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One of the most divisive things you can say to a whiskey fan is “I like flavored whiskey.” To many whiskey aficionados, adding any flavoring to whiskey is the equivalent of adding hot sauce to your chocolate milk. They believe that if the whiskey is well-made, it doesn’t need to be tainted by the addition of caramel, vanilla, cinnamon, or any other (sometimes overpowering) flavor.
If you really want to change the flavor of a whiskey, these purists say, just mix it into a cocktail like an old fashioned or whiskey sour. Wesley MacDonald, owner of Caña Bar and Kitchen in Curaçao agrees with that sentiment.
“I cannot name any flavored whiskey which I could appreciate,” he says. “If you do want some fruit flavors in your whiskey, muddle some seasonal fruit or herbs and add some sweetener, and create your own flavored whiskey drink.”
Since we like to stir up booze-related controversy whenever possible, we decided that we’re not going to settle for that answer. It’s too easy. To cut and dry. So we decided to ask some of our favorite bartenders to tell us their choices for the flavored whiskeys actually worth trying. Believe it or not, they actually came up with some winners (plus, you know Fireball got shouted out).
Journeyman Pit-Spitter
Hayden Miller, head bartender at Bodega Taqueria y Tequila in Miami
While I am not a huge fan of flavored whiskeys, Journeyman Distilling does a cherry rye called Pit-Spitter. It’s a limited release but the tartness of those fresh Michigan cherries with their rye whiskey is quite the Midwestern summer combo.
Fireball Cinnamon Whisky
Justin Monell, general manager of BLVD & MAIN Taphouse in Las Vegas
If I’m going to sip on some flavored whiskey. It’s probably going to be at a tailgate or some other party-like event and it’s going to be Fireball Cinnamon Whisky. It’s a classic and I love the heat.
Pennington’s Strawberry Rye
Ellen Talbot, lead bartender at Fable Lounge in Nashville
Pennington’s Strawberry Rye. Strawberry is a flavor found in a lot of higher-end rye whiskeys, so to accentuate it just makes sense. Pennington’s is also a Nashville company, which I appreciate.
Knob Creek Smoked Maple
Matt Shields, bartender at The Bay Restaurant in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida
My go-to flavored whiskey is Knob Creek Smoked Maple. While sweet and flavored whiskey is not my thing, smoked maple can be made into a serious brunch bomb. Swing by The Bay and I’ll make you one. Better yet, just stay home and drink it.
Wild Turkey American Honey
Blake Jones, bartender and director of beverage at The Kennedy in Pensacola, Florida
Usually, the only flavored whiskey I drink is whiskey flavored. But if I have to pick one, I’ll say Wild Turkey American Honey, because of Jimmy Russell. Everything he’s involved with is great. If you’re into sweet, honey-filled whiskey than this one is for you.
Modus Hoperandi Hop Whiskey
Danielle Becker, bartender at the Aspen Meadows Resort in Aspen, Colorado
Colorado local favorites Ska Brewing and Peach Street Distillers got together and made something magical. They call it Modus Hoperandi Hop Whiskey, and I love it. It’s smooth, easy to drink with just a hint of floral hops presence.
Wild Turkey Spiced Bourbon
Freddy Concepcion Ucan Tuz, bartender at JW Marriott in Cancun, Mexico
Wild Turkey Spiced Bourbon: The flavor of vanilla in the Whiskey makes this drink especially common in cocktails or during Christmas, I like to serve it with a cinnamon stick in it.
Writer’s Picks:
Leopold Bros. Michigan Cherry Whiskey
Many people believe that flavored whiskeys are a contemporary creation. In reality, distillers have been adding fruit juices to whiskeys during aging for over 100 years. Leopold Bros. wanted to revive this style by launching a few flavored whiskeys. One of the best is the distillery’s Michigan Cherry Whiskey with tart cherry juice added to their bourbon before aging. The result is a subtly spicy whiskey with hints of vanilla, dried cherries, and caramel.
George Dickel Tabasco Barrel Finish
When it comes to flavored whiskey, your mind probably heads to cinnamon before literal hot sauce. But that didn’t stop Tabasco and George Dickel from getting together to create a sweet, smooth whiskey with subtle heat at the end. It pairs well with rich foods or to spice up your favorite cocktail.
The coronavirus lockdowns are driving everyone crazy, there’s no denying that. But if your anger at the state of the world ever causes you to come to blows with someone who is just trying to do their job — you’re taking sh*t too far. Especially if the source of your anger is that you have to wait too long to get some cheddar biscuits from Red Lobster.
In a video that has since gone viral, one woman can be seen getting entirely too mad after being forced outside of a Red Lobster in Pennsylvania over Mother’s Day Weekend after demanding a refund because of a three-hour wait for her food.
A Karen Goes Berserk at Red Lobster on Mother’s Day (YORK, PA)
Woman upset that she has to wait 3 hours for food from Red Lobster on Mother’s Day when the restaurant has a reduced staff. pic.twitter.com/gEnZI9vPh3
— iGrowCannabis (@ArmoredGoat) May 12, 2020
The video was captured by an unrelated patron and begins with the customer being pushed outside of a Red Lobster by an employee while she demands a refund. After giving her name to a separate employee inside the restaurant, the patron takes advantage of a brief moment of calm to strike the manager in the face, leading to a brawl that ends with three other Red Lobster employees trying to separate the two.
