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The 1975’s Matty Healy Enters His Emo Grandpa Era In Prosthetics For The ‘Oh Caroline’ Music Video

The 1975 returned today with a new music video for their poppy romantic song, “Oh Caroline,” from the band’s recent acclaimed album, Being Funny In A Foreign Language.

While they are currently still touring across the US as lead singer Matty Healy causes more chaos onstage, this latest video finds him wreaking emotional havoc instead. Donning full prosthetics to transform into an old man reminiscing on a lost love, Healy lets fans literally see what his grandpa era will look like.

The video for “Oh Caroline” pans between the past and present, as Healy (in his younger, current form) performs the song with the rest of the band at a club. Alluding to grief, there is also a powerful dancing scene that finds Healy with a female performer before he remembers the same choreography in old age — except he is alone.

In traditional fashion, there’s cigarette smoking and dancing on tables. At the end of the day, she was probably put off by Healy’s meat-eating shenanigans.

“You don’t need to have lived a story to write one,” Healy told Apple Music about the song. “Caroline is whoever you want it to be – you can change that name in your head.”

Watch The 1975’s new music video for “Oh Caroline” above.

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ESPN’s Zach Lowe Ripped Shots On ‘NBA Today’ After Croatia Beat Brazil At The World Cup

After Croatia’s stunning victory against Brazil in the World Cup quarterfinal, Zach Lowe went on NBA Today decked out in a Luka Modric Croatia jersey. Lowe, a Croatia supporter who tweeted his excitement about the win, has been sporting the jersey on the show during the World Cup, and after the win over the favorites in the tournament, he took a second to flex.

At one point, Lowe just straight up started ripping shots, because the World Cup is an incredible thing that just does this to people.

Croatia entered the match as significant underdogs to a Brazilian side that had danced their way through the tournament. Brazil couldn’t crack the Croatian defense through 90 minutes, and in extra time, they finally broke through with a brilliant goal by Neymar that looked to be the decisive moment that would put them through to the semifinal.

However, in the 117th minute, Bruno Petković scored an equalizer on a shot that deflected off of Brazilian defender Marquinhos — if the NBA Today producers want an Emmy, we highly recommend that they find and air footage of Lowe watching and reacting to the goal.

In penalties, the Croatians calmly converted four, while Brazil missed their first and Marquinhos hit the post in brutal fashion to send them home for good. Croatia will move on to face Argentina — which likewise won a thriller — in the semifinal, while Lowe gets to sport the Croatia jersey on air for another week.

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The Absolute Best Bourbon Whiskeys (At Every Price Point) To Give As Gifts

‘Tis the season for a good bottle of bourbon whiskey. The corn-fueled American whiskey is the perfect gift for many reasons, from the deliciousness to the complexity of the brown sauce. But the best reason that bourbon whiskey is a great gift is that it hits every price point. You can check every level of gift price-taggery off of your shopping list with a different bottle of bourbon at a different price point while being confident you’re getting something special.

Breaking down all the bourbon fit for gifting isn’t always the easiest thing to do though since there are about a gazillion bottles on the shelves these days. That’s where I come in with a little bit of expertise. As a full-time whiskey writer, spirits judge, and whiskey consultant, I have access to so much bourbon from the bad to the mediocre to the good to the transcendent. So I’m going to name some true gems for you and whomever you’re shopping for.

For this list, I’m sectioning these bourbon bottles out by price instead of ranking them (they’re all good whiskeys, folks). There are five options in each of the five price points from cheap ($30 or less) to out-of-this-world prices ($250 and up) and in between. If you have a lot of bourbon whiskey lovers in your life, you’ll be able to find a bottle for all of them from this list. Lastly, I tried to keep these bottles findable. That said, the higher-end bottles are going to cost a lot for access but it’s the gift-giving season so that’s just part of the deal.

Let’s dive in!

Also Read: The Top 5 UPROXX Bourbon Posts Of The Last Six Months

$0-$30 Bottles For A Co-Worker

Jim Beam Single Barrel

Jim Beam Single Barrel
Beam Suntory

ABV: 54%

Buy Here: $24

The Whiskey:

Jim Beam’s single-barrel bottlings are pulled from single barrels that hit just the right spot of taste, texture, and drinkability, according to the master distillers at Beam. That means this juice is pulled from less than 1% of all barrels in Beam’s warehouses, making this an exceptional bottle at a bafflingly affordable price.

Tasting Notes:

You’re greeted with vanilla pound cake drizzled with salted caramel, mulled wine spices, and a cherry hand pie with powdered sugar icing that’s just touched with dark chocolate and maybe some broom bristles and corn husks. The taste leans into floral honey cut with orange oils next to sticky toffee pudding and cherry tobacco packed into an old leather pouch. There’s a hint of coconut cream pie next to woody winter spices on the finish with a touch more of that cherry tobacco married to salted dark chocolate all layered with dry sweetgrass and cedar bark.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a great bottle for someone who likes shots at the bar and maybe the odd old fashioned and is looking to get into whiskey a little more. It’s familiar yet a little bit more refined to help develop a palate.

1792 Small Batch

1792 Small Batch
Sazerac Company

ABV: 46.85%

Buy Here: $29

The Whiskey:

This whiskey from Barton 1792 Distillery is a no-age-statement release made in “small batches.” The mash is unknown but Sazerac does mention that it’s a “high rye” mash bill, which could really mean anything. The juice is batched from select barrels and then proofed down and bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

The nose opens with a woody cherry bark next to sour apple pies, distiller’s beer, and caramel candies next to vanilla cream with a counterpoint of cumin and dry chili lurking in the deeper reaches of the nose. The palate opens with a Cherry Coke feel next to rich and buttery toffee, vanilla malts, and sharp Hot Tamales cinnamon candy with a nod toward allspice and root beer. The end is soft and lush with vanilla smoothness leading to black cherry tobacco braided with cedar bark and wicker.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a great bottle for a whiskey lover who doesn’t have a big collection. The unique bottle — and quality juice at the price point — is always a welcome addition to any home bar cart.

Elijah Craig Small Batch

Heaven Hill

ABV: 47%

Buy Here: $26

The Whiskey:

This is Elijah Craig’s entry-point bottle. The mash is corn-focused, with more malted barley than rye. The whiskey is then rendered from “small batches” of barrels to create this proofed-down version of the iconic brand.

Tasting Notes:

The nose opens with a hint of taco seasoning mix next to vanilla malts, caramel apple, and a touch of fresh mint. The taste opens with smooth vanilla and spicy winter spice mix that’s cinnamon and allspice heavy with a touch of anise next to oaky tobacco. The end has a nice woodiness that leans more toward pine tar and broom bristles with a soft and sweet vanilla cream cut with toffee and vanilla lattes.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This bottle is great for what it is but really shines as a cocktail base. So grab this one for the home mixologist in your life.

Jefferson’s Very Small Batch

Jefferson's Reserve
Jeffersons Reserve

ABV: 41.5%

Buy Here: $27

The Whiskey:

This is a sourced bourbon from around Kentucky. The age, mash, and vital details are undisclosed. What we do know is that the team at Jefferson’s spends a lot of time tinkering with their barrels to create accessible and affordable bourbons.

