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Items 1051-1064 of 1064
E.H. Taylor Single Barrel Bourbon is one of many versions crafted by E.H. Taylor and still produced at the Buffalo Trace Distillery. This single-barrel bourbon was crafted from Mash Bill #1, like other great blends such as Eagle Rare, Buffalo Trace, and George T. Stagg.
The 2018 Domaine Huet Vouvray Le Mont Moelleux is a captivating Chenin Blanc with a clear, deep, and flinty aroma that exudes pure minerality. On the palate, it balances lush intensity with vibrant tension, delivering elegance and vitality in every sip.
With cellars located in the charming, hilltop town of Sancerre, Jean-Laurent and Jean-Dominique Vacheron have vineyards in mainly the eastern part of Sancerre on hard, flinty soils as well as smaller holding on softer limestone and clay soils.
Thibaud Boudignon has gone through the three stages of small-producer cultdom. First, there were the tweets and instagram posts. Maybe a foreign blog or small magazine article. The allusions to his wine were rapturous, but enigmatic and mostly from overseas.
An open attack on the palate where one discovers grapefruit and lemon. The finish is reminiscent of vegetation. 90% Sauvignon Blanc, 10% Chardonnay. Jean-Francois Roy has been making wines from Chateau de Valencay since 1989 and now has over 69 acres of vineyards in the villages of La Vernelle, Fontguenand, Meusnes, and Lye.
Domaine Jean-Paul Balland Sancerre is a clear appearance with a pale yellow hue. Intense aromas at first, fine, very mild of ripe fruits (peach) with hints of citrus and fresh herbs.
Grape variety, 100% Sauvignon Blanc, organic (not certified), 8 months' ageing in bulk with some lees stirring, lightly fined & filtered before bottling. Located at the northern edge of the appellation De Tracy's vineyard is south-west facing, on flint and Kimmeridgian soils and extends from "Tracy hill" to the "Champs de Cris" plateau. 32 hectares are in production.
Founded in 1837 by farmers George and John Rate, twenty miles from the heart of Edinburgh, Glenkinchie was completely rebuild in the 1890s to become a large model distillery.
“Madly sited”, perched high between two mountain ranges on a pass once a meeting point for cattle drovers on their way to market. The name Dalwhinnie translates from Gaelic as “Plain of Meetings”. Surviving periods of closure, the distillery has produced its distinctive single malt since 1947, only being completely modernized in 1996.