 
    What is single malt?
    
Single malt is so-called because the malt comes from a single   distillery. It is a whisky refined by a single distillery, using   malted barley as the only grain ingredient. Each distillery has its   own distinct taste, flavour and style and single malts bear that.   Some world-renowned single malts are Glenfiddich, Glenmorangie,   Glenlivet, Glenkinchie and if you move into the rarevarieties,   PortEllen, Dalmore, Glenfarclas, IsleofJura,   Knocdhu, Lagavulin,Laphroig,  Macallan, Oban,Taliskar, Cragganmore.   Enjoying a single malt is a connoissseur's job and you have to   learn to be one. A single grain, as distinct from a single malt, is   a grain whisky made at one distillery, while the single malt is   made with barley.
What is Blended Whisky?
Blended whisky is a mixture of single malt whisky and ethanol derived   from grains.  Developed for those who could not stomach the   strong taste of whisky, it is a combination of malt and grain   whiskies. First distilled and bottled by Andrew Usher in Edinburgh   in the early 1860s, it turned out to be softer, lighter and more   palatable.
The character of the whisky is determined not only by the proportions of   malt and grain whisky, but  also by the ages of the individual   whiskies and the manner in which they are combined to bring out the   finest qualities in each other. Most whisky drunk across the world   is blended whisky. Famous Grouse, Bells,  Teacher's, Whyte &   Mackay and Johnnie Walker are a few that are well-known.
What is the difference between Whisky and Whiskey?
Alcohol, malted or not, made from grain which is produced in Scotland is   called WHISKY, while it is called WHISKEY if it is produced in USA or   Ireland.  American whiskey is called Bourbon and is made from   grain. Bourbon is at least 51 per cent corn or maize.
Scotch whisky is generally double distilled, while Irish whiskey is   generally distilled three times.  Wheat whisky is the rarest   whisky. Rye whiskies are mostly
popular within the US. Scotch whisky is whisky that has   been distilled and matured in Scotland for at least three hours in   oak casks.
     What   is Alcohol?
Alcohol is obtained after breaking down natural sugar of grain into C02,   ethanol or ethyl alcohol and residual content.  Yeast from   grains and vegetables changes the sugar into alcohol. From the   cheapest beer to the most expensive wine or after dinner   liqueur, all alcohol is made with the same fermentation process.
The different colours, tastes, potencies and flavours come from   the different fruits or vegetables used as well as the additives,   by-products and diluting substances employed during the   fermentation process.
Why should you never drink on an empty stomach? 
    Experts   say eating food before drinking retains alcohol in the system where it   is absorbed slowly into the blood stream. This gives the liver more time   to break the alcohol down.  Otherwise, it is directly absorbed   without being broken down into simpler compounds into the blood   stream.  This can be harmful for the
liver and general health. The kick comes when the alcohol is   absorbed into the bloodstream directly and slows down the   central nervous system. The absorbed alcohol blocks some of the   commands the brain sends to the body; hence the reflexes and   reactions are slower.
Does drinking water before or between drinks help you   hold your drink better? 
    Dehydration causes   your blood volume to go down and alcohol will cause it to go down   further. So make it a habit to drink enough water before you go out   for a hard drink. Experts say in case of alcohol consumption, the   bigger you are the better it is. Big people have a larger quantity   of blood, so alcohol they take in is more diluted as it mixes with   the blood. 
     
    Women are   generally smaller than men. They also have proportionately more fat   and less water in their bodies and so the concentration of   alcohol in their blood is higher for the same amount drunk.
What goes better with Whisky - Water or Soda? 
    Whisky is   preferred with water more than soda as soda is carbonated water   and it kills the taste of whisky. But real connnoisseurs of whisky   like to have it neat or with water on side or with two cubes of ice.
What is Cognac? 
    The wines   of Poitou, La Rochelle and Angoumois, produced from high   quality vineyards, were shipped to Northern Europe where they   were enjoyed by the English, Dutch and Scandinavians as early as   the 13th century. In the 16th century, they were transformed   into eau-de-vie, then matured in oak casks to become Cognac.. That was   the start of the adventure for a town, which was to become the   capital of a world famous trade.
Cognac is a living thing. During its time in the oak casks it is in   permanent contact with the air. This allows it to extract   the substances from the wood that give both its colour and its   final bouquet.
Aging is indispensable if an eau-de-vie is to become Cognac.   It takes place in casks or barrels that hold between 270 and 450   litres. The natural humidity of the cellars, in which the casks are   stored, with its influence on evaporation, is one of the   determining factors in the maturing process. With the balance   between humidity and dryness, the spirit becomes mellow and ages   harmoniously.  
     
