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-   -   What-cha' Drinkin'? (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=11158)

Urbane Guerrilla 08-23-2006 09:31 PM

Aliantha, yep, particularly in some sectors of the market. In table wines, about the best deal short of the five-finger discount is the Charles Shaw line of vins ordinaires at the wholesale-like retail price of two dollars US the 750cl bottle. The price has held for years, long enough to get the nickname "Two-Buck Chuck."

lumberjim 08-23-2006 09:39 PM

Captain Morgan Tattoo and diet coke.

Tattoo seems to be coke flavored. it's black, and peppery, and diet coke seems to dilute it nicely. very smooth, and even. tastes like you're drinking a coke, but when you stand up, you remember the Captain.

Aliantha 08-23-2006 10:14 PM

UT...lindemans have some nice wines. Very popular for weddings etc as they're among the best of the cheaper wines around. Usually by the carton they work out around $7au/bottle. It's amazing how cheap wine is at the moment actually. I'm lucky not to spend every night drunk at these prices. ;)

UG...we have some wines that would work out about that price but I generally steer clear of them if possible.

Urbane Guerrilla 08-23-2006 11:56 PM

Thing is, that while it's not at all extraordinary, it is okay. Quite a bit of bang for buck here.

Aliantha 08-24-2006 12:00 AM

lol...well that's alright for a budget night then I suppose. I can't imagine paying only that amount for wine here though.

Dagney 08-24-2006 10:07 AM

Raisin Rice Wine
 
My friend just delivered the recipe for this amazing stuff. If you have any questions on the process, let me know!

RAISIN AND RICE WINE

2 LBS RICE - REGULAR
2 LBS GOLDEN RAISINS
7 LBS SUGAR
2 ORANGES
1 LEMON
2 CAKES (packages) OF YEAST (preferably Champagne yeast)
2 GALLONS WATER, BOILED AND COOLED

MIX ALL INGREDIENTS IN 5-GALLON CROCK. STIR EACH DAY FOR 3 WEEKS.
STRAIN (I use a nylon fruit wine straining bag) and place into CARBOYS (two 4litre glass wine jugs work perfectly), fit airlocks and let sit 3 weeks. Rack and bottle. MAKES ABOUT 3 GALLONS. (or 10 standard wine bottles)

After bottling wait at least 6 months to open, but this wine doesn’t really get good until it has aged 4 or more years (at 6 months you may think you did something wrong and consider throwing it away - DON’T (it’s not bad at 6 months, just disappointing)) (The original recipe did not call for placing it in the carboys but just immediately bottling it. I just made a batch using the carboys for the first time, and the wine seemed to be much much better for it- and I think it might actually taste good at 6 months – but no promises!) In fact if you try it at 6 months and again at 4 years you won’t even believe it is the same wine! Best of luck, and have fun!

footfootfoot 08-24-2006 09:45 PM

Q:
1) do you cook the rice or put it in raw?
2) is the finished product still or fizzy?
3) Corked or capped? If corked, wine cork or champagne cork?

Thanks, I may be able to do this in a few months.

Dagney 08-25-2006 09:12 AM

I'll be sure to ask when I see my friend next - I know it was corked, but didn't have the 'knobby' thing on top. And it's a still wine, no fizz to it.

Hope to have answers for you by Monday.

K

Dagney 08-25-2006 07:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot
Q:
1) do you cook the rice or put it in raw?
According to my friend - the rice is raw - the water should be boiled (to sterilize) and added at room temperature. (And slice the citrus!)

2) is the finished product still or fizzy?
It's a still wine - you can make it fizzy, but the process is a little different, requires some extra equipment, different bottles and corks - and more knowhow than he has.

3) Corked or capped? If corked, wine cork or champagne cork?
Just regular corks :)

Thanks, I may be able to do this in a few months.


wolf 08-29-2006 01:25 AM

I recently tried port.

Because I wasn't sure if I was going to enjoy the experience, I got the cheapest, and probably nastiest bottle of port in the State Store.

I have to go back and get some better port.

Does anyone have suggestions?

bluecuracao 08-29-2006 04:14 AM

What did you get? :eek: I'm not an expert, but Graham's and Cockburn seem to be good choices. I've had some of the really good vintages once or twice, and they were freaking amazing, but hell if I can remember what the exact years were. I don't think you want to drink anything less than 10 yrs. old, and Tawny ports are more delicious and complex than Rubies, IMO. Hope that helps a little.

