CigarStone
For once, knowledge is making me poor!
Typing this thread I feel like I did when I joined CP because I am such a newb with bourbon. 
@EmergenCigar has been helping me learn to tolerate bourbon which has morphed into liking it......love is still a ways off.
I was the guy who only ever drank bourbon, whiskey, scotch, tequila, or gasoline when someone bought me a shot because I was taught to honor the giver by excepting the gift. Sometimes it was me who bought or proposed the shot in memory of a lost loved one.
I was bound and determined to at least understand this love affair that people have with bourbon, even if I never achieved the same love. So, I started "experimenting" with various bourbons and Brett made sure I didn't play with crappy stuff. I tried it neat, I tried it with ice, I made ice spheres with an orange peel frozen in the middle. I thought about how I love a dirty martini, shaken not stirred, because the small amount of dilution coupled with the violent action seemed to soften the bite of the vodka.
I am probably making some of you connoisseurs laugh because you went through this eons ago but here is what I have concluded which made a huge difference for me.
Using Woodford Reserve, and marking the glasses so I could keep track, I poured an ounce in two different glasses and let one sit while I went to the man cave and sipped on the other for 30 minutes.
I then came out and poured an ounce in a shaker and shook the crap out of it (no pun intended), and poured this into a third glass. Another ounce in the shaker with two small ice cubes and shook that vigorously as well, and then poured that into a fourth glass.
I took the three new glasses to the man cave and here is what I observed.


@EmergenCigar has been helping me learn to tolerate bourbon which has morphed into liking it......love is still a ways off.
I was the guy who only ever drank bourbon, whiskey, scotch, tequila, or gasoline when someone bought me a shot because I was taught to honor the giver by excepting the gift. Sometimes it was me who bought or proposed the shot in memory of a lost loved one.
I was bound and determined to at least understand this love affair that people have with bourbon, even if I never achieved the same love. So, I started "experimenting" with various bourbons and Brett made sure I didn't play with crappy stuff. I tried it neat, I tried it with ice, I made ice spheres with an orange peel frozen in the middle. I thought about how I love a dirty martini, shaken not stirred, because the small amount of dilution coupled with the violent action seemed to soften the bite of the vodka.
I am probably making some of you connoisseurs laugh because you went through this eons ago but here is what I have concluded which made a huge difference for me.
Using Woodford Reserve, and marking the glasses so I could keep track, I poured an ounce in two different glasses and let one sit while I went to the man cave and sipped on the other for 30 minutes.
I then came out and poured an ounce in a shaker and shook the crap out of it (no pun intended), and poured this into a third glass. Another ounce in the shaker with two small ice cubes and shook that vigorously as well, and then poured that into a fourth glass.
I took the three new glasses to the man cave and here is what I observed.
- Glass shaken with ice.........obviously diluted and smoother/softer.
- Glass shaken with no ice......harsh ethnology bomb (for me) just like when freshly poured.
- Glass poured 40 minutes ago......amazingly smoother/softer, and much more flavorful.
