A bourbon for what ails you

maggie and old forester

Who needs a Saint Bernard?

Snow in bourbon-drinking country is not usually a common occurrence but sometimes it happens and when it does, well what more could you ask for? I call our snows “boutique” snows, since it’s usually great big puffy-flake snow that makes for great pictures and it’s all gone in the next day or two. I can send the pics to friends up north and say “see, we have snow, too” while never acknowledging the fact that I don’t own a snow shovel, or a snow blower, or even decent parka.

(I was going to mention “rubbers,” Midwestern vernacular meaning overshoes or galoshes, but the very fact that I grew up being told to “be sure to put on your rubbers” as I headed out the door is still disconcerting…)

This year we’re getting more snow than we’re used to, but each instance is a “let it snow” moment providing the perfect excuse to stay indoors, stare out the window and toast the season. Of course you can toast any season, and I believe you should, but right now this is the one to focus on.

This month I got us some Old Forester bourbon, which is a bit of conundrum in the bourbon world, as near as I can tell. From a purely consumer standpoint Old Forester resides in the netherworld between your everyday bourbons and your special occasions bourbons.

If your friends aren’t the sort that worry about the hit they’ll take from the estate tax, then you can pull out some Old Forester and everyone will appreciate your slightly eclectic taste.

On the other hand, if your doctor is recommending rotator cuff surgery for the shoulder pain you feel from constantly reaching for those top-shelf bottles, then it seems to be de rigueur to suggest that Old Forester is somehow unworthy of serious consideration.

To quote, as I usually do, the estimable F. Paul Pacult: [from F. Paul Pacult’s Whiskey Review, iWhiskey iPhone app]

“… The palate entry is hard, brittle, unwelcoming, … at midpalate there’s a slight reflection of the grainy aroma, but that’s washed away in the torrent of oaky resin; ends up bitter and biting. I didn’t care for this uneven, Jekyll and Hyde of a bourbon. One minute it’s sweet, inviting, and succulent in the nose; the next minute it’s scraping the skin off your tongue and upper palate.”

Sheesh, what an attitude! A couple of ice cubes, a splash of water and a devastating Dear John letter and F. Paul would be throwing it down with a vengeance I say.

Then there’s the frequently-suggested-on-the-internets but unverified claim that Woodford Reserve, which I wrote about a while back, is just the best of each Old Forester batch relabeled and greatly revalued. I want to believe Woodford Reserve when they say this is not true, but until they can produce an actual, legitimate birth certificate from the state of Hawaii, I’m skeptical. I guess it’s a conspiracy with legs given that Old Forester is made by Brown-Forman, which also bottles Woodford Reserve and Jack Daniels among its products.

You gotta love this guy’s tenacity in searching for the truth:

Old Forester does have history on its side, at least according to Charles Cowdery:

“Old Forester was born in 1870. In those days, distilleries and distributors sold whiskey in barrels to bars and groceries. Many less than scrupulous merchants watered the whiskey or ‘extended’ it with un-aged spirits and other, sometimes toxic, substances.

“Among those who complained about this practice were physicians, who often prescribed whiskey as a tonic and anesthetic. George Brown, who previously worked for a wholesale drug company, knew about this complaint and got the idea of selling whiskey only in sealed bottles, so a buyer could trust the contents.”

Given that information I must suggest that Old Forester was the first “medicinal purposes” whiskey that a doctor could really trust. You know where I’m going with that…

So anyway, Tweets and I did a blind taste test using the remains of the previously mentioned Woodford Reserve and our new bottle of Old Forester. Old Forester won. We still like Woodford Reserve, but on our binary scale of zero-to-one with one being good and zero being void of all goodness and undeserving to exist in this universe, we give Old Forester a one.

P.S. – “Fried peanut and banana sandwich with bourbon and vanilla” on the breakfast menu at Breslin in NYC. I might have to move back.

Art for all seasons

yurt in winter

Gallery yurt in the woods in the winter

A while back I mentioned in one of my posts (please visit for “before” pictures) about how the banners in the woods are an ever-changing installation, depending on the time of day, the season, the weather, etc.

Since then, with a golden fall and a white winter so far, the seasons have obliged, and so here’s some pix to illustrate my claim. (click to enlarge)

Green leaf in summer Green leaf in fall green leaf banner in winter

Here’s the green leaf banner in summer, fall and winter.

Red Leaf banner i nfall Red leaf banner in winter

Here’s the red leaf banner in fall and winter.

Dogs banner fall Dog banner winter

The photo banner of Chigger and Woody in fall and winter.

Deer skull in winter Two dogs in snow

The deer skull banner in winter, plus a gratuitous photo of Gerret and Maggie. (What could I do? They’re staring over my shoulder as I type. They expected this to be a dog post.)

New Works

Here’s some new images I’m happy with…

Pine Needles

Pine Needles

Oak Leaves

Oak Leaves

Sycamore Leaf

Sycamore Leaf

Circumstances dictated a “fall” theme to these images. For some reason the Pine Needles, now hanging in our living room, remind me of Rodin’s “Burghers of Calais.” And that’s enough hubris for one day.

Adopt!

I like these folks. I give ’em money when I’ve got it.

It was thirty years ago today…

John Lennon Shot Dead

We, my first wife and I, were living at 88 Canal Street in Manhattan. It was a seventh floor walk-up loft on the eastern end of Canal Street. A combination of residential Chinatown and Jewish commercial district. An “F” train neighborhood. East Broadway, Essex, Ludlow, Orchard, Division.

I walked downstairs that morning and out the door to go to work. As I turned to head up the sidewalk there was a man coming toward me reading the newspaper. The New York Post. He was holding it in front of his face open to some story on the interior. The front page was like a sign board coming down the street toward me. “JOHN LENNON SHOT DEAD.”

It had happened the night before but in this pre-Internet world it was the first I’d heard of it.

I was stunned. Stunned in a way I have only experienced a handful of times in my life: the Kennedy assassination (when I was very young), the Nixon resignation (when I was very cynical), my father’s unexpected death (when he was very young) and the collapse of the World Trade Center buildings. (Not the attack on the World Trade Center, which I could handle somewhere in my brain, but the actual collapse of the buildings.)

I was not a huge John Lennon fan. Just as appreciator. But killing him just didn’t make sense. The same way those other moments didn’t make sense. It left a void in my mind.

There’s a whole book’s worth of thoughtful discussion that should follow this, but that’s not the purpose of this writing so that will have to wait.

At any rate, for me it was the end of the Sixties. The 60s lasted until December 1980, and then they were over.

In December 1980, Ronald Reagan, champion of the “60s are Over” movement was President-elect, having defeated Jimmy Carter in November. If you were around then you’ll remember that Reagan was to the years leading up to 1980 what Sarah Palin is to the years leading up to 2012. I’m just saying.

But all of this is intro to a longer story that played out over the follow three or four months and involved Nancy Reagan, Julia Stiles, mail art, Lucy Lippard, the Secret Service, performance art, Denton, Texas, Jack Daniels, roast pork and bean curd, and a tiny little gun hidden under a pillow.

I hope to get to all of that soon.

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This