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Craft Distillers
Приєднався 28 лют 2014
Craft Distillers - Workhorse / Modern Ancient Floriani Old Bourbon Mash
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives his tasting notes on Workhorse Rye's recent project, Modern Ancient Floriani whiskey, made with Floriani red corn, Grass Valley heirloom rye, and malted Sonora wheat.
Переглядів: 44
Відео
Craft Distillers - Workhorse Rye / MODERN ANCIENT Bolita Belatove Whiskey
Переглядів 20Місяць тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives his tasting notes on Workhorse Rye's special project, Modern Ancient Bolita Benatova whiskey, made with an ancient, near-extinct, Oaxacan pink corn.
Craft Distillers - Workhorse Rye / MODERN ANCIENT Ute Blue Corn Whiskey
Переглядів 66Місяць тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers discusses and tastes MODERN ANCIENT Ute Blue Corn Whiskey from Rob Easter at Workhorse Rye.
Craft Distillers - Cuentacuentos Mezcal Tepextate
Переглядів 375 місяців тому
Ansley Coale tastes and discusses production of Tepextate mezcal from Cuentacuentos distiller Cristina Garcia
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Pisco Logia | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 207 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives his tasting notes on Pisco Logia. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/pisco-logia/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Pisco Logia | Brand Overview
Переглядів 67 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives a brief overview on Pisco Logia. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/pisco-logia/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Comunidad Mezcal: Heladio Lopez | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 147 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives a brief overview on Heladio Lopez, a featured distiller of Comunidad mezcals and gives his tasting notes on Heladio's jabali made in Santa Catarina Minas. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/comunidad/eladio-lopez/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Comunidad Mezcals: Heladio Lopez
Переглядів 207 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives a brief overview on Heladio Lopez, a featured distiller of Comunidad mezcals. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/comunidad/eladio-lopez/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Comunidad Mezcals | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 117 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives his tasting notes on Comunidad mezcals. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/comunidad/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Comunidad Mezcals | Brand Overview
Переглядів 117 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives a brief overview of Comunidad mezcals Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/comunidad/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Tso'ok Rum | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 117 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers talks about and tastes Tso'ok Rum from the Sierra Mixe in Oaxaca. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/tsook/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts - Tso'ok Rum - Brand Overview
Переглядів 117 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives a brief overview of Tso'ok Rum from the Sierra Mixe in Oaxaca. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/tsook/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Dakabend Rum | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 97 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers talks about and tastes Dakabend Oaxacan Rum. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/dakabend/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Dakabend Rum | Brand Overview
Переглядів 97 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives a brief overview of Dakabend Oaxacan Rum. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/dakabend/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Los Nahuales NAHUAL Mezcal | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 228 місяців тому
Ansley Coale of Craft Distillers gives a brief overview and tasting notes on Los Nahuales NAHUAL blanco mezcal. Learn more: craftdistillers.com/products/los-nahuales/
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Los Nahuales Mezcals | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 158 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Los Nahuales Mezcals | Tasting Notes
Craft Disitllers - QR Shorts | Los Nahuales Mezcals | Brand Overview
Переглядів 98 місяців тому
Craft Disitllers - QR Shorts | Los Nahuales Mezcals | Brand Overview
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Devin's Soft n Tasty Whiskey | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 178 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Devin's Soft n Tasty Whiskey | Tasting Notes
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Devin's Soft n Tasty Whiskey | Overview
Переглядів 138 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Devin's Soft n Tasty Whiskey | Overview
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Comunidad Mezcals | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 408 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Comunidad Mezcals | Tasting Notes
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus Santa Ana del Rio | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 228 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus Santa Ana del Rio | Tasting Notes
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Miguel | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 128 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Miguel | Tasting Notes
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Luis Mezcal | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 358 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Luis Mezcal | Tasting Notes
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Juan del Rio | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 218 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Juan del Rio | Tasting Notes
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Baltazar | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 208 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Baltazar | Tasting Notes
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Andres | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 378 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus San Andres | Tasting Notes
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus Mezcals | Overview
Переглядів 358 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts | Alipus Mezcals | Overview
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts - Cuentacuentos El Barro | Overview
Переглядів 118 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts - Cuentacuentos El Barro | Overview
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts - Cuentacuentos El Barro | Tasting Notes
Переглядів 208 місяців тому
Craft Distillers - QR Shorts - Cuentacuentos El Barro | Tasting Notes
Great recommendation. Where would I find a bottle to try?
