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TNbourbon
11-08-2005, 20:20
I don't really know what this means, but since it's the first solid reference I've ever seen to a Van Winkle Lot A, I thought I'd note it:
Van Winkle 18yo Lot A (http://forums.egullet.com/index.php?showtopic=32311)
'Course, the reference to Wild Turkey "Reserve" makes we wonder if this guy even knows what he's drinking, but...

Ring a bell, Julian?

tdelling
11-09-2005, 07:35
Surprise #2 in that thread is that Lew Bryson posts there,
as recently as July 2005. He hasn't posted here for a loooong
time... years and years.

He had a great series of three whiskey articles in Malt Advocate
that were really great reading... you could tell that (1) he actually
visited the distilleries, and (2) he's not afraid to ask technical
questions and really find out what's actually going on, and (3)
he's not afraid to write about what he sees. He doesn't just write
a watered down puff piece waxing romantic about tradition and
how beautiful the hills are and blah blah blah we've heard it all
before from the marketing department already. Lew makes you feel
like you're there, talking to the master distiller, who has an
interesting job and does interesting things. You'll never see
a "it mixes really well with Coca-Cola!" master distiller quote
in a Bryson article.

Tim Dellinger

Vange
11-09-2005, 11:01
check that link out
not sure if it helps

http://www.whiskymag.com/whisky/brand/family_reserve_kentucky_straight_bourbon/whisky1906.html

Vange
11-09-2005, 11:42
A Park Avenue liquors exclusive?

kbuzbee
11-09-2005, 12:09
Surprise #2 in that thread is that Lew Bryson posts there, as recently as July 2005. He hasn't posted here for a loooong time... years and years.



I personally loved the comment about why you put Bourbon in a Mint Julep. http://www.straightbourbon.com/forums/images/graemlins/lol.gif

Just classic!

Ken

NorCalBoozer
11-09-2005, 16:26
i believe it's pretty common for liquor stores to get their own bottling. Binny's has their own 18 y.o. Van Winkle as well.


A Park Avenue liquors exclusive?

LewBryson
11-10-2005, 15:40
Thanks, Tim. I ran into Ken Weber at WhiskyFest NY last night, he told me "they're talking about you on straightbourbon.com", and then wouldn't tell me anything else. Glad it was something good! If you liked those pieces, I think you'll like the one in the upcoming issue on mashing. I got some really good stuff from Jerry Dalton at Beam, and the scotch side from Jim Cryle, retired master distiller at Glenlivet.
Thanks again,

Lew Bryson

Gillman
11-10-2005, 15:53
Welcome, Lew, hope to see you around here some. Your expertise and knowledge have been mentioned here many times. Especially when we discuss straight rye, I always think, what would Lew say? http://www.straightbourbon.com/forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif

Gary Gillman

tdelling
11-10-2005, 16:06
> If you liked those pieces, I think you'll like the one in the upcoming
> issue on mashing. I got some really good stuff from Jerry Dalton at Beam,
> and the scotch side from Jim Cryle, retired master distiller at Glenlivet.

Awesome! I'm looking forward to it.

For those who haven't seen it, Lex Kraaijeveld wrote up a nice little
piece about bacteria in mashing. He even flexed his muscles as a biologist
a little and categorized a few of the strains into families. (This was
all data from Scottish distilleries.)
http://www.celticmalts.com/journal-a19.htm

(Lactic acid bacteria are what give bourbon's sour mash it's sourness.)



Tim Dellinger

LewBryson
11-10-2005, 19:51
Thanks for the welcome, but 'expertise' is probably too strong a word. I'm a willing student, just doing my best to learn from people who know a LOT more than I do, and taking a look at things from my own perspective.

Lew

JeffRenner
11-11-2005, 06:38
I think you'll like the one in the upcoming issue on mashing.



I look forward to that article. As a homebrewer, I find that I have more unanswered questions on mashing than on any other aspect of the production of whiskey. Not because I know more about the other aspects, but because I know more about mashing and therefore know more what to ask.

In particular, I am interested in the various reasons for sour mash, and have been turning over in my mind a bit of an short essay on this that I will post soon.

Jeff