Tasting Notes:

This opens pretty thin with hints of caramel, vanilla pods, and maybe a touch of leather and oak with a mild berry vibe. The palate is either subtle or thin … I can’t decide. There are notes of classic bourbon caramel and vanilla countered by a hint of stewed apple, buttery toffee, and maybe a hint of nutmeg. The end stays pretty mild but does build to a nice finish full of classic bourbon notes.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a soft and very bespoke bottle of bourbon for the casual drinker who wants likes easy drinking pours and not hardcore high-proof bombs.

Evan Williams Single Barrel

Heaven Hill

ABV: 43.3%

Buy Here: $30

The Whiskey:

This is Heaven Hill’s hand-selected single barrel Evan Williams expression. The juice is from a single barrel, labeled with its distillation year, proofed just above 86, and bottled as is.

Tasting Notes:

This has a really nice nose full of woody cherry, salted caramel with a tart apple edge, and a soft leatheriness. The palate feels and tastes “classic” with notes of wintry spices (eggnog especially) with a lush creaminess supported by soft vanilla, a hint of orange zest, and plenty of spicy cherry tobacco. The end is supple with a hint of tart apple tobacco with a light caramel candy finish.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This also comes with some serious name recognition thanks to Evan Williams Black Label dominating the bar scene. This takes a known commodity and refines it enough to make it something truly special for an amazing price thanks to true refinement on the palate.

$30-$50 Bottles For A Good Friend

Puncher’s Chance Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Puncher's Chance
Punchers Chance

ABV: 45%

Buy Here: $32

The Whiskey:

This is a celebrity-owned bourbon from UFC’s Bruce Buffer. The juice in the bottle is a blend of four to six-year-old bourbons from Kentucky that are touched with a little proofing water after blending.

Tasting Notes:

This has a slightly tannic nose (think old, red-wine-soaked oak) with woody vanilla, nutmeg, and a lush vibe. The palate mixes up the sweet vanilla with sweet yet sharp spice, some dark chocolate, and a hint of orange zest. The end combines everything into a lush finish that highlights old oak, soft nutmeg, and a soft orange-chocolate vibe with a hint of clove and anise.

Who It’s Perfect For:

If you know a UFC fan, this is the bottle to get.

Jack Daniel’s Bonded

Jack Daniel's Bonded
Brown-Forman

ABV: 50%

Buy Here: $44

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is from Jack’s bonded warehouse. The mash of 80% corn, 12% barley, and 8% rye is twice distilled before it’s run through Jack’s very long Lincoln County process of sugar maple charcoal filtration. The spirit then goes into the barrel for at least four years — per bonded law — before it’s batched, cut down with that Jack Daniel’s limestone cave water, and bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Yellow sheet cake with vanilla frosting leads the way on the nose with dry cherry candy, new leather jackets, sweet fir bark, and a hint of orange tobacco. The palate is full of still-warm apple fritters with plenty of winter spice and a sugar glaze that hits a moment of nutmeg-rich creamy eggnog. The mid-palate veers away from all of that with a sweet white grits vibe with brown sugar and butter that’s topped with stewed cinnamon apples and a raisin or two. The finish mellows toward a Cherry Hostess Pie stored in a cedar box with a leaf or two of sticky pipe tobacco.

Who It’s Perfect For:

There’s bound to be a Jack Daniel’s fan somewhere in your friend circle. This new release is a big step up from Old No. 7 and is truly a tasty and complex whiskey.

Knob Creek Small Batch Aged 9 Years

Beam Suntory

ABV: 50%

Buy Here: $46 (one-liter)

The Whiskey:

This is Jim Beam’s small batch entry point into the wider world of Knob Creek. The juice is the low-rye mash aged for nine years in new oak in Beam’s vast warehouses. The right barrels are then mingled and cut down to 100 proof before being bottled in new, wavy bottles.

Tasting Notes:

The nose on this feels classic with a bold sense of rich vanilla pods, cinnamon sharpness, buttered and salted popcorn, and a good dose of cherry syrup with a hint of cotton candy. The palate mixes almond, orange, and vanilla into a cinnamon sticky bun with a hint of sour cherry soda that leads to a nice Kentucky hug on the mid-palate. That warm hug fades toward black cherry root beer, old leather boots, porch wicker, and a sense of dried cherry/cinnamon tobacco packed into an old pine box.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a quintessential whiskey for novices and whiskey nerds alike. It delivers a great and deep flavor palate that always slaps.

George Dickel Tennessee Bottled in Bond Whisky Fall 2008 Aged 13 Years

Screen-Shot-2021-08-19-at-4.35.35-PM.jpg
Diageo

ABV: 50%

Buy Here: $43

The Whisky:

Nicole Austin has been killing it with these bottled-in-bond releases from George Dickel. This release is a whiskey that was warehoused in the fall of 2008. 13 years later, this juice was bottled at 100 proof (as per the bottled-in-bond law) and left to rest. This fall, new releases of that Tennessee juice were sent out to much acclaim.

Tasting Notes:

Another classic nose! Maple syrup on buttery pecan waffles leads toward apple chips, old leather, and a mix of winter spices and sour cherry vanilla wafers. The palate leans into an apple pie with plenty of nuts, spices, and raisins next to malted vanilla milkshakes, blueberry cotton candy, and a hint of dark chocolate milk powder. The end has a hint of dry anise mixed with cherry and brown sugar with a slight nuttiness leading toward a cherry-cinnamon tobacco finish.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a great whiskey for a whiskey aficionado who knows all the awards bourbons and niche stuff that’s actually really good for a great price.

Eagle Rare 10

Screen-Shot-2021-08-18-at-2.08.54-PM.jpg
Sazerac Company

ABV: 45%

Buy Here: $49

The Whiskey:

This might be one of the most beloved (and still accessible) bottles from Buffalo Trace. This juice is made from their very low rye mash bill. The whiskey is then matured for at least ten years in various parts of the warehouse. The final mix comes down to barrels that hit just the right notes to make them “Eagle Rare.” Finally, this one is proofed down to a fairly low 90 proof.

Tasting Notes:

Old leather boots, burnt orange rinds, oily sage, old oak staves, and buttery toffee round out the nose. Marzipan covered in dark chocolate opens the palate as floral honey and ripe cherry lead to a winter cake vibe full of raisins, dark spices, and toffee sauce. The end has a balance of all things winter treats as the marzipan returns and the winter spice amp up alongside a hint of spicy cherry tobacco and old cedar.

Who It’s Perfect For:

A bottle of this would make any whiskey lover happy. It’d probably make a whiskey novice ecstatic.

$50-$100 Bottles For A Beloved Family Member

Wild Turkey Rare Breed Barrel Proof

Wild Turkey

ABV: 58.4%

Buy Here: $54

The Whiskey:

This is the mountaintop of what Wild Turkey can achieve. This is a blend of the best barrels that are married and bottled untouched. That means no filtering and no cutting with water. This is a classic bourbon with nowhere to hide.

Tasting Notes:

This opens like a dessert table during the holidays with crème brûlée next to a big sticky toffee pudding with orange zest sprinkled over the top next to a bushel of fresh mint. The palate hits an early note of pine resin as the orange kicks up towards a bold wintry spice, soft vanilla cream, and a hint of honeyed cherry tobacco. The end keeps the winter spices front and center as a lush pound cake feeling leads to soft notes of cherry-spiced tobacco leaves folded into an old cedar box with a whisper of old vanilla pods lurking in the background.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a very hyped bourbon for a reason, it’s truly delicious and wonderfully priced (still).

