Ouch!! ...my eyes are wateringThrall wrote:......snipped............ Try them wi a bottle o´Swedish usqebae, chill-filtered or not; see http://www.mackmyra.se/default.php and they widni mind keeping it chust fer them sels. We´re on an island and that means keep it out or pay to the hilt.
I´ve just imported five pulks to Iceland; the extra duty and costs amounted to 47%. Now we´re waiting for snow, wid ye believe.
......snipped............
€900 for a 30 litre mini barrel
Some 15 years ago I bought a hogshead (the middle of the three sizes used in Scottish distilleries, next up is hogshead, with the smallest a barrell) which is roundabout 250 litres for ca. £900, and sold it for much much more when is was 12 years old, plus a case for me. I've got a second youngster that needs another few years before the independent bottlers will be really interested.
Fortunately I got into the game very early on, and this Springbank offer was sponsored by SMWS, as opposed to many of the later offers which were just money making businesses for the sellers, if indeed, the barrels actually existed
I was strongly tempted to buy a hogshead of Bruichladdich a few years ago when I was flush, when the distillery came back into production as an independent, but a long chat with my good mate the independent bottler led me to realise that I was being asked to pay a price of £/lpa (litre pure alcohol) for the new spirit that was way above the current market price for 10 year Bruichladdich ...........
The lesson, - it's generally a mug's game, with no reasonable prospect of a profit.
But still, €900 for 30 litres, - that's business that I'd like if I was selling
And then, because the cask is so small that means that the surface area to volume ratio is much higher that for barrels, casks or hogsheads, which does indeed mean a higher rate of maturation for the 30 litre mini-barrel, but at what cost in terms of the characteristics
David