gusto616 Posted April 5, 2017 Posted April 5, 2017 Another lineup I saw today -And this one came home with me todayAs Arnold would say, "I'll be back" (for that Hibiki 17)Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro 3
Martino Posted April 5, 2017 Posted April 5, 2017 Great (USD?) price on both the Nikka 12 (discontinued) and the Hibiki 17 - grab both before they disappear!
Smoking Ninja Posted April 5, 2017 Posted April 5, 2017 Great score on the Miyagikyo 12!! You will enjoy that one and it is discontinued!! You can still find Hibiki 17 fairly easy!
Smoking Ninja Posted April 5, 2017 Posted April 5, 2017 These are the bottles I scored for this trip. Flying back to the states soon. Very happy with what I have found! Nikka red, black, Chichibu The Peat 2016, 5 Yamazaki LE 2016, 3 Date, Hakushu 12, Nikka Coffey Malt, The Nikka 12, Nikka Taketsuru, Talisker 18, Hibiki 21, Hibiki 17, Yamazaki 18. 2
Ken Gargett Posted April 5, 2017 Posted April 5, 2017 might be of interest. One-of-a-Kind Rare Karuizawa Japanese Whisky Collection on the Auction Block Karuizawa whiskies Karuizawa 1960 Tony Sachs April 4, 2017 For collectors of Japanese whisky, the 0 is a holy grail, one of the rarest and most sought-after whiskies ever made. Aged for 52 years and limited to 41 bottles, it sold for a record $118,500 when it was last auctioned in 2015. Now another bottle has gone on the auction block, along with the most comprehensive collection of Karuizawa whiskies ever brought together in one place. The auction, held by the Scotland-based Whisky Auctioneer, features just over 290 bottles (each to be sold individually) from the legendary distillery, which closed in 2001. In recent years, the Japanese whisky market has exploded internationally, with exports increasing a staggering 179 percent from 2011 to 2015, according to the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service. The boom has translated to the secondary market as well, heightening interest in older bottlings as well as those from “ghost” distilleries like Karuizawa, which are no longer producing whisky but still have limited supplies of older stocks for aging and bottling. The Rare Whisky Karuizawa index, which tracks sales of collectible whiskies from the distillery, reports that select Karuizawa bottles have increased in value more than 300 percent since 2013. They’re prized not just for their rarity but for their quality. Iain McClune, founder and owner of Whisky Auctioneer, says, “[The] Karuizawa distillery was known for producing whisky of the finest quality and using only the finest ingredients to make it. Barley was imported from Scotland and sherry casks from Spain which, when combined with a water source that flowed through the volcanic lava rock around the distillery, provided its whiskies with a unique mineral quality.” The collection was acquired by Whisky Auctioneers from a single anonymous collector in Germany, who had amassed the collection over a decade. “The fact that a close-to-complete collection of Karuizawa has never been presented at auction previously makes this a rather momentous sale,” says McClune. “We don’t know his rationale for parting with the collection. However, it’s very likely that he will have been tracking the phenomenal performance of Karuizawa whisky at auction.” Others looking to diversify their whisky investments will have much to appreciate in the auction’s 290 individual bottle lots. More than 230 of them are single cask offerings, which means only one cask — holding a few hundred bottles of whisky or less — was used in the creation of that whisky. Apart from the 1960 bottling, some of the rarest Karuizawas include a 50 Year Old, distilled in 1963, and a 48 Year Old from 1964. One of McClune’s personal favorites is the 1984 Single Cask No. 2961, which, he says, is one of only 12 bottles given to attendees of a dinner thrown by the Number One Drinks Company — the corporation that bought the Karuizawa’s remaining stocks after the distillery shuttered its stills. Given the fervor for Japanese whisky, the 1960 has a good chance of fetching more this time than it did two years ago. But not all the bottles will reach the six-figure mark; most are expected to fetch closer to $2,500 and up, providing an easier entry level into the world of Karuizawa for collectors. Bidding begins on April 5 and ends April 17. (whiskyauctioneer.com) 2
spicycorona Posted June 1, 2017 Posted June 1, 2017 This was apparently taken before we killed 3/4 of the bottle.. Went down very easy and was my introduction to Japanese whiskey. Anyone have any information on it?
shlomo Posted June 1, 2017 Posted June 1, 2017 It's a blend from the early 90's. Gold and Gold. Fairly pricey now, but not outrageously so. They pop up on auction fairly regularly. 1
SirVantes Posted June 1, 2017 Posted June 1, 2017 12 hours ago, spicycorona said: This was apparently taken before we killed 3/4 of the bottle.. Went down very easy and was my introduction to Japanese whiskey. Anyone have any information on it? 1 hour ago, shlomo said: It's a blend from the early 90's. Gold and Gold. Fairly pricey now, but not outrageously so. They pop up on auction fairly regularly. There's also a current re-issue with the samurai top that's sold only at Japanese airport duty-frees, at a rather reasonable price. Same blend - the malt component is believed to be Yoichi, with the grain component distilled in coffey stills. 1
shlomo Posted June 1, 2017 Posted June 1, 2017 8 hours ago, SirVantes said: There's also a current re-issue with the samurai top that's sold only at Japanese airport duty-frees, at a rather reasonable price. Same blend - the malt component is believed to be Yoichi, with the grain component distilled in coffey stills. Didn't know that. Cool.
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