Jack Daniels Collection

@Stuartx - Nice, though your shelf with single barrel looks like cardboard cut outs! It must be the angle or light ;)

To the haters, you really should try something other then JD Black Label.

To those that have and still hate it, each to their own :)
 
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this very statement shows what a poor drink it is. it's a cult drink.

Yet if you read the rest of my statement that you have chopped off, I don't drink any drinks neat like that.

And to be honest, I'd rather enjoy my drink than ram it down my throat.

I'm more of an Ale person / Real larger person
 
Will it still be drinkable after sitting on a shelf for 10 years? Or is it like wine were you have to make a big effort keeping it ?

Booze doesnt last too long round these parts :)
 
@StuartX - Nice, though your shelf with single barrel looks like cardboard cut outs! It must be the angle or light ;)

To the haters, you really should try something other then JD Black Label.

To those that have and still hate it, each to their own :)

100% Not cardboard
 
Don't think I've crossed the point where I like malt whiskey yet.... I do like a nice bourbon though.

Cool collection.... sometimes its cool just to collect for the achievement of collecting, rather than for the actual purpose of drinking/use.

Nice work.


I should at least get a nice bottle now and save it for retirement!
 
Disavow...it's still technically a bourbon to most, hence the earlier comments.

If I remember correctly, any bourbon produced in Tennessee can be called Tennessee Whiskey though not all of them do this.
 
Disavow...it's still technically a bourbon to most, hence the earlier comments.

If I remember correctly, any bourbon produced in Tennessee can be called Tennessee Whiskey though not all of them do this.

So why the rolleyes? Why the condescension?
 
Infact it's the process...Wiki lends a hand...I guess it's the way you read it:
To be labeled as a "Straight Bourbon", it is prohibited for flavoring or coloring compounds to be added to the spirit after the fermenting process. While it is a common misconception that this requirement prohibits the use of the Lincoln County Process for bourbons, it is actually not uncommon for bourbons to be charcoal filtered, and the decision not to label whiskies that use the process as "bourbon" may only be a choice of marketing strategy.[4][5][6]

As for the rolleyes, not really condescension, more just surprise due to it still being techinicall a bourbon :)
 
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