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Is it more rare. Does it make you drunk faster. Is it a better experience. Is it a collectors item. Is it an investment.

2006-11-26 04:19:25 · 18 answers · asked by yardie1997 1 in Food & Drink Beer, Wine & Spirits

18 answers

Expensive alcohol takes more time to craft the ingrediants so it is a taste experience.

To wit, Johnny Walker Black is a far superior drink to Johnny Walker Red, owing to the time to make it smoother

2006-11-26 04:22:06 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 13 0

As stated above but not in combination. Time and ingredients. The best water, grains, etc. make the best liquor. But the best ingredients do not make a liquor smooth. Time makes the liquor smoother and blends the tastes better. Whiskeys, Tequillas and Rums are aged in barrels. The barrels let the water escape from the barrels and concentrate the alchohol content of the liquor. The liquor will also take on some characteristics of the wood of the barrel. Basically, it costs more to buy better ingredients and it costs more to store and age a liquor for 10 years than it does for 8. That is the difference. But to some an 8 year liquor may taste better than a 10 year.

2006-11-26 06:27:38 · answer #2 · answered by jason a 2 · 0 0

Scotch will be a really reliable get mutually of the severe priced tasting extra useful than the low priced. the low priced stuff tastes fairly watery, basic to drink, and mildly complicated, the position the severe priced stuff is amazingly complicated, in various of circumstances lots tougher to drink because it really is so reliable. With maximum alcohol the further severe priced has a miles extra complicated style.

2016-11-29 19:29:38 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

One costs more that the other. Drink what you will. You will get the same result in the end. What's the point of an "investment" when purchasing alcohol? Just enjoy what you like...

2006-11-26 04:23:48 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

in wine...just the cost. i have had a 200 bottle of fine napa cab sauv from beringer and it was horrible. but I yave also had a very wonderful sangiovese from silverado that was superb for like 30. price is all relative. it is what people are willing to pay. a lot of the wineries have high price based on reputation. but that is not saying it is good. price and how good a wine is are not always the same.

2006-11-26 09:44:49 · answer #5 · answered by Lisa H 7 · 0 0

A finely aged wine or liquor such as certain types of brandy has a higher quality flavor and takes longer to produce in volume,hence the higher price tag.

2006-11-26 04:30:39 · answer #6 · answered by S.A.M. Gunner 7212 6 · 0 0

Actually it has to do with the quality and availability of the grain or fruit involved, how well it's strained/processed, how long it's aged, the size of the operation it's coming from, and the location of it's potential market.

2006-11-26 04:27:58 · answer #7 · answered by justannae 3 · 0 0

The difference between good iquour and bad liquor is the way you feel the next day...

2006-11-26 16:03:14 · answer #8 · answered by hweaveriii 2 · 0 0

more expensive alcohol is filtered more and tends to go down smoother ther for giving you less of a hangover

2006-11-26 04:25:24 · answer #9 · answered by wood2737 1 · 0 0

i find the cheap stuff gets me drunk faster so ill be saving my pennies and sticking to the cheap stuff!

2006-11-26 05:21:51 · answer #10 · answered by foxy lady 4 · 1 0

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