Lagavulin: where is it?
Hi, guys & gals;
I'm pretty new to scotch. Until a month ago, the only scotch I'd ever had was Chivas Regal. (And old Chivas at that; the bottle in my cabinet is a 12 year left over from my parent's wedding... in 1974.) I thought this was pretty good, but I still prefered bourbon like Makers' Mark. Anyway, my friend is also a big fan of Whiskies, and so for Christmas I bought him a bottle of Macallan 12. Originally I wanted to get him some Lagavulin, as I'd read in several places that this was an excellent drink. However, it was sold out all over town, and the local importer told me that he wasn't sure if he'd ever get another bottle because "the distillery burnt down". We sipped a couple of shots of Mccallan over cigars, and wow -- I had no idea scotch could be like that. Very, *very* tasty stuff. Very smooth. Eventually I found a bottle for a good price ($38) and bought one for myself. But I've been looking for Lagavulin ever since. Tonight I was in a local bar with some friends and noticed that -- holy cow -- they had a bottle of Lagavulin! (They also had a bottle of the exorbantly expensive Macallan 25; next time my birthday rolls around, I'm treating myself to a $30 shot of that goodness). I ordered a shot of Lagavulin and... wow. I think this is one of the greatest drinks I've ever tasted. Not only smooth, but with a very complex and strong undercurrent of flavor and scent. Now I feel like I HAVE to get a bottle. Is the Lagavulin shortage going to end any time soon? From what I read Googling Usenet, apparently this distillery fire is not the cause of the problems; good ol' supply and demand is the cause of the problems. I've told all of the local liquor importers to give me a call if they can ever get a bottle in again, but I'm not holding my breath. I haven't seen anything posted about it on Usenet in half a year... does the Lagavulin shortage show any signs of letting up? Thanks! -R |
> Is the Lagavulin shortage going to end any time soon? From what I
> read Googling Usenet, apparently this distillery fire is not the cause > of the problems; good ol' supply and demand is the cause of the > problems. Lagavulin has been hard to get, but things are changing now. In a couple of months I've seen it in many airport tax-frees and in some liquer stores (at least in Belgium). It's also quite widely available from web shops, such as http://www.thewhiskyexchange.com. Supply-vs-demand is quite tricky business with whisky, as all proper whiskies are matured at least 10 years... tends to make the reaction times quite long... :) |
On 2005-01-05 18:20:17 -0800, "Chaka" > said:
> Hi, guys & gals; > > I'm pretty new to scotch. Until a month ago, the only scotch I'd > ever had was Chivas Regal. (And old Chivas at that; the bottle in my > cabinet is a 12 year left over from my parent's wedding... in 1974.) I > thought this was pretty good, but I still prefered bourbon like Makers' > Mark. > Just a short note on old bottles of spirits. Spirits do *not* age in the bottle. Your bottle of Chivas was a 30-year old bottle containing 12-year old scotch. |
On 2005-01-05 18:20:17 -0800, "Chaka" > said:
> Hi, guys & gals; > > I'm pretty new to scotch. Until a month ago, the only scotch I'd > ever had was Chivas Regal. (And old Chivas at that; the bottle in my > cabinet is a 12 year left over from my parent's wedding... in 1974.) I > thought this was pretty good, but I still prefered bourbon like Makers' > Mark. > Just a short note on old bottles of spirits. Spirits do *not* age in the bottle. Your bottle of Chivas was a 30-year old bottle containing 12-year old scotch. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:44 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FoodBanter