Saturday, February 25, 2012
Bourbon Review: Old Forester Birthday Bourbon 2008 Edition
Old Forester Birthday Bourbon 2008 Edition - 94 Proof; aged 13 years (bottled in 1995); distilled at Brown-Forman Distillery Louisville, KY; Price ~$35
Preface- Old Forester was the first bourbon to be sold in individual bottles. It was marketed mostly towards physicians, as the varying levels of quality control in standard barreled bourbon had become a problem for them. Prior to Old Forester, bourbon was sold by the distilleries in barrels to resellers, who then went from city to city selling the bourbon in barrels to bars, who then let people buy individual glasses or bring their own reused bottles. At several points along this chain there was every opportunity to water down the bourbon or otherwise adulterate it by the resellers or the bars that bought the whole barrels. So the move to selling bourbon in individual bottles from the distillery was bourbon's first real move to quality control. Being consistently good bourbon, it also attracted the wealthier f those who enjoyed good bourbon, like Mark Twain, who was fond of Old Forester.
These days Old Forester is owned by Forman-Brown, which is perhaps better known as the company that owns Jack Daniels (and Woodford Reserve). Old Forester is still a very good bourbon name, though it obviously doesn't have 1/100th of the strength of the Jack Daniels brand. Birthday Bourbon is a special release that has been put out once per year to celebrate the birthday of George Brown. It is very interesting, because every release has been radically different. It is my goal to find several more vintages of Birthday Bourbon. It's an interesting concept, putting out a limited release once a year that is purposefully wildly different every year. No other distillery is really doing anything like this. At the very least Old Forester and Forman-Brown should be applauded for doing something different.
Packaging - The bottle is handsome, though not particularly attractive. The top is completely made out of cork, from the grip on the top, to the actual part that does the corking. This is a little abnormal, but I think it's a cool touch, again setting it apart from the more standard wood top with a cork glued on. The label color scheme varies from year to year, and this one is black with green accents. I find it slightly unattractive, but not awful either.
Appearance - Dark Amber
Smell - Apples and caramel, with alcohol. Literally smells like you dipped a caramel apple in bourbon.
Taste - Again, it tastes like a bourbon flavored caramel green apple. The apple taste isn't overwhelming by any means, but it's perhaps one of the clearest secondary flavors I've ever tasted in a bourbon, my friend Maria Merritt noticed this right away the first time we tasted it (secondary flavors are flavors that aren't almost uniformly associated with bourbon, that is, not the primary flavors, which are caramel, vanilla, corn syrup, cinnamon, alcohol and (in infortunate cases) astringent/mouthwash). Perhaps this is why the label has the green in it? To hint at the green apple flavor? It's also fairly smooth, as would be expected from a 13 year old bourbon. Cinnamon also finds its way into the taste as well, giving it a spicy little kick. The feel in the mouth is average thickness, as would be expected from a 94 proof bourbon.
Finish - the apple and caramel taste fades faster than the cinnamon, meaning the finish is much spicier than the initial taste. It's not a long finish at all. Perhaps even a touch short for my tastes, but isn't bad. Only a tiny hint of astringent in the finish. Solid, though not spectacular finish for the price range.
Overall - A very good bourbon that is very unique. I've tasted a lot of bourbon, and I can honestly say I've never tasted a bourbon with this strong of a green apple taste to it. If you're one of those people who believe that secondary flavors in bourbon don't exist, try this. The apple taste is undeniable. I'm not sure if it was an oddity to the yeast mix, the barrel or the grain mix, or most likely a combination of all the above. It's not a bourbon I would want to drink every day, however, for the serious bourbon drinker, it's worth getting for a collection if you like a variety of bourbons.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Bourbon Review: Jefferson Presidential Select 18 Year Old.