NoBoxes 08-29-2006 06:13 AM

There are many categories to choose from: vintage port, single quinta vintage port, late bottled vintage port, vintage character (a.k.a. vintage reserve), tawny port colheita, tawny port, ruby port, and there is even white port. Ports can run from nearly dry to very sweet.

Vintage ports and single quinta vintage ports require years of bottle aging; so, they will probably not be of interest to you. My 1994 vintage ports (a great year) will be ready for drinking somewhere between '08-'12. They are also expensive: the current top releases go for $50-$90/bottle. Mature vintage ports, that are ready for drinking, from the '80s and early '90s are hard to find at retail and are just as expensive if not more so. Single quinta vintage ports come about when not all of the vineyards rise to the quality level necessary to declare a general vintage year. They can be good values; but, still require bottle aging. Late bottled vintage (LBV on label) port is aged twice as long in cask before being bottled and is often ready for drinking on release. Vintage character/vintage reserve port is similar to LBV except it's a blend of multiple vintages. Prices are a fraction of that for vintage port and they can be a good introduction to the taste of vintage port. Quality levels; however, can vary widely. It's best to get informed recommendations. I haven't tried any lately.

Tawny ports are completely aged in cask before being bottled and are ready for drinking when you buy them. Tawnies are blended from ports of multiple vintages [excepting the scarce colheitas which are vintage dated tawnies]. They have a different character from vintage ports. Tawnies may be labeled with the number of years they've spent in cask before being bottled (e.g. 10 yo, 20 yo, 30 yo ... etc.). They become increasingly more expensive with longevity; though, more than 20 yo generally doesn't yield much more for the money. As for the tawnies I'm drinking, I have just one bottle left of Niepoort Tawny Port Colheita 1983 which is outstanding; but, just about impossible to find anymore (it was originally about $30/btl.). Fortunately, I found a tawny port that I like just as much; yet, it doesnt come from Portugal at all! It's Hardy's Tawny Port South Australia Whiskers Blake NV. It's a very sweet tawny, aged for about seven years in cask, with layers of flavors that unfold as it warms in the mouth. This stuff to me is like honey to a bear. It's readily available in my area and costs about $13/btl.

Ruby ports come from simple, fruity, and light wines without great concentration. This is the cheapest category. The French like them as an aperitif. I prefer standard wines to this category of port.

White ports are fermented towards dryness and intended to be an aperitif. They are often mixed with tonic water, ice, and a slice of lemon. I'll settle for a wine cooler.

Aliantha 08-29-2006 06:17 AM

When you go to purchase port, tip the bottle over, and have a look to see how 'thick' it is. Syrupy is probably a better word. If you like sweet wine, then you want something fairly thick. If you like it dry but warm, then less syrupy would be my suggestion. If you were in Oz I could name a few reasonably priced but delicious ports. It's probably unlikely you'd get them there though since most of the ones I like are local.

Hippikos 08-29-2006 07:50 AM

expresso
heineken
tequila sunrise
occasional (rioja) wine

headsplice 08-29-2006 10:16 AM

I just had Middleton's for the first time in a couple of years, and that goes down as the best liquor. Ever.
It's like drinking alchoholic butter.

wolf 08-29-2006 10:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bluecuracao
What did you get? :eek:

I'm really ashamed to say.












Taylor, $4.99 a bottle

footfootfoot 08-29-2006 09:27 PM

was drinking Tuaca, then remembered this concoction I made based upon some recipe for preserving fruit.

You take various fruit and layer them in a barrel, packed with sugar. fruit, sugar, fruit, sugar, etc. Then you cover the whole pile with some sort of booze. I used vodka and a bottle of Laird's applejack that had to be forty years old (cleaned out of my dad's pantry, I remember seeing it all though childhood).

Anyway, this is good for fruit presevervation, you just keep adding fruit to it as you go along. So, in the winter when oranges we're in season and we couldn't keep up with them, I'dd toss them in the mix rather than in the compost, then came strawberries, cherries, blueberries, apples etc. Peaches are rearing their fuzzy heads now.

