Author Topic: Favourite Tipple over the lockdown?  (Read 2839 times)

Offline AnthG

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We are coming to the end of the official lockdown so I am just curious what people have been surviving on :) over the lockdown.

At the start, there were videos posted of Tesco's being completely cleaned out over the entire range of alcohol shelves so I am guessing people may have been having a nip or two to take away the boringness of being stuck in the house for 4 months.

For me, my main choice has been Auchentoshan. At the moment (as in a future date this may change) but at the moment I am thinking this is my favourite whisky brand. It just tastes so woody. I have never had a whisky like it. You can taste the wood barrel on every sip and it really feels steeped in wood.

I have tried the Three Barrels which I think is my favourite as one of those three was a sherry cask. but I have tried a few others of theirs too. I have not tried the white wine barrel version though.

But if anyone wants to try a very unique tasting whisky I strongly recommend trying Auchentoshan. Just maybe not the cheap one that's always on special for £20. Go a little bit more premium.

Anyone else want to share their drink of choice?
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Offline rocket88

Large quantities of Peroni,a habit picked up during visits to the many Italian restaurants in Manchester  :drinks:

Online daviemac

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We are coming to the end of the official lockdown so I am just curious what people have been surviving on :) over the lockdown.
I take it you haven't seen or heard about the latest letter, dated 22nd June, sent out by the government.   :unknown:

From June 1st those who are shielding can leave the house once per day, then from 6th July can meet in a group of up to 6 people, including from different households, adhering to social distancing though. Also from that date they no longer need to socially distance from members of their own household.

It alters again on August 1st but hardly an end to lockdown.

Offline AnthG

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I take it you haven't seen or heard about the latest letter, dated 22nd June, sent out by the government.   :unknown:

It alters again on August 1st but hardly an end to lockdown.

Ah, shoot, no. :(

I am not kidding right at this very second I type this I am also on WhatsApp seeing if I can arrange a meet with a girl at a bar/restaurant somewhere. This is not good. I thought it was all over from the 4th with the exception of gyms.
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Online daviemac

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Ah, shoot, no. :(

I am not kidding right at this very second I type this I am also on WhatsApp seeing if I can arrange a meet with a girl at a bar/restaurant somewhere. This is not good. I thought it was all over from the 4th with the exception of gyms.
Not over by a long shot mate. Those at the highest risk still have a lot of restrictions, they are just recommendations but they are there. Can't go back to work until 31st July either.
The one consolation anyone shielding can have a visitor stay overnight to offer care and assistance and it doesn't say they have to be registered carers or that they can't wash your cock as fast as they like.   :D


Offline hullad

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Fresh coffee ..  ...😀

Not touched any alcohol since one week before lock down started. I made a conscious decision not to and will wait till I get with a mate again out on the town.

Not yet it's still not safe

Offline David1970

White Port has been my tipple on a sunny day, kept in the fridge nice and chilled
Tawny Port on colder days, warms me up nicely

Offline Squire Haggard


For me, my main choice has been Auchentoshan. At the moment (as in a future date this may change) but at the moment I am thinking this is my favourite whisky brand. It just tastes so woody. I have never had a whisky like it. You can taste the wood barrel on every sip and it really feels steeped in wood.


Around 1975 a friend of mine used to work with Customs and Excise (later merged with Inland Revenue to form HMRC)  He used to visit the Auchentoshan distillery with a colleague to check everything was OK. They were given lemonade bottles full of Auchentoshan, just to show that they were nice people.:)  He became very fond of it and sang its praises. Since you mention it on here, I'm going to get some at some point. I've no memory of trying it in the past.
« Last Edit: July 02, 2020, 10:11:10 pm by Squire Haggard »

Offline Chorley

Doom Bar or Adnams Ghost Ship.  :drinks:

Offline Cactus

2 cups of coffee over the course of the working day & a couple of litres of water.

Fridge packed in a week into lockdown, which was a nightmare as I then spent a fortnight trying to get it fixed, then when it was written off, took the best part of another week to get a replacement. Been buying cases of brewdog online since then, have really gotten into IPA & pale ale, both of which I used to despise. I’ve been having a few tins fairly often of an evening, but restricted myself to maximum 4 drinking days a week.