Jefferson Reserve Presidential Select 18 Years Old - 94 Proof; aged 18 years; Distilled at the Stitzel-Weller distillery; Price: ~$100 Also, a point of interest is that the bottle tells you that it is a wheat based bourbon. Which means that the secondary grain is wheat whiskey (since by law bourbon must be at least 51% corn whiskey, we must assume that they mean that the other percentage is wheat, though it's impossible to tell exactly what the corn/wheat ratio is). For most bourbons rye is the primary secondary grain. I will go into more detail with this in the taste section.
Packaging - This is a gorgeous bottle. Everything from the plastic/wax stamp, to the silver clasp around the neck, to the wooden top, the elegant lettering. If you collect bourbon, you almost want this one just for the bottle. The label has the relevant details written by hand (the batch and bottle number), which is a nice touch when it's actually done.
Appearance - medium gold/amber in color.
Smell - faint vanilla and alcohol. Very subtle smell for bourbon.
Initial Taste - Tastes like slightly sweeter, smoother Maker's Mark. Extremely easy to drink. Almost no burn. Taste is a subtle mix of vanilla, very light corn syrup and caramel. Feel in the mouth is lighter than many premium bourbons, but heavier than your average bourbon. A very balanced feel in the mouth. The taste is smooth and subtle. I don't know that I would call it complex, as there aren't many different flavors here.
While the smoothness isn't surprising, given that this is a wheated bourbon, and wheat whiskey is generally smoother than rye, it is fairly extreme here. If you want your bourbon smooth, this is it for you. While I don't mind the smoothness, I feel that the bourbon lacks character. When I was in college I really enjoyed Maker's Mark, but slowly I began to feel that it was a good tasting, but ultimately boring bourbon. And that's what I feel about this Jefferson. While it is smooth, subtle, sweet and tastes good, there just isn't anything there that wows me. It seems a bit odd to me, because this is a bourbon that is obviously geared towards aficionados with its price tag, and most aficionados don't enjoy that flavor profile. However, it is different from other super premium bourbons, and perhaps therein lies the angle. Until Maker's Mark introduced their Maker's 46, there simply wasn't a super premium wheated bourbon. Many of the super premiums tasted fairly similar, most being a variation on the vaunted Jim Beam flavor profile. Here it was decided to take a different approach. And while it's not my favorite, it is different and could find its place in a well balanced collection, as a counter balanced to the more usual rye based super premiums.
Finish - Oaky and cinnamon, with some lingering corn syrup. Not a particularly long finish, but if you like oak and cinnamon with a touch of sweetness, it's a good one. No mouthwash astringency taste at all (what most people refer to as simply 'bad aftertaste' when referring to bourbon).
Overall - I don't love it. It's a little too subdued for my tastes in bourbon. But it is extremely good at what it does. You won't find a smoother bourbon, with an easier aftertaste. I find it a bit weird, because this is the kind of flavor profile that non-bourbon drinkers would really love in bourbon. It seems almost marketed to two very different groups: 1) People who don't drink much bourbon, but want super high quality of whatever it is that they drink. ie the rich, yet casual bourbon drinker and 2) The completist. The kind of bourbon drinker that just has to try a bottle of everything, if for no other reason to say he's had it and have it in his collection. This is a bourbon I want in my collection but doubt I will find myself turning to very often. More there for guests who complain of my other bourbons being too much for them to handle, yet still wanting them to try something nice.
Ultimately it's hard for me to come down too hard on this bourbon, because it hits the mark it shoots for very well. I don't care for the flavor profile, in the same way that I don't love Maker's Mark any more. However, if you are one of Maker's Mark's legion of fans, you owe it to yourself to try this bourbon out. It's the Maker's Mark flavor, but with extremes in richness, smoothness and great taste. And it's certainly a conversation starter as well.
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Understanding the aging process of bourbon
Nothing quite gets the juices flowing of a bourbon connoisseur like bourbon aged 15 or more years. Expectations are raised. It's very easy to feel like you are about to be drinking something special when you see a number that's approaching the age of consent on a bottle of nice bourbon.
