Thursday, May 23, 2024

Elevating Whiskey Evaluations to Achieve a New, Higher Perspective

 

Elevating Whiskey Evaluations to Achieve a New, Higher Perspective


George F Manska, CR&D Arsilica, Inc.


Whiskey glasses: Until recently, spirits drinkers have widely accepted two basic shapes: the iconic tulip and the tumbler. Far more accepted is the tulip, an evolutionary descendant of the tiny copita sherry glass. Characterized by tiny rims too small to insert the nose and small bowl diameters to prevent swirling, tulips give no choice or possibility of separating pungent, anesthetic, nose-numbing ethanol from the aroma profile, and in fact, tulips concentrate headspace ethanol aromas to 65 to 75%, with 2 to 3% character aromas, the rest being air and 2 to 4% water, due to the high volatility of ethanol.

State of the Art: Whiskey evaluation and appreciation in its current state has become a status participation game designed to replace your personal opinion with high-powered marketing and buying suggestions. It exists solely because whiskey drinkers encourage and unconsciously demand it by prioritizing pungent olfactory ethanol over discovery, enjoyment, and discussion; add to that a general propensity to let someone else make your decisions because thinking objectively “hurts your brain.” Gurus, mavens, and competitions help guide drinkers only because drinkers insist on confusing the pungency of ethanol with characteristic aroma and flavor, and many equate high ABV with quality.

Bio:  George F Manska, CR&D, Arsilica, Inc.

Qualifications:  Published sensory science researcher, entrepreneur. BSME, NEAT glass co-inventor

Mission: Replace myth and misinformation with scientific truth through consumer education.  

More Information: www.theneatglass.com/shop

No comments:

Post a Comment

The Amazing Diversity of the Whiskey Drinker

 The Amazing Diversity of the Whiskey Drinker George F Manska, CR&D Arsilica, Inc. Let’s go a little deeper into the psyche of the whisk...