Spend enough time immersing yourself in the consumption of just about any grown-up beverage – beer, wine, or spirits – and a young man's fancy inevitably turns to thoughts of, "Hey, I bet I can make this stuff at home."
Even casual beer snobs dive happily into homebrew, and making your own wine in the garage isn't that complex of an undertaking, either.
The ante is raised, though, when it comes to the hard stuff. Making vodka, rum, or whiskey at home requires a still, which is complicated and prone to exploding if operated incorrectly. And unlike homemade beer and wine, home stills are almost completely illegal in the United States (although a few rare exceptions exist). Anyone wanting to make his own whiskey will have to be an extremely devoted scofflaw. Even then, a home whiskey (something more sophisticated than moonshine) is likely to take years of careful barrel-aging to become palatable.
So consider the next best thing: Blending your own whiskey from ready-to-drink stock.
The company has stocks of seven Scotch whiskys that you mix and match to develop your own customized blend, 10 ml at a time.You can do this at home tonight if you'd like. Gather up a handful of your favorite whiskys (stick with all scotch) and pour a bit of each into one glass. How's it taste? It could be a delight. It could be awful. (You can do the same experiment with wine, too.) But either way it will probably be very expensive and difficult to repeat the next time out. What's an enthusiast who just wants a wee dram he can call his own to do?
Enter Whisky Blender. Operated by Drew Nicolson and Andy Davidson with the aid of Master of Malt John Lamond, this Scotland-based outfit lets anyone in the free-drinking world make his own blended whisky. The company has stocks of seven whiskys (some are single malts, some aren't, and none are revealed by name), which you mix and match to develop your own customized blend, 10 ml at a time. The catch is that you only have Lamond's tasting notes to go on, and these are all both fanciful and delicious-sounding. (Who could turn down "creamy smooth with a taste of buttery vanilla?")
Being turned loose in the Whisky Blender website is both like Christmas morning and terribly daunting at the same time. Now, I have blended whiskeys on several occasions, but always with live samples you could nose and taste and tinker with as you went along, adding this or that or starting over if things weren't working out. That's hard enough. "Blending blind" is far trickier.
