Geo Posted May 10, 2005 Share Posted May 10, 2005 How can anyone not drink a bottle of this in a week? It makes me drool now to think about having three fingers of it. This is my favorate regular pour now. For $28 a bottle, who could resist this smooth nector of the Gods! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AVB Posted May 10, 2005 Share Posted May 10, 2005 The 10 is good but the 15 is my goto drink although I don't do a bottle a week. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brian12069 Posted May 11, 2005 Share Posted May 11, 2005 How can anyone not drink a bottle of this in a week? It makes me drool now to think about having three fingers of it. This is my favorate regular pour now. For $28 a bottle, who could resist this smooth nector of the Gods! The bottle a week part cracks me up... ... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
camduncan Posted May 11, 2005 Share Posted May 11, 2005 I'd drink my bottle of 10yo in a week, but I can't easily replace it....so it's had to go on my 'once every few weeks' drinks list Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluesbassdad Posted May 11, 2005 Share Posted May 11, 2005 Until I fell in with the StraightBourbonians, I had never thought of how long it might take to finish a bottle. I suppose I thought a bottle might last a lifetime, especially if the owner is old to begin with and has many bottlings open. It came as a shock the first time I actually emptied a bottle. That prompted me to do the math.One bottle is 750 ml. I figure one drink is 50 ml. (At least that's what the airlines seem to think. I don't know how that compares to a bar shot.) That means there are a paltry 25 drinks in one bottle. If I have two drinks a day from that bottle, it will be gone in less than two weeks.Can I imagine consuming a bottle is as little as one week? Barely. That would mean almost four drinks a day, every day. That's almost too much of a good thing even when it's ORVW in the glass. Now and then I'll get carried away and have that many drinks, or even one or two more, in one day/evening, but I usually find it very easy, almost preferable, to skip the following day.I am commenting on myself, no one else, when I say, drinking one bottle in a week on a regular basis would be a problem (in at least two senses of the word.)Yours truly,Dave Morefield Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ratcheer Posted May 11, 2005 Share Posted May 11, 2005 One bottle is 750 ml. I figure one drink is 50 ml. (At least that's what the airlines seem to think. I don't know how that compares to a bar shot.) That means there are a paltry 25 drinks in one bottle. Dave, didn't you used to be an engineer? That is 15 drinks, not 25. Tim Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
angelshare Posted May 12, 2005 Share Posted May 12, 2005 Tina's favorite for years - even better than the 15yo in her opinion (and, with the bottle of 15 yo we have now, I would agree). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
musher Posted May 12, 2005 Share Posted May 12, 2005 One bottle is 750 ml. I figure one drink is 50 ml. (At least that's what the airlines seem to think. I don't know how that compares to a bar shot.) That means there are a paltry 25 drinks in one bottle. Dave, didn't you used to be an engineer? That is 15 drinks, not 25. Tim . . . which is why I figure on something more like a bottle/week! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluesbassdad Posted May 12, 2005 Share Posted May 12, 2005 Tim, Yeah, but obviously not a very good one. Naturally, I switched to program planning & control and then to accounting. Believe it or not, I've had that erroneous factoid embedded in my mind so long that I haven't even questioned it. I suppose if I had ever drunk from only one bottle until it was empty, I might have discovered my error. (If I were a real engineer I would have done the lab work.) Yours truly, Dave "Bottle a Week" Morefield ( X 15) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
matthew0715 Posted May 12, 2005 Share Posted May 12, 2005 One bottle is 750 ml. I figure one drink is 50 ml. (At least that's what the airlines seem to think. I don't know how that compares to a bar shot.) That means there are a paltry 25 drinks in one bottle. Dave, didn't you used to be an engineer? That is 15 drinks, not 25. Tim According to Scottish legend, there are 18 shots in a bottle, hence 18 holes on a golf course! Matt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Edward_call_me_Ed Posted May 12, 2005 Share Posted May 12, 2005 Good stuff. I have three bottles, now two and a half, that I got the other day. Don't know when or if I will see more on the shelves. I like it a lot. It really changed the way I feel about wheaties. I would really like to see what more time in the barrel would do for this whiskey. Ed Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brendaj Posted May 12, 2005 Share Posted May 12, 2005 Matt, According to Scottish legend, there are 18 shots in a bottle, hence 18 holes on a golf course! Funny, we have that conversation every year at the Bourbon Open ... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nysquire Posted May 13, 2005 Share Posted May 13, 2005 Love the 10yo, but the 15yo has much more to offer...... I keep 3 to 5 of each..... The only other bourbon I keep a few on hand would be EC 18yo.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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