Pin It

Whiskyfest 


10.15.08


 Alastair Bland 

An air of high sophistication filled the ballroom of the San Francisco Marriott on Friday, Oct. 10, as my brother-in-law and I bumbled about among echelons of society we had only read about in books by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Women wore pearly necklaces and dresses that reached the floor. Men with scarves about their necks looked somber until a passing busboy dropped a plate of chèvre and incited a sincere laugh. But this was not an anthropological fieldtrip; this was the second annual San Francisco Whiskyfest.

We decided to sample the oldest whiskeys in the house, which seemed a gentlemanly approach. We began at Duncan Taylor, where the suited rep was serving industry standard quarter-ounce pours of four whiskeys between 16 and 37 years of age. The 21-year-old bore a portlike aroma and, at 127 proof, seared the mouth. Tears streamed from our eyes, we choked, coughed and reeled, we clutched at the curtains to keep our balance, and we knew, surely, that this was excellent stuff.

I elbowed for a space at the table of Highland Park and managed a sample of the 12-year-old, then the 30-year stuff. A rube such as I who is firmly adjusted to softer spirits expects an 18-year difference in the age of two beverages to be brilliant and jolting. Alas, the thirty-something was merely a degree richer and a shade darker, more like a 20-year-old.

Much to our rapture, beer was served in the ballroom's southwest corner. There is a mantra I recall from college: "Liquor before beer, never fear," though my brother-in-law swore it was "Beer after liquor, never sicker." We took a gamble, and at the table of Quebec's Unibroue downed glass after glass of cool, soothing brew.   


Quick dining snapshots by Bohemian staffers.


Winery news and reviews.


Food-related comings and goings, openings and closings, and other essays for those who love the kitchen and what it produces.


Recipes for food that you can actually make.


Comments (0)

Subscribe to this thread:

Add a comment

Latest in Dining

  • First Crescent

    Moonlight's Brian Hunt (finally) set to open tasting room in Santa Rosa
    • May 15, 2013
  • Poached Eggs & Pasta

    • May 15, 2013
  • Kitchen Call

    At culinary boot camp, wounded veterans find healing
    • May 8, 2013
  • More »

More by Alastair Bland

  • Bird Call

    While Caltrans claims it's fixed the problem, entangled cliff swallows in Petaluma keep dying
    • Apr 24, 2013
  • More »

Find It

Boho Beat

May 18: Loveline Reunion at the Uptown Theater

May 18: Alpha Bitch Soup at the Redwood Cafe

May 16: Walter Mosley at Book Passage

More »

Facebook Activity

Most Commented

  • Fresh Blood

    Barolo's Angelo Chambrone turning heads as youngest chef in Napa Valley
    • Mar 27, 2013
  • I'm Just a Po'Boy

    Parish Cafe brings traditional New Orleans sandwiches and breakfasts to Healdsburg
    • Feb 27, 2013
  • More »

Twitter

Read more @nbaybohemian

Copyright © 2013 Metro Newspapers. All rights reserved.

Website powered by Foundation