Hospices de Beaune 1993 Marc de Bourgogne (Burgundy) As red-Burgundian as a marc can be, full of the lovely blended fruit and autumnal richness of a nicely-aged wine and a warmness that never tips over into burn. (8/10)
Old Rip Van Winkle 10-Year Bourbon (Kentucky) As with the superior bottlings from this distillery, the wood-infused peach and caramel are more lively and less barrel-deadened than many other commercial bourbons. And while I dont mean to suggest that this isnt good it is; in fact, its better than most it rather obviously doesnt have the complexity of the longer-aged and more eccentric bottlings. This is carping, I know. (7/10)
Peconic Bay Spirits Signature Grape Brandy sono rinata (New York) Apparently merlot, and be warned that its a clearer, more grappa-like style than it is a deep, wood-aged style. Or rather, I wish someone had warned me. Because I dont care for this at all. It tastes like corn, and the alcoholic bite is harsh and ungainly. (8/10)
Marian Farms Epirito de la Valda Brandy Private Reserve (California) Supple, with good acidity and a fun side. Lots of wood, though. A little more than it can handle. (8/10)
Marian Farms California Style Pisco (California) Orange bubblegum. In a pisco? Welcome to California! Sweet and soft; not bad, necessarily, but certainly not what any knowledgeable pisco drinker is looking for. (8/10)
The Speyside Scotch Whisky 12 Year (Speyside) Iodine, but not too much. Peat, but not too much. Flavor, but not too much. Sweet oak? Yeah, theres a lot of that. Straightforward, really. (9/10)
The MacPhails Selected Single Distilleries Collection (Bunnahabhain) 8 Year Scotch (Islay) Boring. How do you make an Islay whisky boring? Well: exhibit A. Iodine, but only just, with a clammy boredom resting atop an alcoholic nonentity. The most flavor of the three from this lineup that Ive tried, but in service of naught. (10/10)
The MacPhails Selected Single Distilleries Collection (Tamdhu) 8 Year Scotch (Speyside) Boring, with a side of tedium. Sweet and a little vegetal. Still boring, after all these words. (10/10)
The MacPhails Selected Single Distilleries Collection (Highland Park) 8 Year Scotch (Orkney) Boring, though slightly less so than its stablemates. A little sweetness, a little spice, a little of not enough thats nice. Just barely worth the $25 I paid for it, though one of the better blended whiskys would have been just as good, and probably cheaper. (10/10)
Ferrand Cognac Grande Champagne 1er Cru du Cognac Rserve (Cognac) A little over-succulent and almost candied on the nose, at first opening. Lets let it breathe for a bit. [] And were done. Blood orange? Yes, that and butterscotch. Were verging into California chardonnay territory here. More air? Yes, please. [] Settling down, at last, but theres still an inexorable pumpkin pie element, both aromatically and texturally, that I cant quite get past. A lot of soil is to the good, but its not enough. I admit that all beverages of this type are almost exclusively aromatic pleasures for me; I can enjoy drinking them, but were that all there was to them Id still to wine. So that the palate here is a little diagonal and slashy, bringing a great deal of heat and white chocolate for which I dont care, is no big deal. I want to smell, not quaff. And thus, I wish the nosegrab was more enticing. [one hour later] Starting to get a lot better, knitting and filling out, with less of the fetid and more of the elegantly feral. I suspect it might be days before this rounds into form, though. More later. (11/10)
Ferrand Cognac Grande Champagne 1er Cru du Cognac Rserve (Cognac) Third night after opening. All the faux candied sweetness is gone, leaving something a lot more elegant. No, thats not the right word. Sophisticated. Perhaps a little over-jacketed in layers of formality, to be honest. Loosen the bowtie! Theres a lota lotof soft, loamy earth, which I like and find intriguing in a Cognac. But theres also a planar stuffiness to the finish, as if the brandy has a slight head cold. Or as if that aforementioned bowtie is a little suffocating. (11/10)
Ferrand Cognac Grande Champagne 1er Cru du Cognac Rserve (Cognac) Over a week after opening, and everything difficult about this spirit is now gone, replaced by subtleties and shadings. Really quite lovely. Does it live up to its price? Probably not quite, but then I find most Cognac to be rather aspirationally priced to begin with; in context, its probably more or less OK. (11/10)