Our next door neighbors, Caddell & Williams, have it available online: caddellwilliams.com/brands/workhorse/
@@craftdistillers2192 rock on! Will def take a look :)
Hey, I want you to shine a light through my Straight Bourbon in the tank. I never add caramel color. What a marvelous red color from the new charred oak barrels. No Caramel Coloring at ALL. That Scotch has been aged in used Bourbon barrels, and is yellow because most of the red oak color was taken out when the new Bourbon was in it. You got this information from a bartender who has never made a drop of spirits. What does he know about caramel? Not much. What I know is good 36 month air dried oak imparts a beautiful red color. I invite to experience the true colors of whiskey, come see me.
8 years later... I wonder if those pallets collapsed yet
Small barrels get a lot of bad press. However, if you’re aging them at a lower temperature, couldn’t you achieve a good flavor profile?
Good video my friend.
Nice setup.
Ansley, I was first introduced to good California brandy after a visit to the old Carneros Alambic distillery. I was heartbroken when Remy Martin destroyed them. I was living in Livermore when I discovered you and Hubert’s distillery and have bought a numerous of bottles over the years. Brandy is indeed the most underrated spirit. Craft whiskeys and Vodkas are over represented in marketplace as are IPAs are in the brewing business. I’m waiting for the day folks appreciate a good brandy again. Keep up the good work!!
just found a bottle of this yesterday.. :D
Great video, thankyou. Do you or other companies use caramel for flavour and if so how?
looks delicious
I'm looking at this review, and wondering how Soft and Tasty would measure up to Abosolo's El Whisky De Mexico? That's also made with a type of white heirloom corn.
The Philippine Influence in Mexican Mezcal Distilling How 500 years and a 12,000 mile-trade route shaped modern mezcal. By Caroline Hatchett Published 04/27/23 Man pouring mezcal next to a Filipino-style still Pedro Jimenez Earlier this year, Tito Pin-Perez placed seven bottles of Mexican spirits on a bar-a line-up that showcased the country’s distillate diversity, including raicilla, pox, sotol, bacanora, artisanal Oaxacan mezcal, tequila, and tuxca. He poured a small glass of the tuxca first, then slid it across the bar. “Tuxca,” he said, “is actually the grandfather of all of these spirits.” A New York bartender by trade, Pin-Perez moved to Mexico City during the pandemic and now oversees the bar programs at Fónico and Rayo, where his spirits selection and cocktail lists reflect his ongoing education and experience with Mexican distillates. Those include widely popular spirits like tequila and mezcal, but also an array of other agave-based distillates like bacanora, raicilla, and agave-adjacent sotol. But it’s tuxca that unlocked mezcal’s history for him. “It helped me understand how it all connects,” says Pin-Perez. Insecto Tuxca, the bottle he shared, lists some clues to that history on its label: Molienda a mano (milled by hand), fermentación en pozo de piedra volcánica (fermented in a volcanic stone pit), destilado de agave del sur de Jalisco (agave distillate from southern Jalisco), and destilador Filipino (Filipino still). It’s the last of these descriptors that offers a deeper insight into the history of Mexican distilling. It’s a story that connects nearly five centuries of distilling in Mexico with a Pacific trade route that traversed 8,500 miles of ocean, and the Filipino sailors who brought unique stills and production techniques to the Central American region. It’s a story that stands in contrast to colonialism-a testament to ancient practices, Indigenous ingenuity, and mutual resistance. Spout pouring mezcal distillate into clay container. Pedro Jimenez The Trans-Pacific Origins of Mexican Distilling Native Mexicans cultivated agave for centuries before Spaniards showed up on their shores in 1519. They cooked and fermented piñas for sustenance. They drank mildly alcoholic pulque, made from fermenting the plants’ sap. But they did not distill its nectar into mezcal (or at least there is no definitive proof of pre-Columbian distillation, but more on that later). There’s nearly conclusive evidence, though, that Spaniards themselves did not introduce distillation to Mexico. Rather, they tried to squelch it. In 1565, a little more than four decades after the Aztec Empire fell to Hernán Cortés and his troops, the Spanish conquered the Philippines. The same year, Spain established the 12,000-mile Manila Galleon trade route across the Pacific Ocean, connecting Manila and Acapulco. For 250 years, ships transported spices, silk, porcelain, and other cargo from Asia before returning from Mexico bearing New World silver. “[Upon arrival,] sometimes whole crews would abandon ship and desert and then mix into the local population. It’s a testament to the cruelty of Spanish colonialism.” -Rudy Guevarra Jr., Associate Professor Of Asian Pacific American Studies, Arizona State University. By the early 1600s, skilled Filipino sailors made up the majority of these galleon crews of 100 to 350-plus men. Some were slaves and others underpaid navigators, and all endured tremendous hardship onboard. Crews suffered from scurvy, starvation, and dehydration. Adequate clothing was not provided, and making it to Mexico alive was not a given. In 1620 alone, two galleon crews lost 99 and 105 men, respectively, their bodies tossed