However, a lot of intermediate bourbon drinkers are shocked when an old bourbon tastes flat, yet harsh and mediocre or a young bourbon is full and smooth. This even leads some bourbon drinkers to the view that all bourbon is more or less the same and if you buy premium bourbon, you're just paying for marketing. It's a complex issue, so let's dive into the multiple facets:
First, let's consider how bourbon is aged. In order to be called straight bourbon, the bourbon must be made of at least 51% corn whiskey and aged in new (never used before) white oak barrels for at least two years (though if aged between 2 and 4 years, the maker must put exactly how many months old the bourbon is, which practically means almost all bourbon is aged at least four years, since very little bourbon that clearly says '2 years old' would sell). These barrels are also required to be 'fired' or 'charred', meaning that they are burnt on the inside. Legend has it that this was due to a fire at Elijah Craig's distillery, where they then tried to salvage some of the partially burnt barrels and found them to produce superior product. This account is almost certainly apocryphal. If you think about it, the insides of the barrels couldn't have become charred without first burning through the entire barrel first. No, the charred insides were almost certainly a method of sterilizing the barrels prior to usage, as a nice quick burn would kill any bacteria in the wood that might otherwise ruin the product. It was then a happy discovery that charring the insides of the barrels cause the sap of the white oak to caramelize on the outer surface of the inside of the barrel, just underneath the char. When the bourbon was then put in the barrel for aging, the bourbon would soak into the wood, and then would pull out much of the caramelized sugary white oak sap, giving bourbon its distinctive amber color and carmel/sweet flavor.
What caused the bourbon to go into the wood in the first place? Heat. When the storage temperature of the bourbon barrels rises, this causes the wood to expand and pull the bourbon in. When the temperature drops, it pushes the bourbon back out. These swings in temperature govern the aging process. If the bourbon merely sat in the barrel, without going into and out of the wood, virtually no aging would occur (unlike wine, grain alcohol itself doesn't continue to ferment once distillation is finished). Considering the drastic swings in temperature you find in Kentucky, this makes for relatively quick aging. Temperature swings play such an important role in the aging process that experienced tasters can often tell the difference between a bourbon stored in the middle of the rick house from a barrel stored on the outer edge, where temperature swings are more pronounced. Some distillers rotate their barrels throughout the rick house to give a more consistent bourbon, while some use these differences to create different varieties and levels of quality (for instance Booker's only comes from one small part of Jim Beam's rick houses).
Now, let's compare this to Scotch whiskey, which is aged in used barrels, in Scotland, which has much less extreme changes in temperature, due to the gulf stream, and is also just generally colder than Kentucky. In order to get the same level of effective aging, the Scotch is going to have to sit in the barrel for substantially longer in most cases. While the two processes are difficult to compare, you can roughly figure that aging 1 year in Kentucky is roughly equivalent to aging 1.5 in Scotland, in so far as how much the whiskey goes into and out of the barrel it is aging in. A single malt Scotch aged for just 6 years is quite rough in most circumstances (though not inherently bad), whereas many bourbons aged 6 years are extremely smooth.
Single malt Scotch is mostly where the 'aging craze' for whiskey started. Because scotch takes so long to age properly, a lot of inferior Scotch was legitimately rushed to market, since legally only 3 years of aging are required. Furthermore, older whiskey must be more expensive, because of three factors:1) The time value of money indicates that whiskey makers are putting up a substantial amount of capital up front for a return that is several years off. Simple interest would indicate that this would make it more expensive. 2) Storage space, the cost of barrels and other factors make simply storing the stuff expensive. Storing a barrel of 25 year old scotch for 25 years comes at an opportunity cost of not storing 3 barrels of 8 year old scotch. And finally, 3) Every year a percentage of what is in the barrel evaporates. This is euphemistically referred to as 'the angel's share'. Thus causing an aged barrel to produce less product than a younger barrel.