Old Rip Van Winkle 10-Year Bourbon (Kentucky) As with the superior bottlings from this distillery, the wood-infused peach and caramel are more lively and less barrel-deadened than many other commercial bourbons. And while I dont mean to suggest that this isnt good it is; in fact, its better than most it rather obviously doesnt have the complexity of the longer-aged and more eccentric bottlings. This is carping, I know. (7/10)
Peconic Bay Spirits Signature Grape Brandy sono rinata (New York) Apparently merlot, and be warned that its a clearer, more grappa-like style than it is a deep, wood-aged style. Or rather, I wish someone had warned me. Because I dont care for this at all. It tastes like corn, and the alcoholic bite is harsh and ungainly. (8/10)
Marian Farms Epirito de la Valda Brandy Private Reserve (California) Supple, with good acidity and a fun side. Lots of wood, though. A little more than it can handle. (8/10)
Marian Farms California Style Pisco (California) Orange bubblegum. In a pisco? Welcome to California! Sweet and soft; not bad, necessarily, but certainly not what any knowledgeable pisco drinker is looking for. (8/10)
The Speyside Scotch Whisky 12 Year (Speyside) Iodine, but not too much. Peat, but not too much. Flavor, but not too much. Sweet oak? Yeah, theres a lot of that. Straightforward, really. (9/10)
The MacPhails Selected Single Distilleries Collection (Bunnahabhain) 8 Year Scotch (Islay) Boring. How do you make an Islay whisky boring? Well: exhibit A. Iodine, but only just, with a clammy boredom resting atop an alcoholic nonentity. The most flavor of the three from this lineup that Ive tried, but in service of naught. (10/10)
The MacPhails Selected Single Distilleries Collection (Tamdhu) 8 Year Scotch (Speyside) Boring, with a side of tedium. Sweet and a little vegetal. Still boring, after all these words. (10/10)
The MacPhails Selected Single Distilleries Collection (Highland Park) 8 Year Scotch (Orkney) Boring, though slightly less so than its stablemates. A little sweetness, a little spice, a little of not enough thats nice. Just barely worth the $25 I paid for it, though one of the better blended whiskys would have been just as good, and probably cheaper. (10/10)
Ferrand Cognac Grande Champagne 1er Cru du Cognac Rserve (Cognac) A little over-succulent and almost candied on the nose, at first opening. Lets let it breathe for a bit. [] And were done. Blood orange? Yes, that and butterscotch. Were verging into California chardonnay territory here. More air? Yes, please. [] Settling down, at last, but theres still an inexorable pumpkin pie element, both aromatically and texturally, that I cant quite get past. A lot of soil is to the good, but its not enough. I admit that all beverages of this type are almost exclusively aromatic pleasures for me; I can enjoy drinking them, but were that all there was to them Id still to wine. So that the palate here is a little diagonal and slashy, bringing a great deal of heat and white chocolate for which I dont care, is no big deal. I want to smell, not quaff. And thus, I wish the nosegrab was more enticing. [one hour later] Starting to get a lot better, knitting and filling out, with less of the fetid and more of the elegantly feral. I suspect it might be days before this rounds into form, though. More later. (11/10)
Ferrand Cognac Grande Champagne 1er Cru du Cognac Rserve (Cognac) Third night after opening. All the faux candied sweetness is gone, leaving something a lot more elegant. No, thats not the right word. Sophisticated. Perhaps a little over-jacketed in layers of formality, to be honest. Loosen the bowtie! Theres a lota lotof soft, loamy earth, which I like and find intriguing in a Cognac. But theres also a planar stuffiness to the finish, as if the brandy has a slight head cold. Or as if that aforementioned bowtie is a little suffocating. (11/10)
Ferrand Cognac Grande Champagne 1er Cru du Cognac Rserve (Cognac) Over a week after opening, and everything difficult about this spirit is now gone, replaced by subtleties and shadings. Really quite lovely. Does it live up to its price? Probably not quite, but then I find most Cognac to be rather aspirationally priced to begin with; in context, its probably more or less OK. (11/10)