overboard. “[Upon arrival,] sometimes whole crews would abandon ship and desert and then mix into the local population,” says Rudy Guevarra Jr., an associate professor of Asian Pacific American Studies at Arizona State University. “It’s a testament to the cruelty of Spanish colonialism.” Scholars estimate that 75,000 Filipinos settled in western Mexico during the Galleon era. According to Guevarra’s research, they married into Mexican families and blended into a community of similarly dark-skinned, mixed-race people who had Spanish surnames and practiced Catholicism. In turn, a great cultural exchange took shape, one that’s visible still in places like Acapulco and Colima. Among other foodstuffs, Filipinos introduced tamarind, rice, mango de Manila, and coconuts to Mexico. Coconuts, brought over in 1569, would be the most consequential of them all. Jimador in the agave fields. Pedro Jimenez Mexico’s First Distillate Filipinos had a similar relationship with the coconut palm as Mexicans did with their native agave. Filipinos used the fronds for clothing, shelter, and tools. They ate coconut meat and milk, drank the water, and used various parts of the tree for medicinal purposes. Filipinos fermented palm sap into the low-alcohol beverage tuba, similar to Mexican pulque, which you can still buy on the streets of Colima. In the morning hours, freshly made tuba is sweet and often enjoyed plain; by the afternoon tuba has a more prominent fermented tang and gets topped with peanuts, syrup, and fruit. Filipinos also transformed tuba into vinegar. To make tatemado, essentially a spicy Mexican adobo, cooks in Colima braise pork, chiles, and aromatics in coconut vinegar. Filipino sailors also brought with them the technology to distill tuba into lambanog, known in Mexico as vino de coco. Newly arrived Filipinos established coconut palm farms, and vino de coco soon became the most important business in Colima. By 1631, the town produced 262,000 liters of the stuff, and as mining activity picked up in northern Mexico, vino de coco helped to fuel its workers’ labor. It’s from this colonial soup of circumstances that mezcal, as we know it today, is thought to have emerged. “All the identified evidence suggests that agave distillation originated through adaptation of the coconut distillation process in Colima,” write Zizumbo-Villarreal and Patricia Colunga-GarcíaMarín in a 2008 landmark study. Compared with the Arabic-style alembic stills used by Spaniards, the Filipino still is a rustic apparatus. There’s a hollow tree trunk-in Mexico, most often from the parota tree-that’s appended on either side with a copper bowl. Vino de coco distillers added tuba to the bottom bowl and heated it over a fire. The liquid turned to vapor, rose in the still, and hit the copper bowl on top, through which cold water circulated. The vapors condensed and fell in droplets onto a wooden gutter and through a spout into a clay vessel. Distillers repeated the process several times to achieve the ideal proof and composition. Zizumbo-Villarreal and Colunga-GarcíaMarín’s study, as well as that of Paulina Machuca in 2018’s El Vino de Cocos en la Nueva España, stack evidence that Filipinos shared this technology with their new Indigenous and mixed-race neighbors and families. If this distillation process worked for tuba, why fermented agave? Original Filipino-style still build into a perota tree trunk, and brick oven at Balancan distillery. Ismael Gomez Modern Mezcal Is Born Of the 38 tabernas, or distilleries, Zizumbo-Villareal and Colunga-GarcíaMarín documented in southern Jalisco, 24 had coconut palm groves nearby. The research team also found greater agave diversity in southern Jalisco than in Tequila to the north, describing the region near the Colima volcano as “the nucleus of agave genetic diversity.” For millennia, Indigenous Mexicans in the area had selected specific agave varieties suited to making pulque. They cooked agave in stone pits, smashed the piñas with mallets, and fermented pulque in wells carved into volcanic rock. Then this centuries-old beverage met the adaptable Filipino-style stills that had landed on nearby shores. The first known documented reference to agave distillation comes from a Spanish cleric in 1619, who speaks of “mexcale” as an Indigenous drink produced on the coast and in the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains of Nayarit. Mezcal distillation was traveling north and south through ancient and mining-related trade routes, and, along with vino de coco, becoming an economic threat to imported Spanish brandy. “The Spanish didn’t intend for the kind of interracial convergences that occurred between Indigenous and mixed-race Filipinos and Mexicans,” says Gueverra. “When this community started selling their own spirits and competing with the Spanish, it had this unforeseen impact on the culture.” Starting in 1603, colonial powers declared a series of prohibitions on vino de coco and mezcal, and by the 18th century, Colima’s vino de coco industry had effectively vanished. Agave distillation, on the other hand, went clandestine in the foothills of the Colima volcano and continued to spread, according to Zizumbo-Villarreal and Colunga-GarcíaMarín. Underground fermentation in volcanic wells was easily concealed, and the lightweight Filipino stills could be easily disassembled and moved. And agave-sacred, wild, and abundant-had far more cultural import in Mexico than the newly introduced coconut palms.