It should be noted that under Pennsylvania’s current state orders, restaurants are only allowed to serve customers via delivery or curbside pickup, so how and why a maskless woman (her name has been released, sadly, it’s not “Karen”) ended up in the Red Lobster in the first place is beyond us. Red Lobster issued a statement to USA Today regarding the incident and the general long wait times customers experienced over Mother’s Day weekend (a particularly busy time for Red Lobster) writing:
“We understand that we may have disappointed some of our guests on Mother’s Day when due to COVID-19 and changes to our operations and staffing, we were not able to keep up with the demand at some of our locations… that said, we do not tolerate violence for any reason in our restaurants. We expect our team members to treat our guests with respect, and we expect our guests to treat our team members with respect in return. We are grateful our Manager and the guest involved were not seriously injured in the incident on Sunday.”
The patron’s actions will now be forever immortalized on Twitter, where folks have more or less spent the whole day wondering how anyone could ever justifiably get this mad over the food at Red Lobster.
no one says anything when she slaps her but she grabs her hair and they want to defend her like shes the victim?
— Storm (@snoweyedstorm) May 12, 2020
Where’s this McDonald’s worker when we need her? pic.twitter.com/KApeBitMyC
— Lemon (@JLemon66) May 13, 2020
Those employers, especially the woman who shut the doors near the end, should get combat level negotiation pay! She knew how to de-escalate by talking to the rational employees who were heated for good reason instead of the crazy customer who caused all of the problems, go her!
— Amy Lynn Best (@AmyLynnBest) May 13, 2020
Nothing more annoying than ppl trying intervene once Karen gets her hair pulled pic.twitter.com/BfkFfUa0lZ
— BigOldPeak (@ElectricLuv) May 13, 2020
In less than 3 hours you can whip up lobster and biscuits at home and actually have a sentimental mother’s day meal.
Instead these assholes wanna wait 3 hours just to abuse service industry workers.
It totally tracks.
— LadyPolitik (@Ladypolitik) May 13, 2020
If you are willing to wait 3+ hours for takeout from Red Lobster, I question your life choices. I want that lady arrested for assault
— Mel (@FujikoWay) May 13, 2020
For Red Lobster?? pic.twitter.com/ULZ6tb45nW
— LAC (@HumanitarianGal) May 13, 2020
Shitty shrimp scampi.
— Abrrrril (@Abrrrril_) May 13, 2020
When 54-year-old Gregg Garfield traveled to Italy on a ski trip with friends in February, he had no idea he would become a Providence Saint Joseph Hospital’s first coronavirus patient, nor that he would fight for his life there for more than two months straight.
He and the dozen friends with him on the trip ended up testing positive for the virus. Four of them had to be hospitalized, three were put on ventilators, but Garfield’s case took an extreme turn. Despite his athleticism and good health, he ended up on a ventilator for 31 days. At one point, was only given a 1% chance of survival.
“He wasn’t that bad when he came into the emergency room,”pulmonologist Dr. Daniel Dea told KABC-TV, “and within less than 48 hours, he wasn’t breathing well. He was on maximum oxygen.”
It’s a good reminder that COVID-19 is unpredictable, and that for some people, a robust immune system ends up hurting more than helping. “The disease kicked off, and my immune system just ate me alive,” Garfield told KCAL-TV.
Garfield’s sister Stephanie offered some details of his terrifying journey on a GoFundMe page for him:
“On March 5, 2020 Gregg checked himself into St. Joseph’s Providence Hospital Burbank with serious Covid-19 symptoms. He was the hospital’s first Covid-19 patient, or “Patient Zero” as they call him. Two days later, under heavy sedation and paralytic drugs, the doctors intubated him- around day 10 doing a tracheostomy- and he continued to be on a ventilator for 31 days. During that time his body became septic; his kidneys failed and he was put on CRRT dialysis; his blood pressure plummeted and he needed medications to divert his blood-flow to his major organs for survival, leaving his hands and feet starving for circulation; he spiked fevers and was covered in ice; his lungs collapsed 4 times and chest tubes were inserted; and he developed secondary infections that are common in hospital environments. He had a 1% chance of surviving. The doctors and nursing staff had to always remain 3 steps ahead of any potential disasters because to enter his room took about 15 minutes for them to gear up in their hazmat attire. Gregg knocked on death’s door, but said “F#$% NO! I’m not coming in!!!”
On Friday, Garfield finally got to leave the hospital and go home—to a rousing and heartwarming send-off from hospital staff:
“This is really emotional for me,” Garfield told KCAL-TV. “I have a hard time receiving. I have received an outpour of unbelievable love. The only thing I really am focused on right now is telling the story about how real this is.”
Garfield still has a long road ahead of him as his body learns to walk and breathe normally again. An update on the GoFundMe page describes the impact of being bedridden and ventilated for as long as he was: “The sustained lack of circulation to his extremities caused his fingers and toes to turn black, similar to a frostbite injury. This caused permanent damage and unfortunately once he is released from acute rehab, he will be looking at additional surgeries for amputation, prostheses and of course more physical/occupational therapy as he learns to navigate this new world.”
However, Garfield is confident he will recover completely—which is the best gift he could give to the dedicated hospital staff who never gave up on him.