Anyway, I skimmed some of the booze part off and I am sipping that. sweet and syrupy. You don't really want more than a little bit of this.

zippyt 08-29-2006 10:01 PM

So what do you do with ALL that fruit that has congeled at the bottom ????

footfootfoot 08-29-2006 10:03 PM

I'm not sure, I'm thinking blend it up and make some kind of summer drink/smoothy thing.

Got any ideas?

zippyt 08-29-2006 10:05 PM

Well there is always fragrent garden torches ( with all the absorbed booze ) !!!

rkzenrage 08-29-2006 10:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot
Rkzenrage,
Have you had Gyokuro?

super.

Also fond of Pu Erh

and for general use: gunpowder

Nope. But, I have been drinking some Yerba lately and enjoying it.

All my alcohol has been given away now... I want a goddamn beer.

Griff 08-30-2006 06:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rkzenrage
Nope. But, I have been drinking some Yerba lately and enjoying it.

I like the illicit looking paraphanalia, makes people nervous. I've got a leather encased gourd (I can't believe I just wrote that) and a couple bambillas that give the appearance of criminal activity.

footfootfoot 08-31-2006 11:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zippyt
Well there is always fragrent garden torches ( with all the absorbed booze ) !!!

Then again there is always fruitcake for the holidays...

rkzenrage 08-31-2006 11:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff
I like the illicit looking paraphanalia, makes people nervous. I've got a leather encased gourd (I can't believe I just wrote that) and a couple bambillas that give the appearance of criminal activity.

Lol! I just have some of the tea a friend sent... I would love to have a gourd some day though. I wanted to see if I liked it first. I do, so someday...
(my friends think I'm a freak and are used to me pulling out weird stuff, so they would just ask what it is)

Griff 09-04-2006 07:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rkzenrage
Lol! I just have some of the tea a friend sent... I would love to have a gourd some day though. I wanted to see if I liked it first. I do, so someday...
(my friends think I'm a freak and are used to me pulling out weird stuff, so they would just ask what it is)

I actually quit coffee over the weekend so its just mate' for me now. I think my Nexium has been causing some skin issues for me so since I quit the acid reflux meds I have to quit the main source of acid (outside the body) as well.

JayMcGee 09-04-2006 07:38 PM

interesting......


my coffee intake has dropped from 7-8 per day to less than one per week... and I too now have some fairly major skin-blemish issues.

Any ideas/thoughts, anyone?

Urbane Guerrilla 09-04-2006 07:47 PM

On a side note, check George Gaylord Simpson's Attending Marvels for mate', mate' gourds, bombillas, and generally the art of the mate' cebador as practiced in Argentina in the 1930s. Pp. 113-118 of the Time Inc. edition -- those softbacks with the distinctive smell to their ink. You can find these books in used-book places by scent.

bluecuracao 09-04-2006 08:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JayMcGee
interesting......


my coffee intake has dropped from 7-8 per day to less than one per week... and I too now have some fairly major skin-blemish issues.

Any ideas/thoughts, anyone?

Well, they're saying now that coffee is a system cleanser, helping the liver along. And since your skin is an organ, maybe the impurities are taking that route out of you now. Or it could be that the coffee oils you've built up are being purged out of your skin. Take your pick! More water intake will help clear it up, either way.

bluecuracao 09-04-2006 09:21 PM

Dammit. I have two cans of 10 oz. Buds sitting on my desk, one full and one for ashes. Guess what I just did?

NoBoxes 09-05-2006 02:21 AM

Either way, I'll bet you drank some ashes.

NoBoxes 09-05-2006 03:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolf
Quote:

Quote:
Originally Posted by bluecuracao
What did you get?
I'm really ashamed to say.
Why? What did you do after drinking that bottle of port? If you can amend your statement to read "I'm really ashamed to say ... I got naughty.", I might just send you another bottle! :lol:

Flint 09-05-2006 12:58 PM

1 glass, filled with ice. Add 1/3 water, 2/3 Whaler's Vanilla Rum. I've been drinking "grog" . . .

capnhowdy 09-07-2006 03:43 PM

Someone left a pint of Malibu mango rum here a while back. Anybody know how to drink it? I was thinking fruit juice, but it's already "mango rum". "sup w/ this stuff?