Chattanooga Whiskey Bottled In Bond Vintage Series Fall 2018 Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Chattanooga BiB
Chattanooga Whiskey

ABV: 50%

Buy Here: $53

The Whisky:

The latest seasonal drop from Tennessee’s Chattanooga Whiskey is another great. The juice is a blend of four of their mash bills. 30% comes from mash bill SB091, which is a mix of yellow corn, malted rye, caramel malted barley, and honey malted barley. Another 30% comes from mash bill B002, which has yellow corn, hardwood smoked malted barley (smoked with beech, mesquite, apple, or cherry), caramel malted barley, caramel malted, and honey malted barley. The next 20% is mash bill B005, which is yellow corn, malted wheat, oak smoked malted wheat, and caramel malted wheat. And the last 20% is from mash bill R18098, which is yellow corn, pale malted barley, naked malted oats, double roasted caramel malted barley, peated malted barley, cherrywood smoked malted barley, chocolate malt, and de-husked chocolate malt.

Tasting Notes:

Cinnamon, brown butter sugar, walnut, and raisins meld on the nose with some vanilla to create a moist oatmeal cookie next to buckwheat pancakes griddled in brown butter and topped with apple butter, and maybe some apricot jam with a dash of nutmeg, dark chocolate shavings, and creamy vanilla whipped cream. The palate leans into cherry hand pies and vanilla wafers with a counter of dried wild sage, orchard tree bark, and meaty dates. The end has a sharp turn into dried red chili pepper cut with pipe tobacco, dark chocolate bars, cedar bark, burnt orange, and lime leaves with this whisper of cinnamon cookies at the very end.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is the whiskey you get a true whiskey nerd. It’s so unique and complex. It’s kind of like getting someone a story and a bottle that they can enjoy on several levels.

Old Ezra 7 Year

Old Ezra 7
Luxco

ABV: 58.5%

Buy Here: $92

The Whiskey:

This brand from Luxco is still sourced juice though they did start distilling their own in 2018. This bottle is a seven-year-old blend of barrels with a bourbon mash bill of 78 percent corn, 12 percent malted barley, and ten percent rye, which just so happens to be Heaven Hill’s bourbon mash bill. These barrels are blended down and left as-is at cask strength for bottling.

Tasting Notes:

This is a pretty classic bourbon from nose to finish with a strong sense of rich caramel, pancakes with plenty of vanilla, sweet oak, wet brown sugar, and a whiff of cherry tobacco. The palate leans into the woody brown spices as a dark cherry vibe sweetens the mid-palate. The end circles back to that sweet oak and spicy cherry tobacco on a short finish.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is another great gift bottle for whiskey lovers in the know since this is a very highly awarded and beloved bourbon.

Woodford Reserve Double Oaked

Brown-Forman

ABV: 43.2%

Buy Here: $60

The Whiskey:

This expression takes the standard bourbon above and gives it a finishing touch. The bourbon is blended and moved into new barrels that have been double-toasted but only lightly charred. The juice spends a final nine months resting in those barrels before proofing and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

The nose opens with blackberries and marzipan next to toffee and honey with a sense of pitchy firewood in the background. The palate adds Nutella to the mix with dried tart berries and apple cider next to burnt toffee and cinnamon bark. The end arrives with a sense of woody and spicy tobacco next to creamed honey and old nutshells.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a sleeper hit. It’s from a huge brand, sure, but it’s also just really good whiskey that even the biggest snobs admittedly like.

Russell’s Reserve Single Barrel Bourbon

Campari Group

ABV: 55%

Buy Here: $82

The Whiskey:

This is a high water mark of what standard Wild Turkey can achieve. The Russells select the “honey barrels” (those special barrels that are as much magic as craft) from their rickhouses for single barrel bottling. The resulting whiskey is non-chill filtered but is cut down slightly to proof with that soft Kentucky water.

Tasting Notes:

Vanilla cream spiked with orange oils and sprinkled with toasted coconut mingle with spicy oak and buttery cake on the nose with an underpinning of winter spices by way of a sour mulled wine. The palate opens with easy notes of marzipan, subtle dried roses, vanilla pods, more winter spices, and singed cherry bark. The end arrives with a sense of Almond Joy next to cherry tobacco dipped in chili-infused dark chocolate with a flake of salt and pinch of cedar dust and old leather saddles.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This premium side brand from Wild Turkey is a great step up for any fan of Wild Turkey 101, of which there are many.

$100-$250 Bottles To REALLY Impress Someone

Colonel E.H. Taylor Small Batch Bottled In Bond Straight Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey

Sazerac Company

ABV: 50%

Buy Here: $149

The Whiskey:

Buffalo Trace’s Colonel E.H. Taylor, Jr. Small Batch is an entry point to the other 12 expressions released under the E.H. Taylor, Jr. label. The whiskey is a blend of barrels that meet the exact right flavor profiles Buffalo Trace’s blenders are looking for in a classic bottled-in-bond bourbon for Taylor.

Tasting Notes:

The nose opens with a lush and creamy grit vibe with spicy cinnamon and clove next to pecans, maple syrup, singed cherry bark, and old lawn furniture with dead leaves strewn about. The taste hits on a buttery toffee vibe with a dark and old leatheriness next to dark chocolate tobacco, dried ancho chili peppers, and more of that sharp woody cinnamon with a whisper of salted black licorice lurking in the background. The end has a sense of salted caramel and cinnamon candy next to malted vanilla ice cream, huckleberry pie, and dark cherry tobacco rolled into an old leather pouch.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This likely isn’t going to be on your liquor store shelf so you’ll need to order it. Still, this is a damn near perfect whiskey gift at this price point.

BLACKENED x Wes Henderson Master of Whiskey Series

BLACKENED Wes Anderson
BLACKENED

ABV: 58.1%

Buy Here: $179

The Whiskey:

This new collaboration from Metallica’s whiskey finds Master Distillers Rob Dietrich of BLACKENED working with Wes Henderson, Co-Founder of Angel’s Envy, to create a new expression. The whiskey is a classic Kentucky bourbon aged for six years. Those barrels are vatted and then refilled into white port wine casks for a final rest. Finally, the port barrels are batched and the whiskey is bottled at cask strength.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a good bit of fruit on the nose with pear skins, rum-raisin, and burnt orange next to dried-up old cinnamon sticks and tobacco leaves. The palate stews the pear with honey and wintry spices while a hint of dried chili flake leads to walnut cake and a very mild echo of old wet straw. The end is lush and full of oranges studded with cloves and allspice next to pear tobacco and old cedar humidors.

Who It’s Perfect For:

Is there a Metallica fan in your life? This is the gift for them.

Bardstown Bourbon Company Chateau de Laubade Blended Straight Bourbon Whiskies Finished in Armagnac Casks

BBC Bourbon
Bardstown Bourbon Company

ABV: 53.5%

Buy Here: $184

The Whiskey:

This bourbon is a blend of 12-year-old, low-rye bourbon from Kentucky and 10-year-old, very-low-rye bourbon from Tennessee. The whiskeys were re-barreled into Armagnac casks from the famed Chateau de Laubade. One set spent two years mellowing on the bottom floor of the rickhouse while another set spent 16 months mellowing on the top floor. After that, the barrels were vatted and bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

This hits on complex notes on the nose from old leather, dried sage, cellared oak, roasted almonds rolled in toffee, sultanas, and then deep winter spice: freshly ground nutmeg, mace, cardamom, sharp cinnamon. The palate has a silky vanilla foundation with more sultanas over top, fresh and meaty dates, ginger snaps, and prunes mingled. The end has a gingerbread vibe next to cherry bark and grape must with more of those spices pouring into an old cedar humidor that used to hold tobacco.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a bespoke whiskey that delivers an incredible flavor profile, making it perfect for the bourbon drinker who’s always looking to go deeper.