    Making Cognac   is the work of the Master Blender. Applying   strict control, experience and intuition, he subtly blends   eaux-de-vie of different ages and crus, producing a Cognac that through the   years will not only retain its own personality, but will also keep   a place in the heart of the consumer.
What is the difference between Scotch, Irish, Rye   and Bourbon Whiskies? 
    Scotch Whisky   is whisky, which has been distilled and matured in Scotland.
Irish Whiskey means whiskey distilled and matured in Ireland. 
     
    Whisky   is distilled in Scotland from malted barley in Pot Stills and from   malted and unmalted barley or other cereals in Patent Stills.   The well-known brands of Scotch Whisky are blends of a number of   Pot Still and Patent Still whiskies. 
     
    Irish   Whiskey distillers tend to favour three distillations rather than   two, as is general in Scotland in the case of Pot Still whiskies   and the range of cereals used is wider.
As regards Bourbon Whiskey, the United States Regulations provide:
(I) that Bourbon Whiskey must be produced from a mash of not   less than 51% corn grain;
(ii) that the word 'Bourbon' shall not be used to describe any   whiskey or whiskey-based distilled spirits not produced in the   United States.
Rye Whiskey is produced both in the United States and Canada but   the name has no geographical significance. In the United States,   Rye Whiskey by  definition must be produced from a grain mash of   which not less than 51% is rye grain. In Canada, there is no   similar restriction. The relevant Canadian Regulation states:   'Canadian Whisky (Canadian Rye Whisky, Rye Whisky) shall be whisky   distilled in Canada and shall possess the aroma, taste and   character generally attributed to Canadian Whisky.'
Canadian Whisky is in fact often referred to simply as Rye Whisky or   Rye.
     
    What is the Origin of VODKA? 
    Vodka is   a drink, which originated in Eastern Europe, the name stemming   from the Russian word 'voda' meaning water or as the Poles would   say 'woda'.
The first documented production of vodka in Russia was at the end   of the 9th century, but the first known distillery at, Khylnovsk,   was about two hundred years later as reported in the   Vyatka Chronicle of 1174. Poland lays claim to having distilled   vodka even earlier in the 8th century, but as this was a   distillation of wine it might be more appropriate to consider it a   crude brandy. The first identifiable Polish vodkas appeared in the   11th century when they were called 'gorzalka', originally used as   medicines.
Medicine and Gunpowder 
    During the   Middle Ages, distilled liquor was used mainly   for medicinal purposes, as well as being an ingredient in the   production of gunpowder. In the 14th century a British   Ambassador to Moscow first described vodka as the Russian national drink   and in the mid-16th century it was established as the national   drink in Poland and Finland.  We learn from the Novgorod   Chronicles of 1533 that in Russia also, vodka was used frequently   as a medicine (zhiznennia voda
meaning 'water of life'). In these ancient times Russia   produced several kinds of 'vodka' or 'hot wine' as it was   then called. There was 'plain wine' (standard), 'good wine'   (improved) and 'boyar wine' (high quality). In addition stronger   types existed, distilled two ('double wine') or more times.   Since early production methods were crude, vodka often   contained impurities, so to mask these the distillers flavoured   their spirits with fruit, herbs or spices.
The mid - 15th century saw the first appearance of pot distillation   in Russia. Prior to that, seasoning, ageing and freezing were all   used to remove impurities, as was precipitiation using it in   glass ('karluk') from the air bladders of sturgeons. Distillation   became the first step in producing vodka, with the product being   improved by precipitation using isinglass, milk or egg white.   Around this time (1450) vodka started to be produced in large   quantities and the first recorded
exports of Russian vodka were to Sweden in 1505. Polish 'woda'   exports started a century later, from major production centres   in Posnan and Krakow.
From acorns to melon 
     In 1716,   owning distilleries became the exclusive right of the nobility, who   were granted further special rights in 1751. In the following 50   or so years there was a proliferation of types of aromatised vodka,   but no attempt was made to standardise the basic product.   Types produced included: absinthe, acorn, anisette, birch, calamus   root, calendula, cherry, chicory, dill, ginger   hazelnut, horseradish, juniper, lemon, mastic, mint, mountain ash,   oak, pepper, peppermint,  raspberry, sage, sorrel, wort and water   melon! A typical production process was to distil alcohol twice,   dilute it with milk and distil it again, adding water to bring it   to the required strength and then flavouring it,  prior to a   fourth and final distillation. It was not a cheap product and it   still had not attained really large-scale production. It did   not seek to compete commercially with the major producers   in Lithuania, Poland and Prussia. In the 18th century a professor   in St.
Petersburg discovered a method of purifying alcohol using   charcoal filtration.  Felt and river sand had already been   used for some time in Russia for filtration.
Vodka marches across Europe 
    The spread   of awareness of vodka continued throughout the 19th century, helped   by the presence in many parts of Europe of   Russian soldiers involved in the Napoleonic Wars. Increasing   popularity led to escalating demand and to meet this demand, lower   grade products were produced based largely on distilled potato   mash. Earlier attempts to control production by reducing the number   of distilleries from 5,000 to 2,050 between the years 1860 and 1890   having failed, a law was enacted in 1894 to make the production and   distribution of vodka in Russia a state monopoly. This was both for   fiscal reasons and to control the
epidemic of drunkenness which the availability of   the cheap, mass-produced 'vodkas' imported and   home-produced, had brought about.  It is only at the end   of the 19th century, with all state distilleries adopting a   standard production technique and hence a guarantee of quality,   that the name vodka was officially and formally recognized.
    