So, because many times older Scotch was genuinely better, and it was more expensive to produce, and thus demanded higher prices, it began to be associated as a luxury item. Gradually the age of the scotch was viewed as an indicator of worth, in and of itself. Even though some scotches required less aging for the same level of quality, they were aged longer, because older Scotches fetched higher prices. For example, many people feel that Balvenie 12 year old is actually inferior to the former Balvenie 10 year old, but the 10 year old was discontinued when the 12 year old was released (at a higher price).
Slowly, this age obsession creeped into the world of bourbon. For many years, bourbon was aged at 4 years and left at that. Some distillers would occasionally age a few barrels to blend in and give greater consistency between years, but for the most part all bourbon was aged about 4 years. Just enough to not be required to post the age, but not any longer. And this wasn't entirely detrimental. As we talked about above, Kentucky bourbon ages quickly. Especially if the rick houses are left with free ventilation to the outside air, as they typically were. However, a part of the issue was that following prohibition, bourbon makers simply were playing catchup, as virtually all stock of bourbon had been depleted. Thus, while bourbon did age faster, it was also pushed out the door as fast as could be in the years following prohibition, more or less all the way through the 80s.
In the 80's the popularity and reputation of bourbon began to fall, quite a bit. When people drank bourbon, they usually didn't even drink bourbon, they drank Jack Daniels (which is Tennessee Whiskey, though it's an open debate as to whether or not Tennessee Whiskey actually qualifies as bourbon, but since Jack Daniels has no desire to be labelled as bourbon, one that will never be tested). The bourbon industry needed a kick start for both sales, and reputation. They were getting killed on the low end by the growth of vodka as the cheap mixer of choice, especially as more females began to drink cocktails, and there essentially wasn't a high end bourbon on the market.
Along came Elmer T. Lee. Elmer T. Lee was the master distiller at Leestown Distilling, which was formerly ancient age. Lee knew from years of experience that certain barrels that he mixed into his blends were much, much better than others, or even the final blended product. He went to the distillery brass with the idea of creating a brand of bourbon that was selected, by him, from the very best barrels as he tasted them. Thus, Blanton's (and less well known Elmer T. Lee) were born. This was not only the founding of the single barrel movement, but more broadly the move in bourbon towards top shelf bourbon.
It is unarguable that the move towards creating a top shelf bourbon movement did in fact lead to substantially higher quality bourbon. However, it was when this movement mixed with the growing obsession with age in the scotch whiskey community that marketing began to take over.
Jim Beam has constantly, and respectfully, held the line that if done right, bourbon doesn't gain much anything from being aged over about 9 years. Booker Noe even going so far as to claim that some barrels don't gain a thing after 6 years. Yet, the age craze has somewhat taken off and just a couple of brands can be examined for it.
The biggest 'culprits' of the age craze are undoubtedly the Van Winkles. Makers of pappy Van Winkle 20 year old. Consider that for a second. 20 years old is old for scotch, but Kentucky bourbon? It's unthinkable in some ways. That would be the equivalent of something like a 30 year old scotch, which only a handful of those exist, and are considered to be extreme luxury items that often fetch in the thousands of dollars. However, one must ask, was 20 years of aging really what makes that bourbon so great? I've had Pappy Van Winkle 20, and while it's certainly good, I actually have slightly preferred Pappy 15 year old (and several other top shelf bourbons). The 20 years of aging is primarily a marketing ploy. That makes it the oldest bourbon out there that is semi-easily available (though Pappy Van Winkle can be hard to find, one must usually know a liquor store owner and have the store owner either save you a bottle or call you as soon as it comes in). In the case of most bourbon that is older than about 10 years old, it isn't so much the aging that makes the bourbon great, it is that it was simply great bourbon to start with. If Booker's was aged another 6 years, it would be excellent bourbon, but it likely wouldn't be substantially better than it is now. Elijah Craig 18 year old is among my favorite bourbons, but it's mostly quality control that puts it a small notch above it's younger (but still old) sibling, Elijah Craig 12 year old. In fact, Heaven Hill is known to actually slow down the aging process, by keeping the barrels that will become Elijah Craig under a more consistent temperature. The issue is slightly more complicated than this, but clearly a lot of the reason is so that they can slap the '18 year old' label on the bottle and sell it for $50, as opposed to $25.