Remus Repeal Reserve Series VI 2022 Medley

Remus Reserve Serie VI
Luxco

ABV: 50%

Buy Here: $120

The Whiskey:

This year’s Remus Reserve is a mix of six to 14-year-old bourbons. Buckle in. The blend is made from 2% of a 2008 bourbon with a 21% rye mash, 27% from a 2012 bourbon with a 21% rye mash, 29%from a 2014 bourbon with a 21% rye mash, 17% from a 2012 bourbon with a 36% rye mash bill, and 25% from a 2014 bourbon with that same very high rye mash bill. Once vatted, the whiskey is just touched with water for proofing and bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

The nose on this one is complex and meaders through mint fields and caramel apple stands as hints of old boot leather, plum jam, winter spice, and a hint of sweet oak round things out. The palate opens with a rich toffee before a warmth takes over with a soft spice (nutmeg and allspice) before woody vanilla and creamed honey take over. The end feels like a handful of candied fruits wrapped up in leathery tobacco leaves with a hint of cedar bark and dried mint in the background.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a high-end bottle that delivers truly deep flavor notes while still feeling accessible, making it perfect for someone who’s into bourbon but not fanatical about it.

Weller Antique 107

Sazerac Company

ABV: 53.5%

Buy Here: $159

The Whiskey:

This is a non-age-statement bourbon that’s called “Old Weller Antique” (OWA) by those who love the old-school vibes of the expression’s previous iteration. The ripple with this expression is the higher proof. The barrels are vatted and barely proofed down to 107 proof before bottling (the entry proof is 114).

Tasting Notes:

The nose opens with a lovely sense of vanilla pods and orange blossom with a hint of old saddle leather and cedar bark next to wild sage, cinnamon and caramel apple fritters, and salted black licorice with a bundle of holiday spices and barks tied up with burnt orange and pine. The palate is lush with a cream soda float with malted vanilla ice cream cut with cherries, dark chocolate chips, and espresso flakes next to cinnamon cherry bark tobacco on the mid-palate. The end dives toward a thick braid of cedar bark, sage, and blackberry tobacco with a thin line of sweetgrass and vanilla pods woven in there.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is a rare bottle that you might actually be able to find for a little cheaper than listed (but that’s really rare now). Still, this is another bottle that you get for the whiskey drinking in the know in your life. It’s instant happiness upon opening up this as a gift.

$250 and Above Bottles For “The One”

Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Bottled In Bond

Wild Turkey Master's Keep Bottled In Bond
Campari Group

ABV: 50%

Buy Here: $899

The Whiskey:

This is the same whiskey as Master’s Keep 17-Year. In this case, after vatting of minimum-17-year-old barrels, the whiskey was only proofed down to 50% or 100-proof for bottling as per bottled in bond laws. The resulting whiskey is then bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a bold nose of spicy Christmas cakes spiked with orange oils, candied cherries, and dried apples next to vanilla pods and worn saddle leather that leads to this subtle hint of fresh cinnamon rolls with a cream cheese frosting cut with lemon and vanilla. The palate is the epitome of smoothness with a subtle warmth derived from woody winter spices — star anise, clove, nutmeg, cinnamon — that then branches toward this whisper of burnt sugars and fats from an old brisket smoker with a hint of salted red taffy and singed marshmallow next to vanilla pound cake with a hint of poppy seeds. The end has a sweet cinnamon candy flourish before smoldering wild sage and old boots arrive with a dark chocolate espresso cherry tobacco layers into an old cedar box with a hint of black dirt lurking in the distant background.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is the mountaintop of the Wild Turkey line, so if you know someone who loves Turkey, this is the play.

Michter’s Single Barrel Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey 10 Years Old

Michters Distillery

ABV: 47.2%

Buy Here: $512

The Whiskey:

The juice in this bottle is a little under wrap. Michter’s is currently distilling and aging its own whiskey, but this is still sourced. The actual barrels sourced for these single barrel expressions tend to be at least ten years old with some rumored to be closer to 15 years old (depending on the barrel’s quality, naturally). Either way, the juice goes through Michter’s bespoke filtration process before a touch of Kentucky’s iconic soft limestone water is added, bringing the bourbon down to a very crushable 94.4 proof.

Tasting Notes:

The nose draws you in with big notes of fresh leather, sweet cedar bark, tart cherries and currant, burnt orange, salted caramel, spiced Christmas cake, and a hint of blackberry jam on a stack of sourdough pancakes grilled off in butter (or maybe I’m just hungry for breakfast?!). The taste leans into a lush vanilla tobacco warm with dark chocolate-covered espresso beans next to marzipan, orange blossoms, and brandy-soaked cherries with a hint of black pepper spice. The finish is velvety and supple with a black cherry and cinnamon/nutmeg spiced tobacco leaf braided with old wicker canes and dry cedar bark next to orchard wood and burnt marshmallows.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This bottle is perfect for the whiskey drinker who loves classic vibes and deep complexity from a beloved brand.

King of Kentucky Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Single Barrel (5th Edition)

King of Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey
Brown-Forman

ABV: 65.3%

Buy Here: $2,595

The Whiskey:

This year’s King of Kentucky is a 15-year-old bourbon made from a mash of 79% corn, 11% rye, and 10% malted barley. The spirit — made at the Brown-Forman Distillery in West Louisville (Shively) — went into the barrel on December 18, 2009, at 125% entry-proof. After 15 long years, only about 35% of the whiskey was left in the barrel. 43 single barrels were then chosen for this release and individually bottled as-is, yielding about 3,500 bottles of King of Kentucky.

Tasting Notes:

This opens very tannic-y (and old) with a mix of pitchy firewood, old honey barrels, dried cranberry, nutmeg, old vanilla husks, cornmeal pancake batter, and a hint of chili-laced tobacco. The taste is bold with a hot spice mix of cinnamon and dried anchos that’s tempered by lush vanilla and creamy dark chocolate with a hint of sweet cherry and old wicker rounding things out. The end is woody and full of potting soil with a hint of old chewing tobacco next to orchard wood.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is the whiskey for the bourbon fanatic in your life. It’s a true “holy shit” bottle both as a gift and on the palate.

Booker’s 2022-03 “Kentucky Tea Batch”

Booker's
Beam Suntory

ABV: 63.25%

Buy Here: $599

The Whiskey:

The third Booker’s of the year is a nod to “Kentucky Tea” which isn’t tea at all. It’s when you add a little whiskey to a glass of water and then that looks like tea. The whiskey in this case is a blend of bourbon barrels from seven locations across six different warehouses. The final product was bottled without any fussing at cask strength.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a clear sense of sour cherry and vanilla cookies on the nose with a supporting cast of dark tobacco packed into old cedar boxes with a rough and worn leatheriness tying everything together. The palate opens with a vanilla white cake frosted with cherry and chocolate — a bit like a Black Forest cake — that leads to orange oils, clove, and old pine boards with a touch of sap. The end has a fruitiness that leans towards a spicy star fruit with a fresh vibe next to light pear tobacco with a pine humidor edge.

Who It’s Perfect For:

If you know a Jim Beam super fan, then this is the ultimate gift for them since this is that whiskey refined to the highest degree.