Flint 09-07-2006 03:53 PM

Flavored rum: just put it on ice, man.
Add some water, to taste.

skysidhe 09-07-2006 07:05 PM

Orange Juice cap'n. Anything other than Malibu should be thrown away.

http://www.drinksmixer.com/drink1153.html

Flint 09-08-2006 03:53 PM

Oh, I have another idea! Mango Rum + Red Bull . . . hmmm?

bluecuracao 09-08-2006 05:37 PM

You'll be wide awake when you :vomitblu:

footfootfoot 09-08-2006 08:47 PM

St. Pete's English ale. In a Pilsner Urquell glass (shhhh!)

wolf 09-14-2006 11:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NoBoxes
Why? What did you do after drinking that bottle of port? If you can amend your statement to read "I'm really ashamed to say ... I got naughty.", I might just send you another bottle! :lol:

I would never be ashamed to say what I did.

I was ashamed to say the name of the particularly cheap and bad port out loud in public.



pssssst. If you highlight the entire post to which you refer, you may find my answer in teeny weeny letters that don't show up well against the screen background. It's really scary, though.

rkzenrage 09-14-2006 05:39 PM

Peppermint and Chamomile tea.

bluecuracao 09-14-2006 06:17 PM

Vitamin Water, "Revive" (fruit punch flavor).

JayMcGee 09-14-2006 07:14 PM

as always, dark rum'n'coke

This particular rum is especishily cheap & nasty..... I gesh you get wot you pay for.....


*hic*

Flint 09-14-2006 10:18 PM

Hot green tea and blackberry brandy...mmmmmm

Clodfobble 09-14-2006 10:23 PM

IBC bottled cherry limeade

Elspode 09-14-2006 11:27 PM

Diet Coke, cheap vodka...and Kahlua. Oh...chased with a couple of beers.

footfootfoot 09-15-2006 01:55 PM

Coffee, cold and black like my...


driveway in November.

footfootfoot 09-15-2006 01:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Elspode
Diet Coke, cheap vodka...and Kahlua. Oh...chased with a couple of beers.

Why the diet coke? hooked on the flavor of aspartame?

Spexxvet 09-15-2006 03:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by capnhowdy
Someone left a pint of Malibu mango rum here a while back. Anybody know how to drink it? I was thinking fruit juice, but it's already "mango rum". "sup w/ this stuff?

Mix it with coconut rum and pineapple rum.

Crimson Ghost 09-19-2006 01:58 AM

Scotch Comfort (a variation of SoCo)
Maker's Mark
Sambuca
7&7 (Segrams 7 & 7UP)
Rum & Coke

What I'd like to know is where in the hell do they (whoever "they" are) come up with the names for drinks.

I'm sitting in my local saloon and I heard the following drink ordered -
"A Cunt Pump"
-------------
Tomato Juice
Double shot of Vodka
Spoonful of French Mustard
Dash of Lime
Not Mixed
Served with an unused tampon as umbrella

incommunicadocat 09-19-2006 02:12 AM

I got me a nice glass of Botrytis Semillon, cool, sharp and sweet. I've had a deeply grumpy day and shall sit here and drink the bottle. Dry.

Flint 10-04-2006 02:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flint
Hot green tea and blackberry brandy...mmmmmm

Y'all really should try this. The steam carries a delightful vapor... Especially soothing if you have any sinus issues.

Shawnee123 10-04-2006 03:01 PM

How do they work with boyfriend issues? Pass me one, another, another...

bluecuracao 10-27-2006 05:46 PM

Cuervo and lemonade-flavored Vitamin Water. "Good, and good FOR you!" :rollanim:

BigV 10-27-2006 07:53 PM

cold coffee from lunch.

wolf 10-28-2006 12:09 AM

Store Brand Yuppie Water.

Someone pissed in the Water Cooler at work.

Elspode 10-28-2006 12:12 AM

Aren't those two concepts mutually exclusive?

Sheldonrs 10-28-2006 12:35 AM

1 Cape cod, 1 shot of regular tequila, 1 shot of pomegranite tequila and 1 diet coke. :-)
I feel VERY good right now. :-)

Gravdigr 04-19-2009 11:58 PM

Wild Turkey & ginger ale. Just tried this one the other night.

Do Not Want.

sugarpop 04-21-2009 12:30 AM

Water. Lots of it.

morethanpretty 04-21-2009 12:53 AM

more than i should.


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