The Philippine Influence in Mexican Mezcal Distilling How 500 years and a 12,000 mile-trade route shaped modern mezcal. By Caroline Hatchett Published 04/27/23 Man pouring mezcal next to a Filipino-style still Pedro Jimenez Earlier this year, Tito Pin-Perez placed seven bottles of Mexican spirits on a bar-a line-up that showcased the country’s distillate diversity, including raicilla, pox, sotol, bacanora, artisanal Oaxacan mezcal, tequila, and tuxca. He poured a small glass of the tuxca first, then slid it across the bar. “Tuxca,” he said, “is actually the grandfather of all of these spirits.” A New York bartender by trade, Pin-Perez moved to Mexico City during the pandemic and now oversees the bar programs at Fónico and Rayo, where his spirits selection and cocktail lists reflect his ongoing education and experience with Mexican distillates. Those include widely popular spirits like tequila and mezcal, but also an array of other agave-based distillates like bacanora, raicilla, and agave-adjacent sotol. But it’s tuxca that unlocked mezcal’s history for him. “It helped me understand how it all connects,” says Pin-Perez. Insecto Tuxca, the bottle he shared, lists some clues to that history on its label: Molienda a mano (milled by hand), fermentación en pozo de piedra volcánica (fermented in a volcanic stone pit), destilado de agave del sur de Jalisco (agave distillate from southern Jalisco), and destilador Filipino (Filipino still). It’s the last of these descriptors that offers a deeper insight into the history of Mexican distilling. It’s a story that connects nearly five centuries of distilling in Mexico with a Pacific trade route that traversed 8,500 miles of ocean, and the Filipino sailors who brought unique stills and production techniques to the Central American region. It’s a story that stands in contrast to colonialism-a testament to ancient practices, Indigenous ingenuity, and mutual resistance. Spout pouring mezcal distillate into clay container. Pedro Jimenez The Trans-Pacific Origins of Mexican Distilling Native Mexicans cultivated agave for centuries before Spaniards showed up on their shores in 1519. They cooked and fermented piñas for sustenance. They drank mildly alcoholic pulque, made from fermenting the plants’ sap. But they did not distill its nectar into mezcal (or at least there is no definitive proof of pre-Columbian distillation, but more on that later). There’s nearly conclusive evidence, though, that Spaniards themselves did not introduce distillation to Mexico. Rather, they tried to squelch it. In 1565, a little more than four decades after the Aztec Empire fell to Hernán Cortés and his troops, the Spanish conquered the Philippines. The same year, Spain established the 12,000-mile Manila Galleon trade route across the Pacific Ocean, connecting Manila and Acapulco. For 250 years, ships transported spices, silk, porcelain, and other cargo from Asia before returning from Mexico bearing New World silver. “[Upon arrival,] sometimes whole crews would abandon ship and desert and then mix into the local population. It’s a testament to the cruelty of Spanish colonialism.” -Rudy Guevarra Jr., Associate Professor Of Asian Pacific American Studies, Arizona State University. By the early 1600s, skilled Filipino sailors made up the majority of these galleon crews of 100 to 350-plus men. Some were slaves and others underpaid navigators, and all endured tremendous hardship onboard. Crews suffered from scurvy, starvation, and dehydration. Adequate clothing was not provided, and making it to Mexico alive was not a given. In 1620 alone, two galleon crews lost 99 and 105 men, respectively, their bodies tossed overboard. “[Upon arrival,] sometimes whole crews would abandon ship and desert and then mix into the local population,” says Rudy Guevarra Jr., an associate professor of Asian Pacific American Studies at Arizona State University. “It’s a testament to the cruelty of Spanish colonialism.” Scholars estimate that 75,000 Filipinos settled in western Mexico during the Galleon era. According to Guevarra’s research, they married into Mexican families and blended into a community of similarly dark-skinned, mixed-race people who had Spanish surnames and practiced Catholicism. In turn, a great cultural exchange took shape, one that’s visible still in places like Acapulco and Colima. Among other foodstuffs, Filipinos introduced tamarind, rice, mango de Manila, and coconuts to Mexico. Coconuts, brought over in 1569, would be the most consequential of them all. Jimador in the agave fields. Pedro Jimenez Mexico’s