Pappy Van Winkle’s Family Reserve 15 Years Old 2022 Release

Pappy 15
Sazerac Company

ABV: 53.5%

Buy Here: $6,199

The Whiskey:

This is where the “Pappy Van Winkle” line starts in earnest. The whiskey in this expression is pulled from barrels that are at least 15 years old. Once batched, the whiskey is just touched with water to bring it down to a sturdy 107-proof.

Tasting Notes:

The nose opens with freshly fried sourdough fritters dusted with ground almonds, sharp cinnamon, cloves, orange zest, burnt sugars, and maple frosting with a hint of old vanilla pods next to soft figs. The palate leans into rich toffee with a sense of minced meat pies covered in powdered sugar frosting right next to sticky toffee pudding with salted caramel, orange zest, and tons of brown wintry spice countered by a moment of sour mulled red wine cut with dark maple syrup. The end has a soft cedar vibe that leads to vanilla and dark cherry tobacco leaves and a hint of pine next to old white moss.

Who It’s Perfect For:

This is just a motherf*cking mic drop. Give this as a gift and you win the holidays.

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Malik Monk Is A Vital Part Of The Kings’ Elite Offense

The Sacramento Kings and their vast, innovative offense are one of the most dazzling nightly watches around the Association. De’Aaron Fox and Domantas Sabonis are playing like All-Stars. Kevin Huerter is en fuego. Keegan Murray and Harrison Barnes flank that trio with complementary scoring on the wings. The ball, flowing through Sabonis as the hub, pings across the floor. They race up the court at every chance.

And when they turn to the bench, there is Malik Monk to continue the waves of electricity. After a stellar year with the Los Angeles Lakers, Monk ventured northward to join Fox, his former collegiate teammate, in Sacramento. He was one of the NBA’s most prolific reserves in 2021-22 and has expanded upon that this season to fortify the Kings’ attack.

Through 23 games, the Arkansas native is averaging 14.8 points (60.3 percent true shooting), 4.1 assists, and 2.3 rebounds. He’s shooting a career-high 60.5 percent on two-pointers (6.5 points above league average, the best mark of his career). Despite playing 5.6 fewer minutes per game than last year, his 14.8 points eclipse his mark from 2021-22 by a full point. Per 100 possessions, he’s averaging a career-high 30.9 points. With some help from Davion Mitchell, he’s piloting Sacramento’s bench unit and doing it damn well.

The biggest differentiator between Monk as a Laker and Monk as a King is the level of responsibility he holds. His usage rate has swelled from 19.4 percent to 26.5 percent. Per 36 minutes, his touches are up from 58 to 65.1. He’s gone from largely being deployed as a multifaceted scorer to a legitimate secondary creator. He’s showcasing substantial strides in his playmaking — his assist rate is a career-high 27.5 percent (14.3 percent in 2021-22).

His chemistry with Sabonis, both in handoffs and angle pick-and-rolls, is palpable. Monk pitches punctual pocket passes, flicks wraparound feeds from either hand, and is fluent delivering reads off a live dribble. He’s a genuinely reliable facilitator nowadays rather than being a pure scorer with noteworthy flashes of playmaking.

Back in 2020-21, his final season with the Charlotte Hornets, Monk discovered the outside shooting stroke that made him such a coveted prospect and drilled 40.1 percent of his long balls. But to that point, ventures inside the arc he remained precarious. He was a career 47.3 percent two-point scorer, including 47.1 percent that year.

The past two seasons, Monk has remedied those concerns, especially this season. He’s washed away the finishing woes of his Charlotte tenure, cognizant of how to mitigate the shortcomings of his spindly frame, while also being tasked to engineer those chances less often. This year, he’s shooting a career-high 69 percent at the rim (79th percentile among wings).

Whether it’s leveraging his slippery handle into vigorous downhill forays or migrating off the ball, Monk is a constant source of paint pressure. He trampolines off the ground and is stupendously flexible. The way he either plows through or gyrates around rim protectors is uncanny. His solace in busy spaces enables him to thrive as a slasher. He hosts a flying trapeze show at the basket. There’s a vibe of controlled chaos in all he does, but it routinely results in profitable conclusions for the Kings.

Monk’s interior opportunities are derived from the stress he inflicts beyond the arc. While his 35.6 percent clip is only a hair above league average (35.5 percent), his volume and malleability paint him as a clearly high-value gunner. He’s adept on the move, will launch in the face of lively closeouts, and hoists 12 threes per 100 possessions.

Sacramento is sixth in three-point rate, and Monk’s a prominent component of that. The release is picturesque and snappy. He’s been particularly lethal on catch-and-shoots, canning 38.6 percent of his 83 looks. If the ball swings his way with an advantage, he will relish it.

When the Kings acquired Sabonis last winter, they had a vision for an elite offense. At that moment, though, they didn’t roster the personnel to actualize it. The offseason additions of Huerter, Murray, and Monk helped manifest the vision. They want Sabonis as the interior nucleus, a screening and DHO waterhole functioning in tandem with various ball-handlers and dangerous off-ball shooters. Versatility and spacing around the Lithuanian are paramount.

Monk is exactly that. He’ll commandeer some possessions and is simultaneously equipped to slide away from the action, capitalizing on whatever his teammates cook up. The Kings are scoring 114 points per 100 possessions when he’s on the hardwood. He ranks 51st in Offensive Estimated Plus-Minus (plus-1.8).

Sacramento’s stellar starting backcourt limits his minutes, but he’s been absurdly productive when he plays. Per 36 minutes, he’s averaging 23.6 points and 6.6 assists. He’s one of the league’s top reserves and might be its most impactful through early December. At the very least, he’s probably elicited the most joyful viewing experience of the bunch, flourishing as he further expands his game.

Still only 24, the bench might not suffice for him in the coming seasons. For now, however, it’s proving to be the ideal spot. He’s enjoying a feature role and helping extinguish the Kings’ 17-year playoff drought behind a vivacious offensive identity, one that he brightly amplifies.

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The Best New Hip-Hop This Week

The best new hip-hop this week includes albums, videos, and songs from A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, Mount Westmore, and more.

There is no question, this week’s new music Friday belongs to SZA and her long-awaited return in S.O.S., but that doesn’t mean there’s no new hip-hop to look forward to this weekend. In fact, depending on your taste, there might be too much good stuff (shout-out to AMPM) this close to the end of the year.

In addition to ASAP Rocky’s “Sh*ttin Me” video, this week, we got new songs from Blxst and Larry June, YG and Lil Wayne, Polo G, Russ, and more.

Here is the best of hip-hop this week ending December 9, 2022.

Albums/EPs/Mixtapes

A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie — Me Vs. Myself

a boogie wit da hoodie me vs myself
A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie

After pushing his album back — allegedly to duck Drake and 21 Savage, whose Her Loss was guaranteed to be a No. 1 — A Boogie returned with his fourth full-length project on Atlantic Records. Led by “B.R.O (Better Ride Out)” featuring Roddy Ricch, the album is a solid entry to his catalog.

Kamaiyah — Keep It Lit

kamaiyah keep it lit
Kamaiyah

Yaya is enjoying being independent and the freedom it gives her to release what she wants when she wants. Case in point: this seven-song EP, her second this year, continues her consistent tradition of turnt-up, Bay Area anthems.