Offline Hobbit


Offline AnthG

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Offline martini2429

Plenty of coffee and 2 glasses of orange juice a day, haven't had an alcoholic drink since 1 March

 :drinks:

Offline Ahalfa Carling

San Pellegrino Lemon & Mint topped up with either cheap Spiced Rum or Gin

Pepsi with either Spiced Rum or Lidl's cheap Bourbon

Coffee.


Offline Hobbit


Offline AnthG

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Talisker and San Miguel

Talisker is lovely. For a long time before trying the Auchentoshan I would say its been my favourite whisky alongside Highland Park.

I was in my local Asda on Friday and they had the Talisker Storm for £25 (not the Skye, the storm). That is a bargain if the offer is still on.
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Online Fuzzyduck

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White Port has been my tipple on a sunny day, kept in the fridge nice and chilled
Tawny Port on colder days, warms me up nicely

How cold does it have to be before you crack open the ruby?

Offline FLYING BLUE

After many years of forced abstinence (well, almost, excepting holidays etc) I've rather developed a liking for real ale which is now my tipple of choice.

Timothy Taylor's Brewery of Keighley being my favourite so far - Boltmaker & Landlord in particular (not from bottles, only from the cask)

During this lockdown, I've been buying poly-pins & micro casks (not kegs) of real ale from 2 small breweries that are local to me.

When it comes to wine, red's would be from Barolo & Amarone, white's from Tremonte or Gavi di Gavi commune - I don't drink spirits & most likely never will.

Cheers folks, chin chin
« Last Edit: July 03, 2020, 10:21:06 am by FLYING BLUE »

Offline Hobbit

Talisker is lovely. For a long time before trying the Auchentoshan I would say its been my favourite whisky alongside Highland Park.

I was in my local Asda on Friday and they had the Talisker Storm for £25 (not the Skye, the storm). That is a bargain if the offer is still on.

It's good to meet a fellow punter who appreciates whisky.  :hi:

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Talisker is lovely. For a long time before trying the Auchentoshan I would say its been my favourite whisky alongside Highland Park.

I was in my local Asda on Friday and they had the Talisker Storm for £25 (not the Skye, the storm). That is a bargain if the offer is still on.

Standard Talisker is a bit too rough cut for me these days. The 57 North expression is less aggressive on the peaty side but makes up for it elsewhere. I've a bottle of the Auchentoshan 3 wood that I picked up for £30 on some amazon deal a few years back. Very drinkable.

I've not drunk much beer since lockdown; I've found myself on red wine, particularly shiraz.

Offline FLYING BLUE

It's good to meet a fellow punter who appreciates whisky.  :hi:

An old friend of mine, a Northern Scot & connoisseur of Single Malts would always drink malts from the lesser know, Glenfarclas distilery quoting it as "Scotland's very finest example of the ancient art"

I've visited this place with him & sampled 3 different years - very good they were too :thumbsup:

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Offline Hobbit

An old friend of mine, a Northern Scot & connoisseur of Single Malts would always drink malts from the lesser know, Glenfarclas distilery quoting it as "Scotland's very finest example of the ancient art"

I've visited this place with him & sampled 3 different years - very good they were too :thumbsup:

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Yes, the best single malts do come from Scotland. In the US, they enjoy drinking bourbon but I have never really liked it and for me Scotch is top-notch!

Offline AnthG

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Yes, the best single malts do come from Scotland. In the US, they enjoy drinking bourbon but I have never really liked it and for me Scotch is top-notch!

Agree, Islay, and Scottish Island whiskies (Jura, Talisker, Ledaig, Highland Park etc) are quite literally heaven in a bottle. I love them and also Spanish sherry cask whiskies more than anything else.

American Bourbon is nice, but not a patch on what we produce in the UK as even Irish peated whisky, i.e Connemara Peated Irish Whisky is gorgeous too and one of my favs.

