I cant find the original post but thanks to you and another person I was pointed into the direction of proper information. I was so poorly informed of the criteria for bourbon before. Thanks for the eye opening info and sorry about spouting off poor information. Cheers bud
Old fellow i can buy everything in Croatia but they dont have Old fellow on e- bay only.I will buy 500 bottles and start to sold .Because i like Old fellow - Kentucky
@@ClawhammerSupply I see that you are correct when describing the five legal requirements for bourbon. My confusion was because if a bourbon is aged 2 years it can then be designated as "straight bourbon whiskey", as per 27 CFR Ch. 1 (4-1-08 Edition) Subpart C -Standards of Identity for Distilled Spirits § 5.22 The standards of identity (iii) Whiskies conforming to the standards prescribed in paragraph (b)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section , which have been stored in the type of oak containers prescribed, for a period of 2 years or more shall be further designated as “straight”, for example, “straight bourbon whiskey”, . . .
@@Quintinohthree Whisky from Scotland and is made in Scotland is called Scottish whisky. So you are wrong in saying there is no such thing called Scottish whisky,I'm Scottish I know.Are you Scottish?? It is called Scotch for the Foreign market probably where you are from,and we don't call ourselves Scotch,we call ourselves Scottish
@@barryhamilton7845 Scottish whisky, or "whisky, a product of Scotland" in other words, would be any whisky that is somehow Scottish. It could be brewed elsewhere, distilled elsewhere, aged elsewhere, bottled elsewhere and/or made according to different laws, but somehow it could be Scottish. By Scottish law, there can be no such thing. There is only Scotch whisky, made from grain to glass according to Scottish law, brewed, distilled and aged in Scotland, and if it is a single malt also bottled in Scotland.
@barryhamilton7845 I am also Scottish and believe me bourbon IS whisk(e)y, and many of us like to broaden our palletes by drinking it from time to time. Also Scottish whisky IS also branded as Scotch here. Nearly every bottle sold here says it on the label, it's just that we tend not to call it that, as its assumed that when we say whisky we are referring to Scotch. I also don't know why you got the chip on your shoulder about us not being described as Scotch people. I haven't seen anyone post that in the comments here.