Kool G Rap — Last Of A Dying Breed

kool g rap last of a dying breed
Kool G Rap

The Queens rap legend is 30-plus years deep into his career, but you won’t find a speck of rust on him — especially not in his set, his first since 2017. He raises up a few youngbloods and reunites with some of his fellow pioneers (Grandmaster Caz!), but he remains the star of the show.

Mount Westmore — Snoop Cube 40 Short

mount westmore snoop cube 40 short
Mount Westmore

Although the California supergroup ostensibly made its debut earlier this year with the NFT-only Bad MFs, they couldn’t just leave their fanbase hanging. Rather than chasing trends, they stick to their guns, and the album is all the better for it.

Stalley — Somebody Up There Loves Me

stalley somebody up there loves me
Stalley

I promise this isn’t meant to be hate, but I cannot for the life of me understand how rap fans just moved on from Stalley right as he got really good at rapping. He’s in a good groove now, and hopefully, the casual consistency of his independent releases will start garnering some of the buzz he genuinely deserves. Maybe this will be the one to do it.

Xian Bell — Crenshaw At Midnight

xian bell crenshaw at midnight
Xian Bell

The Los Angeles rapper/singer firmly established himself with some standout appearances on projects from the likes of Reason, Jayson Cash, and Katori Walker (the two former both appear here), but on his latest solo release, he makes himself the focus — and really earns that attention.

Singles/Videos

Meek Mill — “Don’t Give Up On Me” Feat. Fridayy

Well, this is a departure. Although Meek has been in mixtape mode lately, here, he slows it down a whole bunch for a ruminative track that works despite being way outside his usual wheelhouse.

Smoke DZA & Girl Talk — “Season”

Building on the chemistry from their April collaboration Full Court Press (which featured Wiz Khalifa and Big KRIT), Girl Talk teams up with Harlemite Smoke DZA once again for an upbeat, loft party-ready single that promises more gold from their partnership.

Tiron & Ayomari — “More Than Like”

Here’s a name we haven’t seen in quite some time. Once upon a time, Tiron & Ayomari were blog rap mainstays whose every release was met with excitement thanks to their willingness to experiment and get vulnerable. Times have changed, but fortunately, their chemistry remains as potent as ever.

Wynne — “Glass Slipper Flows”

Portland upstart Wynne takes a step into a new lane, grabbing a beat that wouldn’t sound out of place on a Drake album, and goes for broke, detailing her mindset as her profile gets higher on the back of relentless independent hustle.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Argentina Outlasted The Netherlands In Penalty Kicks In A Thrilling World Cup Quarterfinal

Argentina are moving on to the World Cup semifinal. After a shocking end to regulation in which the Netherlands drew level with essentially the final kick of injury time, neither side were able to find a breakthrough in extra time, setting up penalties in which a pair of players, Emiliano and Lisandro Martínez, were the heroes.

The Netherlands sent their captain, Virgil van Dijk, up first. The Liverpool star was unable to beat Emiliano Martínez, however, as the Argentinian goalkeeper who is known for his ability to stop penalties came up huge. Argentina’s response was a good one, with Lionel Messi stepping up to the spot and coolly slotting one past Andries Noppert.

With the Dutch behind the 8-ball, Steven Berghuis went first in the second round of penalties. But once again, Martínez was the hero and denied his effort.

Leandro Paredes went next for Argentina, and while Noppert guessed right, Paredes put the ball just out of the 6’8 goaltender’s reach.

Teun Koopmeiners became the first Dutch player to beat Martínez, who didn’t even dive to try to stop his effort. But Gonzalo Montiel was able to respond, as Noppert guessed incorrectly to put the Argentinians up, 3-1.

The heroics of Wout Weghorst, who scored twice to force extra time, put the Netherlands into this position, and Martínez was unable to stop his penalty. This meant that Enzo Fernández stepped up with a chance to put Argentina into the semis, but after a long run-up, he put the ball wide.

Luuk de Jong needed to score to keep the Netherlands alive, and once again, Martínez guessed wrong.

This put the weight of the world onto Lautaro Martínez, who would put Argentina through if he successfully converted. The Inter Milan forward was cool, calm, and collected, and even if Noppert guessed right, he had no shot of stopping the perfectly-placed penalty.

Now, the Argentinians are moving on to face Croatia in the semifinal on Tuesday.

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The Movie Version Of The ‘Mean Girls’ Musical Has A Cast That Will Try To Make Fetch Happen

For a 2004 teen movie about bullies, Mean Girls has had a substantial impact on the world. That idea alone is pretty funny considering that the movie was originally based on a self-help book aimed at parents who don’t understand how their teens work. But then it became a hit movie and helped launch the careers of Rachel McAdams and Amanda Seyfried, and subsequently became the first great movie of the MySpace age, where you could share gifs of your favorite teen idols saying “get in loser, we’re going shopping” and everyone would just accept that.

The movie spawned a (bad) sequel, and while rumors of a potential reunion with the original cast have been shot down, there is one part of Mean Girls that is stronger than ever, and those are the Broadway fans! The musical adaptation of Mean Girls became a smash in 2017, so now they are making a movie based on the Broadway musical based on the movie that was inspired by the book. And a lot of people are both excited and out of breath after reading the news.

The cast will include Angourie Rice as Cady, Auli’i Cravalho as Janis, Jaquel Spivey and Reneé Rapp. Rapp previously starred as the queen bee Regina George in the Broadway adaptation. Tina Fey will also return to write the script, with Lorne Michaels back to produce the film, which will head to Paramount+.

Even though this isn’t exactly the reboot fans were hoping for, any chance to make Fetch happen is welcome.

(Via The Hollywood Reporter)

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Paloma Mami Celebrates The Single Life In Her Comeback Video For ‘Síntomas De Soltera’

After nearly a year of not releasing new music of her own, Paloma Mami returned with her single “Síntomas De Soltera.” In the celebratory music video that was released today (December 9), the Chilean-American singer teamed up with Pailita and El Jordan 23.

Last year, Mami released her debut album Sueños De Dalí without any features. The LP featured her hits like “For Ya” and “Religiosa.” Outside of that, Mami only featured on other artists’ songs this past year. She jumped on the remix of “Ultra Solo” by fellow Chilean acts Polimá Westcoast and Pailita. Feid and De La Ghetto rounded out that global smash. Mami also featured on Junior H’s song “Veneno” from his Contingente album. Now she’s back with “Síntomas De Soltera.”

“Coming back after almost a year of not releasing music feels like a new beginning for me,” Mami said in a statement. “The way I’ve approached my music right now is very different than it was two years ago. I’m experimenting a bit with this new album, with the lyrics, and the flows, but it still feels very me and very Mami.”

For “Síntomas De Soltera,” Mami teamed up once again with Pailita and another rising Chilean act, El Jordan 23. While lyrically cutting an ex-lover down to size, she celebrates living the single life. The kiss-off anthem blends reggaeton beats with the alternative edge that Mami brings to the genre. She holds her own alongside Pailita and El Jordan 23 with her fierce flow. Mami makes a triumphant comeback with the empowering club banger. In the video, she dons a pink wig and parties with her collaborators in a warehouse.

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A New R. Kelly Album Appeared On DSPs, But It Wasn’t Uploaded By Him Or His Label

Surprise album releases have become pretty commonplace in the streaming era, but music fans were still baffled — and somewhat appalled — to see a new album from incarcerated R&B star R. Kelly on their streaming apps this morning. Furthermore, its title, I Admit It, raised more than a few eyebrows, considering he was convicted of both sex trafficking in New York and child porn in Chicago. So, how did a new R. Kelly album end up on streaming?