It says a lot when the biggest selling whisky in America is Johnnie Walker Scottish Blended whisky also (i remember reading this, so someone please correct me if that statistic is wrong, but if its not the biggest selling it will be up there with JD or Jim Beam in the top 2 or 3).
« Last Edit: July 03, 2020, 02:16:55 pm by AnthG »
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Offline Razor Boy

The Glenlivet Nadurra Cask Strength Oloroso has been going down nicely (In the absence of the ladies going down nicely  :D)

Can't go wrong with this cask strength beauty and you can add water to the 60.2% strength to make it go further too, if you wish.
Cider has also been taken during lockdown  :drinks:

Online Fuzzyduck

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The Glenlivet Nadurra Cask Strength Oloroso has been going down nicely (In the absence of the ladies going down nicely  :D)

Can't go wrong with this cask strength beauty and you can add water to the 60.2% strength to make it go further too, if you wish.
Cider has also been taken during lockdown  :drinks:

You drink it neat? Respect. It must be very smooth indeed.

Offline Hobbit

You drink it neat? Respect. It must be very smooth indeed.

You have to drink it neat to really enjoy the taste. I tend to drink them all straight or with a cube of ice.

Offline tesla

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Offline Squire Haggard

Talisker and San Miguel

Talisker, along with peaty malts or a good brandy, maybe Three Barrels VSOP, among others, are good IMO.

San Miguel is deffo not a favourite of mine. Kronenbourg 1664, Peroni, Cobra, Kingfisher are all good IMO.

Offline Hobbit

Talisker, along with peaty malts or a good brandy, maybe Three Barrels VSOP, among others, are good IMO.

San Miguel is deffo not a favourite of mine. Kronenbourg 1664, Peroni, Cobra, Kingfisher are all good IMO.

Peroni for me has become too commercial and I don't like taste as much as an Estrella or San Miguel.

Offline ulstersubbie

Belgian beer, particularly the Trappist ones which are my favourites.

Offline Razor Boy

You drink it neat? Respect. It must be very smooth indeed.

It’s a lovely sherried dram. I spent a week nearby The Glenlivet Distillery last year, their 25 and 30 year drama that I tasted were off the scale good !
As mentioned previously on this thread, Glenfarclas is also superb  :hi: I did the tasting tour there too, I would recommend it. 

Offline whiskyfan

Yes, the best single malts do come from Scotland. In the US, they enjoy drinking bourbon but I have never really liked it and for me Scotch is top-notch!
You might be surprised at the quality of some single malts from elsewhere.

Penderyn (Wales)
Paul John (India)
Kavalan (Taiwan)
Mackmyra (Sweden)

All producing some excellent expressions. Scotland has the heritage advantage but can't afford to sit on it's laurels, the rest of the world is catching up.
« Last Edit: July 03, 2020, 05:41:32 pm by whiskyfan »

Online threechilliman

Belgian beer, particularly the Trappist ones which are my favourites.

You have to be careful with those. So a friend tells me.....

Offline Razor Boy

You might be surprised at the quality of some single malts from elsewhere.

Penderyn (Wales)
Paul John (India)
Kavalan (Taiwan)
Mackmyra (Sweden)

All producing some excellent expressions. Scotland has the heritage advantage but can't afford to sit on it's laurels, the rest of the world is catching up.


Agreed mate, apart from Penderyn ( and I speak as a Welshman) I find it bang average.
Don’t forget the Japenese whiskey either, some of them are epic !

Offline whiskyfan

Agreed mate, apart from Penderyn ( and I speak as a Welshman) I find it bang average.
Don’t forget the Japenese whiskey either, some of them are epic !

Penderyn has both good and bad. Only Japanese whisky I've tried that I really liked was the Hibiki 17. The price of it now though. :scare:

In the end it all comes down to personal tastes.

Offline Razor Boy

Absolutely, it’s whatever floats your boat ... a bit like escorts really!!   :yahoo:

 :drinks:

Offline winkywanky

I enjoy a nice bottle of single malt every Christmas, but don't really like the peaty ones.

Regardless, something I picked up on a guided tour of a distillery a couple of years ago, is that if you enjoy drinking it neat (as I do) then literally a couple of drops of water brings out the taste and nose nicely. Not enough to water it down, just a couple wee drops.

