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Bourbon wisky and wine cost about the same. You can get a cheap bottle of bourbon for about 9 or 10 dollars or you can get an expensive one for a hundred or more dollars. The same is for wine. On average you pay about $15 or $20 for both. Wine is usually about 3 to 4 years old. Bourbon Wisky is at least 6 years old. The brand I buy is aged 7 years. Wine is just fermented and stored in a barrel. Bourbon Wisky is fermented, distilled (concentrated) then stored in a NEW chared oak barrel. Once used, bourbon barrels are either turned into charcoal or sold to the UK for making scotch which is ironicly more expensive than the bourbon that came out of the barrel first. There is about 4 times as much drink in a liter bottle of wisky as there is in the same size bottle of wine. Is it the grapes? Are grapes that much more expensive than grain?

2007-03-13 06:00:05 · 9 answers · asked by goose1077 4 in Food & Drink Beer, Wine & Spirits

You know, the reason you use water in wisky is because you dry the grain first. I've been wondering about making "fresh" wisky with corn that is fresh instead of dried.

2007-03-13 06:23:41 · update #1

9 answers

Um, as a response to the person who guessed the asker was American: if you live anywhere near a major city, that price is going to double. And the reason is partially inflation, partially ingredients, and partially that everything in urban areas tends to cost more.

As for wine costing more than bourbon, a good scotch whiskey is going to cost you a lot more than a decent bottle of wine-BUT keep in mind that grapes are often hand harvested by quality vineyards, and that the wine-making process is a great deal more time-consuming and hands-on than the distilling process. The reason why the whiskey isn't cheaper is politics-governments have been making huge profits from taxes on distilled liquors for hundreds of years.

Edited to add: and a grape vine takes about 12 years to be ready for full production, though you can get some harvest after 3-5 years. It generally produces for about 40 good years if it is healthy, and then the quality of the harvest begins to diminish. They're bloody sensitive to environmental changes, too, where grains will grow a lot more easily in a lot more places.

2007-03-13 07:36:10 · answer #1 · answered by glavnayadevochka1979 2 · 1 0

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2016-10-02 01:30:15 · answer #2 · answered by corolis 4 · 0 0

There may be several reasons, including politics, for the price of wines. However, looking just at the grapes vs. grain issue: yes.

It takes years to get a usable crop of grapes. A winery cannot produce wines for 10 or more years, typically, when the first planting. On the other hand, grains are at their needed level of quality in only a season or two.

Grapes are also more likely to have bad seasons than grains.

2007-03-13 06:09:25 · answer #3 · answered by Jay 7 · 0 0

Greed! The first growth French reds are $1000's a bottle ... nuts, it's just grape juice. I bought a1988 Chateau Petrus back in 1990 for $99.00, now it's over $2000.00. So the wine industry is saying only the rich can afford these crazy over priced bottles. Well, it just means there will be a lot of those wines aging like I guess will just make them more expensive. The wine industry is making fools out of anyone who pays hundreds for a bottle ... the RICH!

2013-12-01 07:18:56 · answer #4 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

You are correct...

It's the grapes versus the grain.
Wine is dependent upon a specific grape while whiskey you can use a variety of grains.

Grapes (good and usable) are very fickle in where they grow and the local micro-climate while grain (wheat, barley, corn or rye) are pretty hardy and grow anywhere.

Also, wine is 100% grape juice (fermented) while with bourbon you use a lot of water (inexpensive) to make the mash for fermentation.

2007-03-13 06:04:30 · answer #5 · answered by lots_of_laughs 6 · 0 0

Where the heck do you live???????????????

I do not know of many jurisdictions where you cannot buy a decent bottle of wine for about 1/3 the price of the price of a bottle of moderate quality bourbon (or other distilled, aged spitits).

Your question's verbiage seems to suggest you are American. The last I read, the average price paid for wine by American consumers was/is between $US 7 and $US 8 per bottle. But there are many, many, many brands that sell for $ 4 or less, in most states.

2007-03-13 06:20:41 · answer #6 · answered by Lisa 3 · 0 2

a mature grape vine can take years to fully develop. They require the perfect blend of temperature and dry conditions. They are generally picked by hand and need to be used right away. They can't be stored.

The grain used in whiskey is easily grown in large quantities and harvested with large machines. It can also be harvested and stored for long periods of time. It's a much more efficient process.

2007-03-13 06:09:20 · answer #7 · answered by Louis G 6 · 2 0

I get my favorite bottle of Reisling wine for about 7-10 dollars a Bottle.

2007-03-13 17:00:05 · answer #8 · answered by Bensalem Strangler 2 · 0 0

I would have to say its because the grapes rely so much on good weather and if they didn't have appropriate conditions for grapes that year then they can't make as much wine so the cost goes up.

2007-03-13 11:53:52 · answer #9 · answered by chefck26 4 · 0 0

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