First Distillate Filipinos had a similar relationship with the coconut palm as Mexicans did with their native agave. Filipinos used the fronds for clothing, shelter, and tools. They ate coconut meat and milk, drank the water, and used various parts of the tree for medicinal purposes. Filipinos fermented palm sap into the low-alcohol beverage tuba, similar to Mexican pulque, which you can still buy on the streets of Colima. In the morning hours, freshly made tuba is sweet and often enjoyed plain; by the afternoon tuba has a more prominent fermented tang and gets topped with peanuts, syrup, and fruit. Filipinos also transformed tuba into vinegar. To make tatemado, essentially a spicy Mexican adobo, cooks in Colima braise pork, chiles, and aromatics in coconut vinegar. Filipino sailors also brought with them the technology to distill tuba into lambanog, known in Mexico as vino de coco. Newly arrived Filipinos established coconut palm farms, and vino de coco soon became the most important business in Colima. By 1631, the town produced 262,000 liters of the stuff, and as mining activity picked up in northern Mexico, vino de coco helped to fuel its workers’ labor. It’s from this colonial soup of circumstances that mezcal, as we know it today, is thought to have emerged. “All the identified evidence suggests that agave distillation originated through adaptation of the coconut distillation process in Colima,” write Zizumbo-Villarreal and Patricia Colunga-GarcíaMarín in a 2008 landmark study. Compared with the Arabic-style alembic stills used by Spaniards, the Filipino still is a rustic apparatus. There’s a hollow tree trunk-in Mexico, most often from the parota tree-that’s appended on either side with a copper bowl. Vino de coco distillers added tuba to the bottom bowl and heated it over a fire. The liquid turned to vapor, rose in the still, and hit the copper bowl on top, through which cold water circulated. The vapors condensed and fell in droplets onto a wooden gutter and through a spout into a clay vessel. Distillers repeated the process several times to achieve the ideal proof and composition. Zizumbo-Villarreal and Colunga-GarcíaMarín’s study, as well as that of Paulina Machuca in 2018’s El Vino de Cocos en la Nueva España, stack evidence that Filipinos shared this technology with their new Indigenous and mixed-race neighbors and families. If this distillation process worked for tuba, why fermented agave? Original Filipino-style still build into a perota tree trunk, and brick oven at Balancan distillery. Ismael Gomez Modern Mezcal Is Born Of the 38 tabernas, or distilleries, Zizumbo-Villareal and Colunga-GarcíaMarín documented in southern Jalisco, 24 had coconut palm groves nearby. The research team also found greater agave diversity in southern Jalisco than in Tequila to the north, describing the region near the Colima volcano as “the nucleus of agave genetic diversity.” For millennia, Indigenous Mexicans in the area had selected specific agave varieties suited to making pulque. They cooked agave in stone pits, smashed the piñas with mallets, and fermented pulque in wells carved into volcanic rock. Then this centuries-old beverage met the adaptable Filipino-style stills that had landed on nearby shores. The first known documented reference to agave distillation comes from a Spanish cleric in 1619, who speaks of “mexcale” as an Indigenous drink produced on the coast and in the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains of Nayarit. Mezcal distillation was traveling north and south through ancient and mining-related trade routes, and, along with vino de coco, becoming an economic threat to imported Spanish brandy. “The Spanish didn’t intend for the kind of interracial convergences that occurred between Indigenous and mixed-race Filipinos and Mexicans,” says Gueverra. “When this community started selling their own spirits and competing with the Spanish, it had this unforeseen impact on the culture.” Starting in 1603, colonial powers declared a series of prohibitions on vino de coco and mezcal, and by the 18th century, Colima’s vino de coco industry had effectively vanished. Agave distillation, on the other hand, went clandestine in the foothills of the Colima volcano and continued to spread, according to Zizumbo-Villarreal and Colunga-GarcíaMarín. Underground fermentation in volcanic wells was easily concealed, and the lightweight Filipino stills could be easily disassembled and moved. And agave-sacred, wild, and abundant-had far more cultural import in Mexico than the newly introduced coconut palms.