After the Russian Revolution, the Bolsheviks confiscated all   private distilleries in Moscow. As a result, a number of Russian   vodka-makers emigrated, taking their skills and recipes with them.   One such exile revived his brand in Paris, using the French version   of his family name - Smirnoff. Thence, having met a Russian émigré from   the USA, they set up the first vodka distillery there in 1934. This   was subsequently sold to a US drinks company. From this small   start, vodka began in the 1940s to achieve its wide popularity in   the Western World.
What is the origin of GIN? 
    The first confirmed   date for the production of gin is the early 17th century in   Holland, although claims have been made that it was produced prior   to this in Italy. In Holland it was produced as a medicine and sold   in chemist shops to treat stomach complaints, gout and gallstones.  To   make it more palatable, the Dutch started to flavor it with   juniper, which had medicinal properties of its own.
From Dutch courage to William of Orange 
    British troops   fighting in the Low Countries during the Thirty Years' War were given   'Dutch Courage' during the long campaigns in the damp   weather through the warming properties of gin. Eventually   they started bringing it back home with them, where already it was   often sold in chemists' shops. Distillation was taking place in a   small way in England, but it now began on a greater scale, though   the quality was often very dubious. Nevertheless, the new drink became a   firm favourite with the poor.
The formation by King Charles I of the Worshipful   Company of Distillers, where members had the sole right to   distil spirits in London and Westminster and up to twenty-one miles   beyond, improved both the quality of gin and its image; it also   helped English agriculture by using surplus corn and barley. When   King William III - better known as William of Orange - came to the   English throne in 1689, he made a series of statutes actively   encouraging the distillation of English
spirits. Anyone could now distil by simply posting a notice in   public and just waiting ten days. Sometimes gin was distributed to workers   as part of their wages and soon the volume sold daily exceeded that   of beer and ale, which was more expensive anyway.
The Gin Riots   
    The problem   was tackled by introducing The Gin Act at midnight on 29 September   1736, which made gin prohibitively expensive. A license to retail   gin cost 50 and duty was raised fivefold to 1 per gallon with the   smallest quantity you could buy in retail being two gallons.   The Prime Minister, Sir Robert Walpole and Dr.
Samuel Johnson were among those who opposed the Act since they   considered it could not be enforced against the will of the common   people.. They were right.  Riots broke out and the law was   widely and openly broken..   
    About   this time, 11 million gallons of gin were distilled in London,   which was over 20 times the 1690 figure and has been estimated to   be the equivalent of 14 gallons for each adult male. But   within six years of the Gin Act being introduced, only two   distillers took out licenses, yet, over the same period of   time,  production rose by almost fifty per cent.
Respectability, High quality and Patronage 
    The Gin   Act, finally recognized as unenforceable, was repealed in 1742   and a new policy, which distillers helped to draft,   was introduced: reasonably high prices, reasonable excise duties   and licensed retailers under the supervision of magistrates. In   essence this is the situation,  which exists today. These   changes led to more respectable firms embarking on the business of   distilling and retailing gin and it became the drink of high quality,   which it has since remained.  Many companies established   themselves as well-to-do manufacturers, often becoming patrons for   major enterprises; one such was the  sponsorship of   the attempt to discover the North West Passage 1829-33: the attempt   failed, but the expedition did establish the true position of   the North
Magnetic Pole.
Gin had been known as 'Mother's Milk' from the 1820s but later in   the century it became known as 'Mother's Ruin', a description   perhaps originating from the earlier 'Blue Ruin' of the prohibition   era in the previous century.
What is Tequila?   
    First the   history: Tequila was first distilled in the 1500-1600's in   the state of Jalisco, Mexico. Guadalajara is the capital of Jalisco   and the city of Tequila was established in about 1656. This   is where the agave plant grows best.  The agave is   not a cactus as rumoured, but belongs to the lily family and has   long spiny leaves (pincas). The specific plant that is used   to make tequila is the Weber blue agave. It takes 8-12 years for the   agave to reach maturity. During harvest, the leaves are cut   off leaving the heart of the plant or pina which looks like a   large pineapple when the jimadors are done. The harvested pina may   weigh 200 pounds or more and is chopped into smaller pieces for   cooking at the distillery. Tequila was first imported into the   United States in 1873 when the first load
was transported to El Paso, Texas. In 1973 tequila sales in the   US topped one million cases.
There are two basic types of tequila, 100% blue agave (cien por ciento   de agave) tequila and mixto. The 100% blue agave tequilas   are distilled entirely from the fermented juice of the agave. All   100% agave tequilas have to be distilled and bottled in Mexico. If   the bottle does not say 100% blue agave, the tequila is mixto and   may have been distilled from as little as 60% agave juice with   other sugars.
Grades   of Tequila: 
     •   Blanco: 100% agave tequila that is un-aged and untreated with   additives.
• Reposado: 100% agave, "rested" tequila that has been   stored in oak between two months and one year.
• Anejo: 100% agave, aged tequila that has been stored in oak at   least one year.
• Mixto blanco: mixto tequila that is unaged.
• Mixto reposado: mixto tequila that has been stored in oak   between two months and one year.
• Mixto anejo: aged mixto tequila that has been stored in oak at   least one year.
• Joven abocado: mixto tequila that has been treated   with additives to achieve an effect similar to aging.
     How   many types of Beer are available to Drink? 
    Here are   the different styles you may come across at our stores or your favourite   local brew pub.  
     
