in London
    See the complete article here:
    By Manas Sen Gupta | 29 Jun 2022
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    More and more consumers are not only inclining toward plant-based savouries and sweets, but they’re also making adaptations on alcoholic drinks, too.
    James Bond likes his vodka martini — “shaken, not stirred.” Like the fictional 007, the real world of London, too, is in love with variations of martinis for over a century. The latest addition to the long list being vegetable martini.
    According to Bloomberg, the vegetable martini is increasingly becoming a favourite of bartenders in London, with some establishments creating mixes delighting the senses in the summer.
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    Image credit: Daniel Lloyd Blunk-Fernández/@blunkorama/Unsplash
    People opting for vegetable martini
    The report says that plant-based variations of the martini is a recent phenomenon, with bars such as Isabel Mayfair and Tomatini creator LPM Restaurant & Bar using vegetables to prepare the drink.
    “People are shying away from sugary cocktails, and the trend toward savoury and vegetal continues to rise,” Tibor Krascsenics, global bar manager of LPM Restaurant & Bar, told Bloomberg, while pointing out that the summer season has led to a rise in orders for the drink.
    Scarlet Ganzoni, bar manager of Isabel Mayfair, said that her clientele too loves to “consume more consciously.”

    Types of vegetable martini served in London
    At LPM Restaurant & Bar, drink lovers are treated to martini, prepared using squeezed ripe tomatoes with vodka, mixed with white balsamic vinegar and a pinch of salt and pepper. This concoction is then shaken with ice before serving.

    Isabel Mayfair’s vegetable martini is made from avocado. It is part of the bar’s summer drink menu. Ganzoni said that avocados make a “perfect base” for martini, and helps prepare cocktails that “aren’t too heavy.” The drink, according to Ganzoni, has an “earthy flavour.”

    Bloomberg reports that other establishments serving vegetable martini include Lyaness, which makes its drink from a home-made fermented grass. There is also The Wigmore, whose vodka martini includes tomato water, porcini mushrooms and Ambrato vermouth.

    At Silverleaf, the drink contains herbs such as wild heartleaf — which can be a starting point for vegetable vodka lovers.

    Asparagus martini is served at Apricity, tomato-based Brusketta martini at Eve Bar, and olive oil vodka with beetroot spirit martini at Three Sheets.

    The price of a vegetable martini can be about GBP 2 to GBP 3 (RM 10 to RM 16, respectively) more than the usual GBP 20 (RM 108), for a pour. The additional cost is for sourcing the fresh ingredients.

    (Main image credit: Ambitious Creative Co. – Rick Barrett/@weareambitious/Unsplash; Featured image credit: Taylor Simpson/@taylorgsimpson/Unsplash)

    This story first appeared on Lifestyle Asia Kuala Lumpur.
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  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,518
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  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,099
    What is that, @NickTwentyTwo? It looks amazing.

    This vegetable martini notion is making me feel quite ill, especially as a lifelong hater of tomatoes.
  • ImpertinentGoonImpertinentGoon Everybody needs a hobby.
    edited July 2022 Posts: 1,351
    I really don't get what a "vegetable based Martini" is supposed to be. Do they mean the garnish? Or do they steep f.e. avocado in vodka for a kind of avocado liqueur and then use that? And how is "squeezed ripe tomatoes with vodka, mixed with white balsamic vinegar and a pinch of salt and pepper" a martini at all? I don't even think I'm that conservative, but nothing in that article makes sense to me.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited July 2022 Posts: 7,518
    When I think of a "vegetable martini", I think it's basically an infused vodka or gin, and then a garnish? And I've had pepper on a cocktail, can't remember which one, but it was actually great.

    @Agent_99 it's a glass half filled with water and put in the freezer at an angle, and then my beloved Godfather on top of it (to fill the glass it's actually a double Godfather... Godfather II perhaps? At any rate, 2oz blended scotch & 2oz Disaronno. You have to have a sweet tooth like me, but if you do, it's delicious).
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,099
    Cheers, @NickTwentyTwo - what a neat idea, and it would work with other beverages too...
  • BennyBenny In the shadowsAdministrator, Moderator
    Posts: 14,811
    Found this in Dan Murphys a chain of liquor stores here in Australia

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    Meet the Vesper Martini, the sidekick to a secret agent, this cocktail is delightful as it is mysterious. HOW TO DRINK All the hard prep work has been done, simply store in a fridge and pour. You can add the finishing touches with a twist of lemon peel. INGREDIENTS The Vesper Martini features Republic of Fremantle Signature Vodka and Aromatic Gin paired with Lillet Blanc and Orange Bitters, creating a citrusy yet luxurious aperitif. A smooth sipping cocktail requires an exceptionally crafted vodka and gin. Our Signature Vodka and Aromatic Gin are distilled from Verdelho grapes, the fruit base and our innovative distilling methods gives life to silky-smooth spirit with greater complexity and flavour.

    I’m going to have to give this one a try.
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