Smokiness usually indicates an Islay malt very peaty and medicinal (tcp'ish)
Ever tried a dram of Big Peat? Closest I got was a sniff and you could smell how strong that was in peat. Reckon that would kick your taste buds like a mule.
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Smokiness usually indicates an Islay malt very peaty and medicinal (tcp'ish)
Ever tried a dram of Big Peat? Closest I got was a sniff and you could smell how strong that was in peat. Reckon that would kick your taste buds like a mule.
This thread reminded myself and a friend about spending time with a bottle of "GLAYVA" 30 years ago. A Scotch whisky liqueur - we had it on the rocks and was exquisite, if I recall.
Is this still available in SA ? Where to find in CT ?
I am sure we will appreciate it more, now also mellowed in old age ;-)
Got this as a pressie for my bday this year. First time I've ever seen this one!

This is an extremely rare, extremely old bottling from the exulted Karuizawa distillery in Japan. Aged for just over 48 years in a 400-litre Sherry Oak cask, at the time of bottling, it is the oldest expression from this now closed distillery. This single malt whisky lay undisturbed in a traditional dunnage warehouse at Karuizawa before being transported to Chichibu for bottling. Being a single cask whisky, only 143 bottles are available, each individually numbered and presented in a dark wooden box fashioned in part from Polish black fossil oak. Karuizawa 1964 Cask #3603 is bottled at natural cask strength (57.7% abv), is non-chill filtered, and retains its natural colour.
£9,999.95

:wtf: you do realise that your irresponsible actions are sufficient grounds for divorce?My husband prefers Irish whisk(e)y, less peaty apparently. Although he has hidden the bottle because I used some for a cake.
My husband prefers Irish whisk(e)y, less peaty apparently. Although he has hidden the bottle because I used some for a cake.
My husband prefers Irish whisk(e)y, less peaty apparently. Although he has hidden the bottle because I used some for a cake.
No, I just like the word. I am an English-speaking Saffa that likes scatalogical Afrikaans words and phrases like gaan k*k ... you get the drift.A woman that calls herself bokdrol... Boere tannie?
No, I just like the word. I am an English-speaking Saffa that likes scatalogical Afrikaans words and phrases like gaan k*k ... you get the drift.
No., not at all, because I am not 12 years old.So you don't take offense to stuff like "wys my jou muis"?