English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-06-13 18:41:01 · 9 answers · asked by aussiechic 2 in Food & Drink Beer, Wine & Spirits

hmm. To clarify. Why is a bottle of Jamesons better tasting and cleaner than a bottle of jonny red but the same price. Why is Bushmills green tastier and less toxic than Jonnny Black but the same price.
Laphroiag is awesome, gives busmills a run for its money. But jonny walker? come on.

2006-06-14 01:42:49 · update #1

I love both too. I was enjoying some Jamesons when i wrote the question pondering why they hellanybody would buy a bottle of J+B or Jonny Red at the same price.
I can drink a 750ml bottle of jamesons without getting hungover. Half a bottle of red will give me a headache.
A friend bought me a bottle of Jonny Green. It was agreeable but I wish he bought me blackbush or even greenbush instead.
I spose my real question why is Irish whiskey better value in the lower ranges.

2006-06-14 17:35:22 · update #2

9 answers

Glad you asked that - i love both but wondered why there so different: here's an article on it

-in a head-to-head battle of the whiskeys, you'll find that both are winners.

In Scotland, it's whisky. In Ireland, ifs whiskey. But the differences--and similarities-between two of the finest whiskeys in the world are greater than whether they spell their names with or without an "e."

For one, there are their highly distinctive tastes--the gentle, light and delicate taste of Irish; the clean, gusty, smoky and peaty taste of Scotch. Different from other whiskeys, with birth dates that stretch back into the dim recesses of history, Irish and Scotch are civilized, sophisticated drinks to be enjoyed slowly and pondered as one might a well-aged Cognac.

Both whiskeys, Irish and single malt Scotch, are distilled, by the centuries-old, slow, traditional pot still method. Most blended Scotch is done by the more modern and faster continuous still method. Both whiskeys are made from two of the same basic ingredients--barley and water. But after that, Scotch and irish go their separate ways.

The differences between the two are reflected in their individual aromas and tastes and the way each is made. While both use barley and water, irish is distilled from a combination of malted and unmalted barley if it is a single malt, and from a combination of malted barley and other grains if it is a blend.

Another difference is that the barley used to make irish is dried in smokeless kilns, while the barley used for Scotch is dried over peat fires, which adds to the whiskey's assertive taste. The third difference is single malt Scotch is distilled twice, while Irish is distilled three times. Irish's extra distillation accounts for much of its light taste because distillation tends to extract flavors, leaving a pure, smooth distillate.

Making A Reputation

It seems odd then, that Irish has long had a reputation in this country as a coarse, harsh, rough drink. That misconception came about during Prohibition when producers of bootleg, inferior whiskey, gave real irish a bad reputation. In the nearly 50 years since Prohibition's repeal, as Scotch gained in popularity here, Irish had to reestablish itself. Now, finally, both seem to hold places of honor and respect among America's knowledgeable whiskey drinkers.

There remains one discernible difference, however: The years of Irish's bad fortune took a toll on its distillers, and many eventually closed. Currently, there are only five irish whiskeys available in the United States: Bushmills, Black Bush, a special and more expensive version of Bushmills; John Jameson; John Jameson 1780, a 12-year-old whiskey; and the very expensive Midleton Very Rare, which sells for about $100 a bottle.

In contrast there are more than 100 Scotch whiskys imported into the United States. There are the well-known blends such as Dewar's White Ladel, Johnnie Walker Red and Johnnie Walker Black, Grant's, Black & White, Chivas Regal, Cutty Sark and Haig & Haig, and single malt brands such as Glenfiddich, Glen Moray, Glenmorangie, Laphroaig and Balvenie.

While Irish and Scotch are both to be enjoyed by themselves, irish takes more readily to mixed drinks. In fact, most Americans have not experienced Irish whiskey neat but rather as an Irish coffee, a fact the irish find strange. Why, they muse, would anyone want to mar such wonderful whiskey with coffee? Why, indeed.

2006-06-14 01:48:00 · answer #1 · answered by Miranda 3 · 2 0

I agree, the Laphroigh, Lagavulin and Talisker are far better than any by me know Irish Whiskey.
The referred whiskies do have an interesting taste and smell and one do not drink it to get drunk, a good reason better than any one except not to drink at all. Many very good whiskies never leave Scotland at all and sold just in they were they are made.

2006-06-14 06:00:15 · answer #2 · answered by Realname: Robert Siikiniemi 4 · 0 0

irish whiskey is distilled 3 times and scotch whisky is only 2 times. Irish will be smoother and get more of the pleasurable flavors you get by ageing it. try jamensons, 18 I'd put it up against a xo cognac.

2006-06-14 19:23:46 · answer #3 · answered by sufferingnomad 5 · 0 0

I will take a good single male scotch over irish whiskey any day. My favorite is Belvenie Doublewood! A real "sipping" whiskey.

2006-06-14 08:23:44 · answer #4 · answered by yardsale 2 · 0 0

i personally dont like irish whiskey, ive only had about 4-5 different brands of it but i wasn't to impressed with any of them. im not a big Scotch drinker either but think cutty sark or J.W. black are pretty good. i like Tennessee whiskey

2006-06-14 02:23:15 · answer #5 · answered by duff007 4 · 0 0

It's not, an aged single malt scotch like McCallans or Laphroig wins hands down everytime.

2006-06-14 04:45:37 · answer #6 · answered by maigen_obx 7 · 0 0

come to scotland and try our whisky.it really is the best in the world

2006-06-14 16:08:14 · answer #7 · answered by missy k 6 · 0 0

anything irish is better

2006-06-14 06:17:22 · answer #8 · answered by Monroe A 1 · 1 0

flavor...

2006-06-14 03:46:05 · answer #9 · answered by blake 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers