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On a whim, what are you up to?


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Do you know how they asked to have it cooked? Pink steak doesn't seem to be out of the realm of decency. If it had come out gray that's a whole 'nother thing.

Rude service is rude service, however.

For some reason in this case I am thinking there is more to this than we are hearing.
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Adams Morgan.

They open at 6PM. I'd say we could meet for a pre-prandial Amsterdan Falafel, but that is purely optional as the food at Bourbon is also quite good.

Great spot, but too early and no parking. Oh, the woes of the commuter! Have fun.
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And their food has gotta be more interesting than the other options in the area (with the exception of certain sacred cow).
Cow is sounding really good for dinner - and yes when it tastes like that it is sacred.

Anyone going to HH at RTC tonight - I just started a low carb diet (just booked a warm trip for February so I now have to be in a bathing suit in seven weeks) Hanger steak will become our friend.

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I am tomorrow before my hockey game. No, I don't go to games in my jersey. I've been to enough games to figure out they probably aren't going to play the skinny jewish dude sitting in the second row.
Corduroy from 4:30 to 7:30 for the DR HHH Pt 2... don't know how to link to the other thread but Cucas put this together.
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Corduroy from 4:30 to 7:30 for the DR HHH Pt 2... don't know how to link to the other thread but Cucas put this together.
There's still a chance to wish your fellow donrockwell.com members a happy holiday season, winter solstice and new year. We will be holding another happy hour this Friday, December 22nd at Corduroy (in the bar) from 4-7:30 pm. Everyone (new, longtime, wayward members too) is welcome to join the celebrating. If you need information about the location, Corduroy is located in downtown Washington on the second floor of the Sheraton Four Points Hotel at 1201 K St., NW and its website is located here.

Please PM me if you plan to attend so that I can let Corduroy know how many of us to expect.

I think there are 12+ so farand the list is growing......

http://www.donrockwell.com/index.php?showtopic=4845

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One hour, 47 minutes.......

If you haven't RSVP'd but still want to join us, come anyway. We have newbies, oldbies, and inbetweenbies coming.

There is free valet parking at Corduroy, about two or three blocks from the metro, and across the street from a Circulator stop so there are no excuses.

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One hour, 47 minutes.......

If you haven't RSVP'd but still want to join us, come anyway. We have newbies, oldbies, and inbetweenbies coming.

There is free valet parking at Corduroy, about two or three blocks from the metro, and across the street from a Circulator stop so there are no excuses.

So theoretically I was supposed to write a review on this, but that said I came late and had to leave early and had no food. Thus I am left to review my drink.

Woodford Reserve is the premium bourbons distilled by the Brown Forman distillery. Brown Forman refers to it as Kentucky Straight Bourbon, but it really doesn't tell the full story. Woodford is a still pot bourbon. Now you may ask, what is still pot bourbon? Well, with inovation there became two types of bourbon- still pot and column still.

From http://www.happinessonline.org/BeTemperate/p11.htm:

Two type of stills are used in the distilling process: the pot still and the continuous or column still. The pot still is the older of the two. It is a simple device much like a huge kettle whose top tapers off into a spiraling pipe. The continuous or column still resembles a tall cylinder about two or three stories high. With the still pot, the liquid is heated in the kettle and the vapors rise through the cooling spiral where they condense and run off. With the continuous still, the preheated liquid is pumped to the top of the still and flows down through baffle plates. At the same time as the liquid is coming down, steam enters from the bottom of the still and rises through the baffle plates. This steam distills and redistills the liquid as it rises and passes through the top of the still where it cools and condenses.

In essence, it's an older form of bourbon produced in the older, more traditional styles, making a decent drinking bourbon.

As per the ice that I had with the bourbon, it was produced from DC water if I had to guess. It didn't taste like the filtered water I find at The Reef, nor did it taste like any bottled water I've ever had.

Thus my Woodford Reserve on DC Ice with a lime that I had rubbed around the edge of the glass was acceptable and no better or worse than an equal sized pour I've ever had.

So there you go- that's apparently my hazing review of the hh.

Cheers,

Jonny

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Woodford Reserve is the premium bourbons distilled by the Brown Forman distillery. Brown Forman refers to it as Kentucky Straight Bourbon, but it really doesn't tell the full story. Woodford is a still pot bourbon. Now you may ask, what is still pot bourbon? Well, with inovation there became two types of bourbon- still pot and column still.

Allow me to illustrate. Here's a snapshot I took in October of the actual pot stills at Woodford Reserve.

post-710-1166857023_thumb.jpg

They're of recent (circa 1996) manufacture by coppersmiths J. Forsyth & Sons of Rothes, Scotland. The center and right stills are essentially of a standard design used for Scotch whiskey. The beer still at left has been modified with a hemispherical bottom to alleviate problems with burning the distiller's beer - unlike Scotch production, Woodford passes the entire beer, mashed grains and all, into the still.

Now that said, I'm not a big fan of the current product, nor is it necessarily the case that you were drinking pot-stilled bourbon. You see, when Brown-Forman established Woodford Reserve and rebuilt the old Labrot & Graham distillery, they were stuck with a new, expensive brand to maintain, and no product to sell - the newly distilled bourbon wouldn't begin to reach market for another six to eight years due to barrel aging. So the "Woodford Reserve" they sold from '96 until recently to create a reputation for the brand actually consisted of selected aged "honey barrels" of Old Forester, brought over to the rebuilt warehouses, then bottled as Woodford. Hence, older bottles of W-R, particularly those ones bearing Lincoln Henderson's signature, may actually have nothing to do with the three magnificent stills seen here. The newer Chris Morris bottles are likely to contain some or all new-production bourbon; I believe they only stopped blending with the Old Forester barrels this year.

I'll let others comment on the taste of their "four grain" limited-edition experiment.

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Allow me to illustrate. Here's a snapshot I took in October of the actual pot stills at Woodford Reserve.

post-710-1166857023_thumb.jpg

They're of recent (circa 1996) manufacture by coppersmiths J. Forsyth & Sons of Rothes, Scotland. The center and right stills are essentially of a standard design used for Scotch whiskey. The beer still at left has been modified with a hemispherical bottom to alleviate problems with burning the distiller's beer - unlike Scotch production, Woodford passes the entire beer, mashed grains and all, into the still.

Now that said, I'm not a big fan of the current product, nor is it necessarily the case that you were drinking pot-stilled bourbon. You see, when Brown-Forman established Woodford Reserve and rebuilt the old Labrot & Graham distillery, they were stuck with a new, expensive brand to maintain, and no product to sell - the newly distilled bourbon wouldn't begin to reach market for another six to eight years due to barrel aging. So the "Woodford Reserve" they sold from '96 until recently to create a reputation for the brand actually consisted of selected aged "honey barrels" of Old Forester, brought over to the rebuilt warehouses, then bottled as Woodford. Hence, older bottles of W-R, particularly those ones bearing Lincoln Henderson's signature, may actually have nothing to do with the three magnificent stills seen here. The newer Chris Morris bottles are likely to contain some or all new-production bourbon; I believe they only stopped blending with the Old Forester barrels this year.

I'll let others comment on the taste of their "four grain" limited-edition experiment.

I will agree in that it's not my favorite thing ever, though my choices were beam regular, jack regular, makers, bookers (I'll never understand the appeal of this stuff...in the words of Ralph from the Simpsons "tastes like burning"),knob and woodford. I went with the woodford. Let's just say Corduroy isn't known for their bourbon selection. That said, the reason for posting this was that I was told by a DR member that as my hazing I had to write a review. Well as I didn't eat anything I didn't feel it fair to write a review of the food, so I just wrote a basic bourbon review :P

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Good idea, but we'll be having dinner with the kids and Temperance Hall after.

ETA: of course, Mr. xcanuck didn't suggest a time. Maybe some folks will want to do both. I just wanna drink.

I'm a baaaad boy. 8:30pm sound OK? Sorry for the late reply. We simply had to grab a drink and appetizers at RTC after watching Casino Royale :P
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I think that Jamie is proposing lunch at RK, since she's quoting the January $9 Bar Lunch menu.

Not that this precludes a Friday HH, but they're different ideas...

Yeah, I figured, but since I'll be eating dinner there, lunch would be... excessive. Whereas a drink at the bar would be perfect.

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