    Ale   - originally liquor made from an infusion of malt   by fermentation, as opposed to beer, which was made by the   same process but flavoured with hops. Today ale is used for all   beers other than stout.
Alt   - means "old". A top fermented ale, rich, copper-coloured   and full-bodied, with a very firm, tannic palate, and   usually well-hopped and dry.
Amber Beer   - an ale with a depth of hue halfway between pale and dark.
Barley Wine   - dark, rich, usually bittersweet, heavy ales with high alcohol content,   made for sipping, not quaffing.
Bitter -   the driest and one of the most heavily hopped beers served on   draft.   The nose is generally aromatic, the hue amber and   the alcoholic content moderate. 
    
Bock   - a strong dark German lager, ranging from pale to dark brown in colour,   with a minimum alcoholic content of about 6 percent.
Brown Ale   - malty beers, dark in colour and they may be quite sweet.
Burton   - a strong ale, dark in colour, made with a proportion of highly dried   or roasted malts.
Christmas/Holiday Beer -  these special season beers are amber to dark   brown, richly flavoured with a sweetish palate. Some are flavoured   with special
spices and/or herbs.
Dopplebock   - "double bock." A stronger version of bock   beer, decidedly malty, with an alcoholic content ranging from 8   percent to 13 percent by volume.
Hefe-Weizen   - a wheat beer, lighter in body, flavour and alcohol strength. 
     Ice Beer   - a high-alcohol beer made by cooling the beer during the process   to below the freezing point of water (32 degrees Fahrenheit) but   above that of alcohol (-173 degrees Fahrenheit). . When the formed   ice is removed and discarded, the beer ends up with a   higher alcohol-to-water ratio.
India Pale Ale (IPA)   - a generously hopped pale ale. 
    Kolsch   - West German ale, very pale (brassy gold) in hue, with a mild malt   flavour and some lactic tartness.
Malt Liquor   - most malt liquors are lagers that are too alcoholic to be labelled   lagers or beers.
Muncheners   - a malty, pale lager distinguished from the darker, heavier Munich Dark   beers by the term "dunkel".
Octoberfest/ Maerzen/Vienna - a copper-coloured, malty beer brewed at the   end of the winter brewing season in March.
Pale Ale   - made of the highest quality malts, the driest and most highly   hopped beer. Sold as light ale or pale ale in bottle or on draft as   bitter.
Pilsner -   delicately dry and aromatic beers. 
    Porter   - a darker (medium to dark reddish brown) ale style   beer, full-bodied, a bit on the bitter side. The barley (or   barley-malt) is well roasted, giving the brew a characteristic   chocolaty, bittersweet flavour.
Stout   - beer brewed from roasted, full-flavoured malts, often with   an addition of caramel sugar and a slightly higher   proportion of hops. Stouts have a richer, slightly burnt flavour   and are dark in colour.
Sweet Stout   - also known as milk stout because some brewers use lactose (milk sugar)   as an ingredient.
Wheat Beer   - a beer in which wheat malt is substituted for barley malt. Usually   medium-bodied, with a bit of tartness on the palate
Enjoy.. now you know what you are drinking

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