I don't usually comment on any videos, but the content that the channel has been publishing is such a joy to watch and listen to - that I had to write this and say thank you.
@berkaberkКүн бұрын
My mother-in-law asks me constantly why I smell everything I eat before I eat it, then wonders how I can identify notes accurately in a whiskey. Smelling random shit is so important for the journey, and not just normal things (floral, vegetal, sweet, fruit) but also some super wacky things like mulch, steel, rotting wood, gasoline, band aids, and rubber tires - it all helps tremendously with whiskey notes.
@Allouran22 сағат бұрын
Making and owning a winery I regularly taste wines with customers, you often lead them through a learning process of evaluating wine. The hardest part is always verbalising what you smell, it seems so difficult to join the dots until prompted - and that’s the skill I find. With whisky 🥃 it is easier to get the gist, but very difficult to get the detail - you can spot smoky Islay, but to know the distillery becomes the quest (ignoring Laphroaig!) as it is so difficult to know them all intimately enough with the experience any home drinker would have. I’m really enjoying these videos Daniel, thanks for the discussion points 👍👍
@elumbraКүн бұрын
Yoichi is also a favorite of mine. Nikka just put out a budget whiskey called Frontier. It's a world blend with a base of Yoichi. For ~$15 equivalent it's an amazing value. Knowing your preference for smoky, I'm curious to see you try something from Saburomaru. They have gotten popular locally for their heavily peated whiskeys which as you probably know are uncommon from Japan. I bought their blend recently and am curious to compare it to an Islay.
@jeffbayer569Күн бұрын
Wow, that is the best explanation of that I've heard. Thank you Sir. And thank you for another great conversation 🥃
@TaylorOpeeКүн бұрын
My palate continues to evolve where I enjoy categories that I didn’t before. I feel as though I’m just beginning after 5 years of delving into whiskey.
@holdenrupp5059Күн бұрын
Probably the most relevant and useful video you have given me!!😊
@brettAnicholsКүн бұрын
When I was young my Mom was having a garage sale where she said that if i could sell my old trumpet she would buy me a new one. Along comes an old man who picks it up and played a very impressive run flawlessly. After he didn't buy it, it was hard to convince my Mom that it wasn't good enough for me😆
@WhiskyLoversSocietyКүн бұрын
Still learning after 35 years.
@tobin_nathanКүн бұрын
This was a great video, Daniel. If you still need topic ideas for future videos, I’d love a walk through of how you blind taste! Particularly at home without someone to help you select and pour the bottles. Thanks!
@ediecervantes80088 сағат бұрын
I love your videos and lessons. Thank you!!
@t.w.3856Күн бұрын
This is a great explanation..thank you for sharing!
@red_j_ruff_wood6384Күн бұрын
David: try taking a long deep breath (though your mouth) over the top of your glass. I call it a “Ghost sip” and I have found it to reveal a lot of the flavor profiles before and after a real sip. Works with the nose to decipher the puzzle of flavor. Cheers!
@-RONNIEКүн бұрын
Thanks for the video 🥃
@xxacidmvКүн бұрын
Welcome all Whiskey Vaulters to Story Time with Daniel! Deductive tasting: something that I need to work at
@devinphillips9704Күн бұрын
Oh man, I loved the Yoichi, and the Taketsuru Pure Malt is really good, too, especially with just a few drops of water. I'm hoping to get to try the Miyagikyo soon.
@brettAnicholsКүн бұрын
13:49 counterpoint. Take a flask of whiskey to the store and smell things next to the whiskey without having to buy them 😂
@rayc51914 сағат бұрын
I really enjoy the videos. Are you going to be doing the new Angel's Envy Triple Oak anytime soon?
@thomaselmer9728Күн бұрын
This is the 10,000 hrs. of practice thing. I prefer the saying 5 yr will make you a journeyman, not an expert but someone who can do the thing without supervision or making glaring mistakes. And there are 10,400 hours of work in 5 yrs if you are working a 40 hour week at a task. It also helps to teach the thing, this makes you better at it.
@kennethmiller2333Күн бұрын
Would be interesting to apply Bayes Theorem to your decision tree...
@WhiskeyVaultКүн бұрын
Technically, that's kind of how deductive tasting is approached intuitively. You do have to watch out for base rate fallacy. For example, a lot of times there can be a lot of markers for malt that could make you start to think that maybe you're drinking a Japanese whiskey because it's all malt when in reality the majority of malt flavors present on the open market are likely to be scotch whiskey
@kennethmiller23339 сағат бұрын
@@WhiskeyVault I'm sure this discussion has made deductive tasting far more boring for many people. But, for me, it has made it a lot more fun. It was the specifically the base rate fallacy, and your mention of how many times you go for a peated scotch when it's a Japanese whisky that made me think of it. Even if your priors tell you that it's a lot like a Japanese whisky, the sheer number of peated scotches make it the safer bet.
@balisticsquirelКүн бұрын
If it walks like a dead duck, and it talks like a dead duck, then you've got a shot at nailing it on the decision tree.
@achieversacademy969117 сағат бұрын
I have heard about seductive testing. First time I am hearing deductive testing
@YoJimBo851610Күн бұрын
Miyagikyo Distillery is more south than Yoichi Distillery in the north lol. Nikka is more like Scotch, specifically Yoichi. And yes, the Yoichi Distillery is still coal fired stills. The other peated Whisky from another big Distillery is Hakushu and even more south than Miyagikyo.
@AWhiskeyAdventureКүн бұрын
Daniel, can you link the mcgimmick video you were talking about in last night's live stream? I can't find it. unless it's the whiskey tribe one (that you werent in) and the other one on the product page.
@WhiskeyVaultКүн бұрын
That video doesn't come out until after Christmas
@AWhiskeyAdventureКүн бұрын
@@WhiskeyVault OHHHH so we got a little teaser of whats to come? :D
@blind7000Күн бұрын
6:45 Celebrated with a World War? With famed Importers like Al Capone?
@YoJimBo851610Күн бұрын
210👍
@Watchman999Күн бұрын
It’s right after Eductive tasting and before Reductive Tasting which leads right into Seductive Tasting