In conclusion, my point is that bourbon should not be judged based on age. Sure, some old bourbons are fantastic. Elijah Craig 18 might be my favorite bourbon in the world. But the judgment should be based on taste, not the number on the label or the price tag on the shelf. As Jim Beam illustrates, some absolutely fantastic bourbons can be made in 6 years, if chosen properly. As always, your best bet is to just sample as much as you can and see what you like and try hard to not be biased by the label (if you can, blind tastings are always fun, and often revealing). Just because a bottle of Pappy Van Winkle 20 year old is that old and costs $150, doesn't mean it's better than a $50 bottle of Booker's or even a $30 bottle of Elmer T. Lee.
Dusting the blog back off with a bourbon review: Booker's
Lately I've gotten the writing bug back, but have been too busy to really do it. Also, I'm now writing over at Capitol Avenue Club which takes a lot of the time I do have to write. However, I'm on a brief vacation and I want to write about bourbon a bit. Writing about bourbon also seems to fit with the title of this blog fairly well, I think.
I've recently thought about keeping a bourbon journal. Keeping track of my thoughts, notes, etc on the various bourbons I try. Then I realized it's probably just as easy to write it here, so here's a random smattering of thoughts I've had about recent bourbons, we will start with Booker's:
Booker's - 124-128 Proof aged 6-8 years (this particular bottle was aged 7 years, 7 months and 128.6 proof, putting it towards the end of both the age and proof range for Booker's) Price ~$50
Packaging - comes in a wooden box with faux aged lettering. A little hokey, but a nice touch for a $50+ bourbon. Bottle is wax sealed on top, with black wax. The top is plastic, which I guess is because of the wax sealing. I'm used to a wooden top for a premium bourbon like this. A cork is still employed, unlike the other Fortune Brands (Fortune Brands owns both the Jim Beam Distilleries and the Maker's Mark distilleries) bourbon with a wax sealed top, Maker's Mark. I prefer cork, it may be an aesthetic thing, but I'm paying $50 for this, I like the touch of a cork, as opposed to a plastic screw top. The bottle is wine bottle shaped and the glass is uncolored glass, which I like for really displaying the rich color that the actual bourbon has. The labels are a bit corny, as Jim Beam tries desperately to hold onto the illusion that each bottle of Booker's is labeled by hand. I sort of hate that approach. If you're really going to go for the pure hand made look, just get somebody to fill things out by hand. If you're not, just design an elegant label that works. This half way stuff lacks grace to me. So while I love the wax that spills over on the 'B' medallion and the cork, I hate the Booker's label. The box will make for a nice riser on my bar to elevate the second row of bottles I have for better display.
Appearance - Deep rich amber color. Sticks to the side of the glass when circulated in a snifter. Both indicate that this bourbon will be a mouthful of thick lushness.
Smell (I refuse to call this 'nose') - Vanilla and corn syrup are the two aromas that jump out to me. More than anything else though, this smells like Jim Beam bourbon, just even more so than white label Jim Beam. While some of the other premium Beam products, like Knob Creek and Baker's, are variations on the Jim Beam profile, at least smell wise Booker's seems to be pure 'premium Jim Beam Bourbon'.