Billboard did a little digging and discovered that, although the credits appear to cite Sony Music’s Legacy Recordings as the responsible party, the label said that it was not involved at all. Sources at Legacy were conducting their own investigation with Apple, Spotify, and the rest of the streamers to figure out how the album was delivered.

Apparently, the actual upload seems to have come from Ingrooves, a distributor under the Universal Music Group umbrella. Ingrooves says that is “severing a relationship” with a label called Real Talk Entertainment, which released the album under a supposed subsidiary called Legacy Recordings — i.e. the same name as Sony’s imprint. This seems like a little sneaky maneuvering on behalf of whoever actually uploaded the album to make it seem like a legit release.

Sony, which dropped R. Kelly after the Lifetime docuseries Surviving R. Kelly spurred the #MuteRKelly movement, still owns his Zomba/Jive and RCA catalog of early recordings. Meanwhile, R. Kelly’s reps told Variety today that I Admit It, named for Kelly’s 20-minute 2018 track in which he admits to very little, was not uploaded by him. It looks like this might be another case of rogue fans or scammers uploading a fake album and trying to profit from the resulting publicity. Since the album has been removed from DSPs, it doesn’t look like a winning strategy at all.

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Gift-Worthy Bottles Of Tequila & Mezcal Plus Accessories For The Agave Fanatic In Your Life

We’re deep into the holiday shopping season and by now you’ve probably already picked up gifts for the gym rat, the world traveler, and big nerd in your family or friend circle. Now it’s time to pick up that gift for that person in your life who prefers to end the day with a nice slow sip of the good stuff.

Particularly, in this case, tequila or mezcal.

If you follow the world of spirits closely, you’re probably aware that the two agave-based spirits are having a bit of a moment right now and that’s because there have never been more great brands and labels producing mezcal and tequila as there are right now. So don’t beat yourself up if your last trip to the spirits aisle left you scratching your head about all these brands you’ve never heard of. Instead, let us help you out by pointing you toward some seriously great bottles that are sure to make great gifts plus a few tequila/mezcal-specific bar accessories that’ll up anyone’s mixologist game.

If you’re looking for other spirits outside of the agave-based as well as other kits and gear that the alcohol aficionado in your life would love, be sure to hit up our Ultimate Spirits Gift Guide for 2022. For now, let’s dive into 2022’s most gift-worthy bottles and accessories.

Part One: The Accessories

Riedel — Tequila Glass Set

Te
Amazon

Price: $40

If you’re not a hardcore tequila drinker, you’re probably totally unaware that tequila has its very own glass designed specifically to enhance the experience of slow sipping expensive aged expressions. Tequila glasses resemble champagne flutes and are designed to deliver the tequila evenly across the palate while allowing for the aromas to tantalize the nose giving a tasting experience that a shot glass just can’t match.

This two-glass set by Riedel is made from machine-blown crystal and carries just over six ounces. The tequila drinker in your life can now share a sip of the good stuff with their favorite person, which will hopefully be you!

Glassique Cadeau — Mezcal Copitas

TeqMez
Amazon

Price: $49.99

Just like tequila has a specialty glass for slow sipping, so does mezcal — it’s known as the copita. Like the tequila glass, the copita is engineered with the aroma of the spirit in mind with a wide shape that helps to aerate the spirit and open up its flavors and scent. This four-glass set by Glassique Cadeau is made from hand-blown glass, which might not be traditional (copitas are traditionally made of clay) but allow the liquid to show through and come packaged together in a reusable storage box, making each pour feel like an event when you bring the set out alongside a great bottle.

Geiserailie Wood Margarita Salt Rimmer

TeqMez
Amazon

Price: $16.49

A dedicated salt rimmer is the sort of bar tool that most people won’t be willing to shell out cash for but is insanely useful. Generally, a plate covered in salt will get you by, but a proper salt rimmer features a circular shape that will allow for a better and less wasteful distribution of salt. You can generally pick these up at any big box liquor store but what makes this one by Geiseralie special is that it’s equal parts function and fashion.

Featuring a solid wood build, this rimmer features precision grooves made for trapping liquid to keep it from spreading and making a mess and sports a removable lid that also acts as a cutting board for limes. It’s the tool the drinker in your life needs, even if he or she doesn’t know it yet.

EDITOR’S PICK: Artisan Citrus Juicer — Large

TeqMez
Verve Culture

Price:$150

This juicer is easier than a hand juicer and can handle bigger citrus. Sure, a hand juicer might do the trick with limes, but if your giftee loves tequila they probably really love palomas. And the best palomas come from hand juicing the grapefruit — that’s just not up for debate.

I personally own this juicer and it’s just so… easy: to squeeze, to clean, and to look at. Yes, there are slightly more compact products out there, but this one looks the coolest. And in the world of bar-based gifts, that certainly counts for something. – Steve Bramucci, Editor

Part One: The Bottles

Tequila — Fortaleza Reposado

Gift Worthy
Drizly

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $60

The Tequila:

Hailing from the famed Tequila Los Abuelos distillery (NOM 1493) Fortaleza is a near-perfect reposado tequila and will have even the most snobbish tequila sippers in your life wide-eyed with excitement about taking that first sip. Fortaleza uses traditional stone and brick ovens to roast their pinas before stone-crushing them the old-fashioned way.

Each lot is then individually aged in American Oak for seven months for a smooth and mellow texture and flavor.

Tasting Notes:

Well balanced between the bright and herbaceous characteristics of agave and the sweetened round qualities of American oak barrel aging, Fortaleza’s Reposado features an ever-shifting bouquet of flavors. On the onset, you get a vanilla smoothness with a hint of stone fruit and citrus with a subtle spicy earthy cinnamon spike on the aftertaste.

The Bottom Line:

Simply one of the finest reposado tequilas you and your loved ones will ever drink. A shocking value for the price.

Tequila — Jose Cuervo Reserva Da Familia Platino

Gift Worth Spirits
Jose Cuervo

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $61.99

The Tequila:

Jose Cuervo gets a lot of justified criticism, their baseline of tequilas is straight-up gross but the Reserva De la Familia line is something else entirely. This top-of-the-line series of expressions from Jose Cuervo follows the handcrafted techniques of the brand’s original master distiller and is produced from hand-harvested agave planted on the Cuervo estate’s richest volcanic soil.

Each bottle is numbered, dated, and wax sealed, also by hand. It’s a craft tequila in every step of its process, and the un-aged Platino is the perfect introduction to this underrated subset of the brand.

Tasting Notes:

Incredibly bright and vegetal as it first hits the palette but it almost immediately settles into a supremely smooth and oily mouthfeel. Notes of pineapple, pear and bell pepper tickle the taste buds before finishing with a bright citrus finish. It’s the perfect tequila for the agave fan who loves cocktails.

The Bottom Line:

Bright and floral, Jose Cuervo’s Reserva de la Familia will elevate any cocktail from great to astounding.

Tequila — Mijenta Reposado

Gift Worth Spirits
Mijenta

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $69.99

The Tequila:

Aside from its absolutely beautiful bottle, Mijenta’s reposado is a multi-award winning tequila, scoring a 99 at Tasting Panel, the Master Award at the 2022 Tequila and Mezcal Masters, and a gold medal from Tequila aficionado in 2021. This small batch spirit is aged for six months in American white oak, French oak, and French acacia casks via specifications from the famed tequila maestro Ana Maria Romero, resulting in an ultra-smooth and flavorful reposado that is among the best in this price range.

