We haven't seen 18 in Texas yet. 17 was last year, and the last Jr. 18 is the first plain Stagg.
SydB92 said:
So did any of today's winners, get a bottle from the last official drawing in the fall or the post Xmas Blantons consolidation.
Because I KNOW she has no idea what a "TexAgs" is.... it's being designed now actually!!CactusThomas said:
Buy a damn ring
MarathonAg12 said:
Stagg 18 is starting to drop in Texas
Go get it
A122 dropped in Houston in February last year, but I've seen past A batches drop as late as May.digging tunnels said:
Speaking of EC, any idea when the ECBP A123 batch should arrive in Texas?
BrokeAssAggie said:
I took a chance. Hope it's good.
Irish 2.0 said:
Smoke Wagon is dumping some late arrival Halloween bottles for those interested. Just got the email.
No idea. Not a huge SW fan.suburban cowboy said:Irish 2.0 said:
Smoke Wagon is dumping some late arrival Halloween bottles for those interested. Just got the email.
are these the rare and limited releases? if so, yes for me
BrokeAssAggie said:
I took a chance. Hope it's good.
Quote:
Barrel finishing is a long-established practice in scotch, but a far more recent phenomenon in American whiskey. That's mainly because bourbon, by definition, must be matured in new charred oak barrels. Put bourbon into a barrel that isn't new and charred and it technically becomes a whisky specialty, more commonly called finished bourbon.
linkQuote:
As defined by U.S. regulations (and clarified in the [url=https://www.ttb.gov/distilled-spirits/beverage-alcohol-manual]Distilled Spirits Beverage Alcohol [BAM] Manual[/url]), bourbon is "Whisky produced in the U.S. at not exceeding 80% alcohol by volume (160 proof) from a fermented mash of not less than 51 percent corn and stored at not more than 62.5% alcohol by volume (125 proof) in charred new oak containers." Unlike many other subsets of whiskey, the regulations do not allow any flavoring or coloring of any kind to be added to bourbon.
This seems pretty clear, right? To be labeled bourbon, you can't add anything else to it.
...
However, as brands have gotten more creative exploring all kinds of new possibilities and fusions of flavor, the line has gotten a bit blurred. By law, bourbon must be aged in new charred oak containers, however we are seeing a tidal wave of bourbons that have been "finished" in additional barrel(s) that once held something else. Wine, rum, armagnac, sherry, cognac, honey...the list of finishing barrels continues to grow and many of these products are fantastic. The labels on these products typically say something like "Bourbon Finished in ex-________ Barrels." A popular example of this, and early adopter of barrel finishing, is Angel's Envy Port Finished Bourbon. In other cases, the addition of flavors is a little more blunt and less romantic, with specific terminology such as "Bourbon with ________" or "Bourbon Blended with _________."
Technically, these products are often classified under a different classification entirely known as "Distilled Spirits Specialty" or "Whisky Specialties" (you can check out the TTB label approvals from the past year here - insert the date range and then "641" to "641" in the Product Class/Type Fields, then click "Search" in the bottom right). Unlike the "Bourbon" classification, "Whisky Specialties" allows for the addition of harmless coloring, flavoring, and blending materials.
wmitchell said:BrokeAssAggie said:
I took a chance. Hope it's good.
If you don't, you can probably offload it onto Marathon!