Initial tase - Well, it's a cask strength bourbon, that's for sure. The first thing you'll notice is the 128 proof, especially if you don't cut it a bit with ice or distilled water. Also, if you don't cut it you'll quickly find that the inside of your mouth has been numbed. I personally usually take a couple sips of it neat, then add an ice cube. If Booker Noe (the bourbon's namesake) says it should be cut with water or ice, well then, I guess it's okay. Once a single ice cube is added (which is how I personally take it) the bourbon reveals a lot more flavor than just the pure alcohol blast of the first neat sip. The vanilla we smelled initially is there, along with the caramel/corn syrup flavor that is the trade mark of the Jim Beam flavor profile. This isn't the most complex flavored bourbon, but it really gets it close to perfect in my mind. The alcohol and caramel also can combine to give a slight citrus flavor, just enough to cut the sweetness a touch. Really, to my palette, there are just 4 flavors going on here: Vanilla, Caramel, Citrus and alcohol. And while that may seem a bit unrefined, it's the balance to those that's so perfect that makes this Bourbon. Some bourbons go for all these complex flavors, but at the end of the day they just don't fit together well. Jim Beam takes a relatively simple profile, but absolutely nails it with Booker's. In a lot of ways you might view Booker's as the platonic ideal of bourbon. It's not interesting in the sense that some other bourbons, like Four Roses, are but to me it just gets the flavor of bourbon right.
Body - This is a thick bourbon, as you would expect based on it being 128 proof. Basically that means that in order to make this a 'normal' 80 proof bourbon, you'd have to add about 50% of the volume of the bourbon in water. It coats your mouth and doesn't let go. While tasting it doesn't so much slosh around as it rolls around.
Finish - long after you've taken your sip the thick, caramel, vanilla goodness continues to coat your mouth. The finish is cinnamon-y (from the alcohol) but remains the hints of vanilla, citrus and caramel. Several minutes later, your mouth still tastes sweet. There is almost a complete lack of the 'astringent' mouthwash taste that some bourbons can have. Which is perhaps the biggest mark of a truly premium bourbon. Booker's manages to be both powerful and easy to drink, which is a rare feat indeed.
Overall - Among the best. Jim Beam is, without a doubt, the most storied name in bourbon. Booker's is not only their best bourbon, but also the one that best exemplifies the Jim Beam flavor profile: Vanilla, caramel, with a touch of cinnamon and citrus. Booker's is by no means cheap, but it holds up to anything in the price range and many bourbons out of its price range. It's not complicated, but it balances things just right. Cut it with a single ice cube and you're tasting something that can make a good argument to being the exact way bourbon should taste. If you like your bourbon sweet, smooth, powerful and to taste like bourbon, this is it for you.
I've recently thought about keeping a bourbon journal. Keeping track of my thoughts, notes, etc on the various bourbons I try. Then I realized it's probably just as easy to write it here, so here's a random smattering of thoughts I've had about recent bourbons, we will start with Booker's:
Booker's - 124-128 Proof aged 6-8 years (this particular bottle was aged 7 years, 7 months and 128.6 proof, putting it towards the end of both the age and proof range for Booker's) Price ~$50
Packaging - comes in a wooden box with faux aged lettering. A little hokey, but a nice touch for a $50+ bourbon. Bottle is wax sealed on top, with black wax. The top is plastic, which I guess is because of the wax sealing. I'm used to a wooden top for a premium bourbon like this. A cork is still employed, unlike the other Fortune Brands (Fortune Brands owns both the Jim Beam Distilleries and the Maker's Mark distilleries) bourbon with a wax sealed top, Maker's Mark. I prefer cork, it may be an aesthetic thing, but I'm paying $50 for this, I like the touch of a cork, as opposed to a plastic screw top. The bottle is wine bottle shaped and the glass is uncolored glass, which I like for really displaying the rich color that the actual bourbon has. The labels are a bit corny, as Jim Beam tries desperately to hold onto the illusion that each bottle of Booker's is labeled by hand. I sort of hate that approach. If you're really going to go for the pure hand made look, just get somebody to fill things out by hand. If you're not, just design an elegant label that works. This half way stuff lacks grace to me. So while I love the wax that spills over on the 'B' medallion and the cork, I hate the Booker's label. The box will make for a nice riser on my bar to elevate the second row of bottles I have for better display.