Tasting Notes:

Vanilla and honey dominate the nose and pull you in for a sip that takes your palette on a journey through roasted agave, floral honey, and a fruity medley of flavors that seems to shift with every drink. Mijenta never gets boring and you’ll find yourself reaching for another drink just to pin down the flavors until your glass is empty and you’re reaching for another pour.

The Bottom Line:

A small batch tequila with a bottle and liquid that is as beautiful to look at as it is to drink.

Siempre Exclusivo Vivo

Teq/Mez
Siempre

ABV: 47.5%

Price: $129.99

The Tequila:

Siempre’s entire line of expressions is pretty solid but this special Exclusivo Vivo bottle is on a whole other level of craft. Made from 100% Blue Weber agave from Arandas Jalisco, this plata tequila is made from agave cooked in stone brick ovens and goes through an open-air fermentation process following a traditional Peruvian method of distillation that utilizes fermented aguamiel (agave sap) with living yeast. The liquid is limited to just 9,000 bottles and was made in partnership with Master Tequileros Sergio Cruz and Adam Fodor.

Tasting Notes:

Noticeably peppery with a heavy cracked peppercorn flavor with hints of fresh citrus, apple skin, and mango. For a plata is goes down incredibly smooth with a supple buttery mouthfeel.

The Bottom Line:

Siempre’s finest tequila by a mile. A lot of care and craft goes into this bottle and it’s something that seasoned tequila drinkers will be able to pick up on at first sip.

Tequila — Eight Reserve

Gift Worth Spirits
Total Wine

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $199.99

The Tequila:

Kendall Jenner’s 818 tequila was already raising the bar for celebrity-owned tequila brands, but with Eight Reserve they’ve proven they are amongst the best of tequila brands, period, celebrity or otherwise. Not only is Eight Reserve a premium blend of añejo and extra añejo tequila, but it comes in a conversation-starting unique bottle shape that might not win you over visually but certainly will once you give it that first pour.

Tasting Notes:

Dangerously easy to drink, Eight Reserve is a wince-free ultra smooth aged tequila that has all the complexity sought after by tequila snobs without anything that would push away more casual drinkers. The initial taste brings together vanilla, cinnamon, chocolate, and cardamom in near equal balance before introducing subtle notes of fresh orange rind, butterscotch, and crushed raspberries.

The Bottom Line:

Simply the finest celebrity tequila brand in the business, Eight Reserve will appeal to the Kardashian/Jenner-obsessed people in your family and friend circle, as well as the hardcore tequila snobs.

Tequila — Herradura Selección Suprema Extra Añejo

Gift Worth Spirits
Total Wine

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $399

The Tequila:

In truth, you could just buy a bottle of Herradura’s regular Extra Añejo expression and still make the tequila drinker in your life happy, but you might as well go all out and reach for the Selección Suprema line, which kicks things up a considerable degree, from great to astounding.

Aged for 49 months in American White oak barrels, this extra añejo expression has scored 25 different gold spirit tasting awards across various respected competitions, and for good reason. It is simply one of the finest aged tequilas on the market right now.

Tasting Notes:

Floral honey greets you and quickly shifts to heavy notes of cooked agave, caramelized butterscotch, and earthy molasses with a luxurious oaky finish that stains the palette in the best way. It’s so good you can still taste it after you exhale.

The Bottom Line:

A super smooth luxurious premium aged tequila for the biggest agave snob in your life.

Mezcal — Montelobos Espadín

Mezcal Gift
Total Wine

ABV: 43.2%

Average Price: $42.49

The Mezcal:

Great, gift-worthy Mezcal is generally pretty pricey, which is what makes Montelobos Espadín so special, it’s great mezcal at a budget price. Made from organic espadín agave from Oaxaca, Montelobos is born from organic agave roasted in underground fire pits and small batch distilled.

Tasting Notes:

A distinct chocolate flavor dominates this mezcal with a mouthwatering savory aftertaste and a smokey finish that burns in the best way.

The Bottom Line:

An affordable bottle that punches well above its weight and serves as a great introduction to mezcal.

Mezcal — La Luna Espandincillo

Gift Worth Spirits
Sip Tequila

ABV: 48.51%

Average Price: $60

The Mezcal:

Made strictly from espandincillo agave from Michoacán, La Luna recently took home awards from the SF Spirits Competition for best Mezcal. La Luna puts this particular expression through a slow roasting clay pot distilled process that keeps the flavors bright, present, and a bit fiery,

Tasting Notes:

Citrus-y with a dark edge to it, this Espandincillo mixes heavy smokey almost charcoal-esque notes with a blood orange flavors with a roasted agave finish.

The Bottom Line:

Not for the faint of heart, La Luna’s Espandincillo is perfect for people who love the smokier qualities of mezcal.

Mezcal — Amarás Cupreata

Gift Worth Spirits
Amaras

ABV: 43%

Average Price: $55.99

The Mezcal:

One of my favorite mezcals of the year, Amarás Cupreata is made from wild cupreata agave from Tixtla Guerrero grown to 13 years of maturity. Cupreata is a rarer form of agave, so if you’re buying for a seasoned mezcal drinker they’ll definitely appreciate the more unique aspects of this highly floral mezcal.

Last year the mezcal took home the best in show at San Francisco’s World Spirits Competition.

Tasting Notes:

The most fragrant mezcal you’ll ever come across, this cupreata features a balance of vanilla and roasted agave notes with some hints of mango and banana leaf with a smooth cocoa finish.

The Bottom Line:

A truly unique mezcal for the drinker who thinks they’ve tasted it all.

Mezcal — Dos Hombres Espadín

Mezcal
Bevmo

ABV: 43.2%

Average Price: $56.99

The Mezcal:

Just as we shouted out the best celebrity-owned tequila brand, we have to give flowers to the best celebrity-owned mezcal brand out there, Dos Hombres, the perfect bottle for the Breaking Bad nerd in your life. Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul’s mezcal brand is made from a blend of espadín agave hand-selected from the Oaxacan hillsides before being roasted in earthen pits in a four-day baking process.

Walter White and Jesse Pinkman made some of the most artisanal meth ever and thankfully that attention to craft has translated into the real world as this legal drug.

Tasting Notes:

Sweet and inviting on the nose with a people-pleasing blend of mango, apple, and caramel on the palate with a distinct burning finish.

The Bottom Line:

The perfect bottle for the Breaking Bad and Mezcal nerd in your life. For the right person, it’s like a two-in-one gift!

Mezcal — Agua Mágica

Gift Worth Spirits
Agua Magica

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $59.99

The Mezcal:

While all of the bottles we’ve chosen for this list are truly gift-worthy in the flavor department, Agua Mágica is the only one with a bottle that looks the part. Made from a mix of espadín and the rarer tobalá agave sourced from Oaxaca, Agua Mágica sports a sweet people-pleasing flavor that has enough complexity to wow seasoned mezcal drinkers but is inviting enough for beginners dipping their toes in the spirit for the first time.

Tasting Notes:

Herbaceous and grassy, this mezcal has notes of cherry and almond with a luxurious mouthfeel and a sweet finish. If you like your mezcal to burn, look elsewhere, this comes across as much more buttery, floral, and mouthwatering than your typical bottle of mezcal.

The Bottom Line:

Sweet, smooth, and bright, this is the best choice for drinkers who love mezcal but aren’t completely sold on the smokey attributes.