Funnily enough, the best explaination I've read as to how cooperative behaviour evolves was in The Selfish Gene, which was, of course, written by Wildeblood's favourite atheist, Richard Dawkins. The relevant chapters are chapter 5 ("Aggression: stability and the selfish machine") and chapter 12 ("Nice guys finish first").Disembodied wrote:Morality seems to be a product of the evolution of co-operation in social animals.
Quote of the week!
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Re: Quote of the week!
- Cody
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Re: Quote of the week!
Ardbeg, apparently - a very nice single malt, is Ardbeg.A Scotch whisky that spent almost three years maturing on the International Space Station (ISS) boasts an "intense aroma" with hints of "antiseptic smoke, rubber and smoked fish".
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
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Re: Quote of the week!
Yes, but it's one you have to work your way up to ... it took me a lot of practice before I could appreciate an Ardbeg. And it's expensive enough as it is - how much would a bottle of orbital whisky set you back?Cody wrote:Ardbeg, apparently - a very nice single malt, is Ardbeg.
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Re: Quote of the week!
Practice? <chortles> Yeah, I had plenty of 'practice' with Islay malts - Bruichladdich was my favourite, back in the day.
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
- Smivs
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Re: Quote of the week!
Smivs loves Port Ellen, but the prices are silly these days
Ardbeg and Laphroaig are both splendid, however, and are merely expensive as opposd to OMG_WTF_HOW_MUCH?!
Edited to add:- Lovers of Islay malts should pop into Asda and grab a bottle of their 'generic' Islay malt - it really is very nice
Ardbeg and Laphroaig are both splendid, however, and are merely expensive as opposd to OMG_WTF_HOW_MUCH?!
Edited to add:- Lovers of Islay malts should pop into Asda and grab a bottle of their 'generic' Islay malt - it really is very nice
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Re: Quote of the week!
*sighs* Must pick myself up some Laphroaig again.. when the budget extends that far!Smivs wrote:Ardbeg and Laphroaig are both splendid, however, and are merely expensive as opposd to OMG_WTF_HOW_MUCH?!
I should think about getting a still again.. I still have my Whisky Profiling Kit, that has a fairly good recipe for Laphroaig, although it tends to go a little overboard on the peat.Smivs wrote:Edited to add:- Lovers of Islay malts should pop into Asda and grab a bottle of their 'generic' Islay malt - it really is very nice
Most games have some sort of paddling-pool-and-water-wings beginning to ease you in: Oolite takes the rather more Darwinian approach of heaving you straight into the ocean, often with a brick or two in your pockets for luck. ~ Disembodied
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Re: Quote of the week!
Remember the first $22 goes to schools & hospitals & better roads, so buy a bottle of any spirits and think of it as your good deed for the day.Diziet Sma wrote:*sighs* Must pick myself up some Laphroaig again.. when the budget extends that far!
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Re: Quote of the week!
What? i thought once bottled Scotch didnt mature? Thats why they left them in the casks? When i visited GlenFiddich they had a few barrrels that were laid down in 1924 ish (memory getting faulty it was back in 1992). The guide said that it hadent been botteled because it was still getting better each year......Cody wrote:Ardbeg, apparently - a very nice single malt, is Ardbeg.A Scotch whisky that spent almost three years maturing on the International Space Station (ISS) boasts an "intense aroma" with hints of "antiseptic smoke, rubber and smoked fish".
I got a bottle of 10 YO Bushmills BlackBush that i have had for 15 years ..... mmmm might be time to crack it open....
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OR i could go with
Arthur Dent: I always said there was something fundamentally wrong with the universe.
or simply
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- Smivs
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Re: Quote of the week!
That is correct, it matures in the cask, not the bottle.spud42 wrote:i thought once bottled Scotch didnt mature?
However a whisky will change its character once the bottle is opened. As it 'airs' it will become a little milder and smoother usually. Most will be better after a week or so than when freshly opened. However this will cause some to lose some appeal as well - Laphroaig for example is definitely at its pungently smoky best when just opened (which probably explains why my bottles seem to empty so quickly!).
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Re: Quote of the week!
They didn't send a bottle into space - they sent a vial of pre-maturation distillate which was mixed with "oak wood shavings from the inside of a charred American White Oak ex-Bourbon barrel" (it being a bit premature, I suppose, for initial trial purposes at least, to send an entire cask).spud42 wrote:i thought once bottled Scotch didnt mature?
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Re: Quote of the week!
I seem to remember that at the Glen Fiddich distillery they used continental SHERRY barrels? why would you put Scotch in an American Bourbon whisky cask?
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Re: Quote of the week!
To reduce the flavour of the wood (and gain flavour of other things that were in the casks previously).spud42 wrote:I seem to remember that at the Glen Fiddich distillery they used continental SHERRY barrels? why would you put Scotch in an American Bourbon whisky cask?
More information here.Scotch whisky is stored in used oak casks. The taste of fresh casks would be too intense. Instead, milder second-hand casks are used. The most common casks are bourbon casks, which have already been used to store whiskey for 2 to 4 years. Before being used, bourbon casks are heated for some time and then charred for a short period of time. This heats up the wood, and the wood sugar caramelises, which makes the whisky brown. The fire turns the lignin of the wood into the chemically related vanillin. In bourbon its taste is obvious, but also in single malt it's often still noticeable. The charcoal layer on the inside of the cask doesn't lead to a smoky whisky. Instead, it mainly filters out the pungent components from the whisky.
The second cask type is the Spanish sherry cask. The whisky also extracts flavours from sherry cask walls, resulting in sherry aromas from sweet to dry.
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We found that comet Lovejoy was releasing as much alcohol as in at least 500 bottles of wine every second during its peak activity.
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
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Re: Quote of the week!
Not to mention Scotch whisky is made by the Scottish, those traditional stingy people. Why would they pay the whole price for the new casks when they can technologically (!) justify why the used (and thus cheaper) ones are better -- haha!Disembodied wrote:To reduce the flavour of the wood (and gain flavour of other things that were in the casks previously).spud42 wrote:I seem to remember that at the Glen Fiddich distillery they used continental SHERRY barrels? why would you put Scotch in an American Bourbon whisky cask?Scotch whisky is stored in used oak casks. [...]
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Re: Quote of the week!
Not sure that's right. Bourbon is cheaper to make than Scotch because, among other things, (a) it spends less time in casks because it absorbs flavours quicker from the new wood & (b) they recover part of the costs of the casks by selling them on to the Scots, and more recently Mexicans since aged Tequila "is a thing now".Commander_X wrote:Not to mention Scotch whisky is made by the Scottish, those traditional stingy people. Why would they pay the whole price for the new casks when they can technologically (!) justify why the used (and thus cheaper) ones are better -- haha!Disembodied wrote:To reduce the flavour of the wood (and gain flavour of other things that were in the casks previously).spud42 wrote:I seem to remember that at the Glen Fiddich distillery they used continental SHERRY barrels? why would you put Scotch in an American Bourbon whisky cask?Scotch whisky is stored in used oak casks. [...]
(Of course the main reason bourbon is cheaper to make is all the different brands are only brands and the products all come from a handful of mega-distilleries.)
In your heart, you know it's flat.