Appearance - Deep rich amber color. Sticks to the side of the glass when circulated in a snifter. Both indicate that this bourbon will be a mouthful of thick lushness.
Smell (I refuse to call this 'nose') - Vanilla and corn syrup are the two aromas that jump out to me. More than anything else though, this smells like Jim Beam bourbon, just even more so than white label Jim Beam. While some of the other premium Beam products, like Knob Creek and Baker's, are variations on the Jim Beam profile, at least smell wise Booker's seems to be pure 'premium Jim Beam Bourbon'.
Initial tase - Well, it's a cask strength bourbon, that's for sure. The first thing you'll notice is the 128 proof, especially if you don't cut it a bit with ice or distilled water. Also, if you don't cut it you'll quickly find that the inside of your mouth has been numbed. I personally usually take a couple sips of it neat, then add an ice cube. If Booker Noe (the bourbon's namesake) says it should be cut with water or ice, well then, I guess it's okay. Once a single ice cube is added (which is how I personally take it) the bourbon reveals a lot more flavor than just the pure alcohol blast of the first neat sip. The vanilla we smelled initially is there, along with the caramel/corn syrup flavor that is the trade mark of the Jim Beam flavor profile. This isn't the most complex flavored bourbon, but it really gets it close to perfect in my mind. The alcohol and caramel also can combine to give a slight citrus flavor, just enough to cut the sweetness a touch. Really, to my palette, there are just 4 flavors going on here: Vanilla, Caramel, Citrus and alcohol. And while that may seem a bit unrefined, it's the balance to those that's so perfect that makes this Bourbon. Some bourbons go for all these complex flavors, but at the end of the day they just don't fit together well. Jim Beam takes a relatively simple profile, but absolutely nails it with Booker's. In a lot of ways you might view Booker's as the platonic ideal of bourbon. It's not interesting in the sense that some other bourbons, like Four Roses, are but to me it just gets the flavor of bourbon right.
Body - This is a thick bourbon, as you would expect based on it being 128 proof. Basically that means that in order to make this a 'normal' 80 proof bourbon, you'd have to add about 50% of the volume of the bourbon in water. It coats your mouth and doesn't let go. While tasting it doesn't so much slosh around as it rolls around.
Finish - long after you've taken your sip the thick, caramel, vanilla goodness continues to coat your mouth. The finish is cinnamon-y (from the alcohol) but remains the hints of vanilla, citrus and caramel. Several minutes later, your mouth still tastes sweet. There is almost a complete lack of the 'astringent' mouthwash taste that some bourbons can have. Which is perhaps the biggest mark of a truly premium bourbon. Booker's manages to be both powerful and easy to drink, which is a rare feat indeed.
Overall - Among the best. Jim Beam is, without a doubt, the most storied name in bourbon. Booker's is not only their best bourbon, but also the one that best exemplifies the Jim Beam flavor profile: Vanilla, caramel, with a touch of cinnamon and citrus. Booker's is by no means cheap, but it holds up to anything in the price range and many bourbons out of its price range. It's not complicated, but it balances things just right. Cut it with a single ice cube and you're tasting something that can make a good argument to being the exact way bourbon should taste. If you like your bourbon sweet, smooth, powerful and to taste like bourbon, this is it for you.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Day 17 - Fall Leaf & Flip Flop
polaroid macro filters attached to the end of my nikkor 55-200 telephoto lens. Fully manual mode! Chromatic aberration and vignetting removed in Aperture.
70mm, ISO 6400, f/10, 1/50, +10 and +4 macro filters stacked
70mm, ISO 6400, f/10, 1/50, +10 and +4 macro filters stacked
80mm, ISO12800, f/16, 1/25, +10, +4 and +2 macro filters stacked; slight cropping, devignetting and chromatic aberration correction in aperture
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Day 15 - Newcastle
Polaroid Macro filters on my Nikkor 35mm prime lens. f/1.8 on the first f/8 on the second to get a deeper depth of field. iso 3200
'Vintage' color added via aperture
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)