Offline whiskyfan

I enjoy a nice bottle of single malt every Christmas, but don't really like the peaty ones.

Regardless, something I picked up on a guided tour of a distillery a couple of years ago, is that if you enjoy drinking it neat (as I do) then literally a couple of drops of water brings out the taste and nose nicely. Not enough to water it down, just a couple wee drops.

All depends on the whisky. Some are fine without it, some need a few drops of water to open up. I remember making the mistake of starting a whisky fair with a couple of cask strength (about 62%) bad boys that were so smooth they didn't need any water. Unlike me who was fucking rough at the end. :D

Offline winkywanky

With a name like yours, I can't help thinking you're the expert here  ;)

For an amateur like myself, then a drop or two of water (I'm talking literally drops) is my regular thing now, whether it really needs it or not.

Offline whiskyfan

Bought a couple of Chivas blending kits when Tesco were selling them off for £7.50. Time to see if I can create my own blend.

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Offline bhudda

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As i discovered decades ago when a local used to take me out 2 nights a week, just for an hour after work, to try 2 or 3 malts each time in the pubs of edinburgh, there are some you prefer to others, but there arent many you dont like at all.

I just wish i could remember  which ones we had tried the following day.

Offline ulstersubbie

You have to be careful with those. So a friend tells me.....

Your friend was right.....     :drinks:

Online Fuzzyduck

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You have to drink it neat to really enjoy the taste. I tend to drink them all straight or with a cube of ice.

Well.... only if you like cask strength whisky. The Glenlivet is 60% ABV. For most people anything above e 50% has too much alcohol which limits the amount of flavour they can taste. Furthermore it depends on the type of chemicals that are delivering the taste. Some prefer to aggregate around water molecules than alcohol so taste is affected by dilution. Whether taste is improved or not by dilution is personal preference IMO. Remember also that most whisky is diluted down to 40-45% anyway by the distiller. Do you prefer the taste of the same whisky out the cask or after the distiller has added water?

Also, you put a cube of ice in it? That changes the taste out of the bottle (since the water dissolves). It also lowers the temperature at the top of the glass and lowers the volatility of the whisky, i.e. there will be less smell coming off the whisky, which... affects the taste.

All that said, I tend to agree with you: I prefer not to dilute but it's worth experimenting with a few higher ABV whiskies to see if you can improve the range of flavours you perceive by adding a little water. It's certainly a good reason to drink some whisky.

At the end of the day, though it's all down to personal preference. If someone wants to stick the equivalent water to whisky in their glass because it optimises their taste and enjoyment, then that's fine. Although I will call them a barbarian for doing so! :drinks:

Offline FLYING BLUE

Belgian beer, particularly the Trappist ones which are my favourites.

Rochefort & Westvletern my favourites of the style though the latter is increasing difficult to procure.

Did you know that there is now an English Trappiste Brewery?  :hi:
Very nice it is too - Tynt Meadow.

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Offline Cactus

San Pellegrino Lemon & Mint topped up with either cheap Spiced Rum or Gin

Pepsi with either Spiced Rum or Lidl's cheap Bourbon

Coffee.

That san pellegrino lemon and mint is good stuff. Must try it with some rum.

Another good mixer for rum is appletizer, add a slice of lime and see what you think?

Offline Steve2

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Amazing choice of draught and bottled beers in the centre of Berlin

Spent several evenings there  :drinks:

Offline berksboy

It amazes me when someone  gets a single malt whisky then drowns it in coke  :scare: If you like whisky and coke ( nowt wrong with that ) why not just use a cheap whisky ?

I cant wait to have a pint of good real ale  :drinks:

Offline Hobbit

It amazes me when someone  gets a single malt whisky then drowns it in coke  :scare: If you like whisky and coke ( nowt wrong with that ) why not just use a cheap whisky ?

I cant wait to have a pint of good real ale  :drinks:

That's not whisky and coke, it's coke with whisky.

Offline whiskyfan

Bought a bottle of Gordon's Mediterranean Orange gin last week. Not impressed. :thumbsdown: Hopefully the Sicilian Lemon bottle will be better.