But what sort of plastic is it made of and dose it contains bpa or bps or other endocrine disruptors!
I love the "how come you're not buying our stuff" riff, but how come I never see your stuff on the shelf?
Whether some Scotish whisky distillers pay for a used Limousine casks?
At the home distiller level there are a lot of people hypothetically doing this as their only recipe.... in the past when I did it it was a 100% fresh sweet corn mash... always soo dang good! glad to see someone is doing it commercially and changing the way people perceive good corn likker!
Did he really pour it back into the bottle at the end 🤮 Barely a sip was poured in the first place, so why not not enjoy it.
Thanks for the informative notes, best regards
Do you still answer your comments?
Very nice photo
Gotta love this guy!
Love that still. I want that onion 🧅 head someday. I wish I had more friends like you. The discussions would be immaculate. Without a doubt.💪👍🥃
քʀօʍօֆʍ ☹️
Very interesting product. Sounds like grits in a bottle, "the most important drink of the day". Jokes aside, I really enjoy Heaven Hill's "Mellow Corn" and Balcones' "Baby Blue" corn whiskey and I agree that corn shouldn't be as heavily-oaked as bourbon. Of course, US law also agrees, as does tradition. Too bad I won't be able to find this product. Still, I enjoy your videos!
Love the updates! I need to get up to Ukiah to try that out!
However how perfect your Sense of smell is,its more like try and error method of making cuts. The best and sure way of doing this is use of alcohol hydrometer. The instrument will have clear definitions of heads, hearts and tails in a distillery.
one of my favorite cognac very special for me
Thank you for sharing. Alipus is a powerful and unique spirit from Mother Earth. Valente Angel Garcia Juarez and the team are making pure magic and presenting the beauty of their art with the World. Please consider the various Anniversary additions.
I support anyone in our craft.....
Great to Know about this Cenizo. I am from Durango. Cheers!
That still has created the finest brandies I have ever tasted in my life. Legendary work!
Awesome. Thanks for the explanation
Ancestral and sola de vega are a perfect match
Thanks Ansley!
Do you have a list of favorites? This video gives me major mezcal cravings. Thanks for your good work
Can I distill alcohol legally in Mexico? Please let me know
💋 Promo'SM!
what temperature you`re aiming for?
Thank you for these videos!
Why did not they use distilled water..?
制作威士忌怎么样?
Great videos - and I've been to San Luis Potosi - awesome to see you sharing some of their work.
Low Gap (California Whiskey) Bourbon Hand-distilled by Crispin Cain Batch No. 2016/2&3 84.4 Proof Age of youngest component: 2 Years 3 Months 756 750ml. Bottles filled Nov. 15, 2018 Distilled & Battled by: The American Craft Whiskey Distillery Redwood Valley, CA
The very last part where you mentioned the thin filter collecting the sulfurs.....is that truly effective? I didn't think that could be filtered out, but that the copper just neutralized those sulfur compounds. Does it truly make a significant difference? Thank you in advance for your reply.
You are correct. Copper is what removes the sulpher. The filter is good for particles in the air, gnats, or the long hair of the distiller not going into the collection tub.
He did say sulphur precipitate, not compounds, so we're talking elemental sulphur.
that looks amazing!
Well, now I want to drive to Ukiah and get a bottle! I wish you all shipped!
I wouldn't call this Agricole, as that can cause confusion with (often AOC protected) French traditions. Furthermore, I don't see the problem in using molasses for rum, and making the claim that it's inferior to fresh cane is misleading.
This makes me want a happy jolly mezcal.🤣👍🥃 Good stuff.
Damn Sir, you learn something new everyday and who to get it on on many notes, bless you.