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2-2 baby! (www.youtube.com)
submitted 8 months ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]
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submitted 9 months ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]
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submitted 10 months ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]

While perusing my local liquor store over Labor Day weekend, I found something I simply couldn't resist. Art of the Spirits is a small distillery out of Colorado Springs with a few interesting selling points. Most obviously, the artwork - each bottle has a label based on an oil painting by Danial James or David Uhl, two Colorado artists made famous by their work for Harley Davidson motorcycles. I'm a big believer that a handcrafted whiskey is a work of art in its own right so I love the pairing here. Less obvious is that this distiller has specifically targeted the barrel pick market. Each of the five whiskies shown here is a cask strength single barrel selected by Goody Goody. The three Bonnie-and-Clyde themed "Final Run" bottles are actually the same spirit, just finished in different ways to bring out different flavors, whereas we also have as "Easy Elegance" and "The Originals" are a bit different. All five bottles were in the $80-$100 range each at my store.

I will put my individual reviews below, but overall I am impressed by Art of the Spirits. This is a very competitive price point, and none of these are likely to become an everyday favorite. Keeping in mind that these are cask strength limited editions I always felt like I was getting my money's worth though. Which is best? That's hard to say. "The Originals" was my least favorite and the one of the five I wouldn't recommend. The flavor profile was certainly unique but not something that really clicked with me. I can also say that I preferred the Ruby Port "Final Run" over the "Tawny Port" as those are similar enough that a head-to-head comparison feels fair. Between the Ruby, the Madiera, and they surprisingly complex Rye "Easy Elegance" I find it impossible to crown a victor however. All three are excellent and which I prefer depends entirely on my mood at the moment.

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submitted 10 months ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]

Brisker, Jackson, and Walker all full participation. Let's go!

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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]
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submitted 11 months ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]

Seems like a fair deal to me, and being frontloaded means it will age well.

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submitted 1 year ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]

Distiller: Laphroaig

Product: Cairdeas

Bottle: 2023 - White Port and Madeira

Category: Islay

Aged: Three quarters finished in second fillMadeira, one quarter finished in first fill white port

Nose: Green apples and peach cobbler over the distinctive Laphroaig peat smoke

Body: Harsh peat smoke is quickly tempered with candied oranges, honey, vanilla, and buttery dinner rolls.

Finish: Miles of lingering campfire smoke with a bit of salted caramel underneath.

Activation: Helps to marry the sweet fruits with the oily iodine peat, creating a single coherent flavor where once there were distinct layers. Recommended.

Notes: Laphroaig Cairdeas is one of the longest running special editions in the industry, although apparently this is the very first offering by new master distiller Barry MacAffer. Certainly more distinctive than last year's unimaginative “Warehouse 1” release, this bottle grows on you with time. It doesn’t break much new ground - aging harsh peats in wine casks is a time honored tradition by this point - but it is remarkably well balanced, with none of the chemical or medicinal harshness that you might expect. Things might be looking up at Laphroaig.

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submitted 1 year ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]

My wife and I each have our own gaming rig and we have played a ton of games without issue. However, trying to party up in D4 isn't just laggy, it's unplayable. I'm talking jogging in place for minutes at a time, can't interact with doors or equip armors, completely busted. Solo play has what I'd call "normal" lag but nothing like being in a party.

Cross play and Cross platform chat are off. BNET launcher is closed. Updated drivers, etc. No torrents or VPN or anything like that running. It's got to be server side right? But if everyone's experience was as awful as ours I'd expect to here much more complaining. Anyone got any other suggestions?

[-] thirdorbital 43 points 1 year ago

Near as I can tell, there are certain communities that have a "rule" that every time you browse that community, you must post something before you leave. This leads to a lot of low effort shitposting that I guess some people find fun but I just blocked those communities so my /All feed wasn't cluttered.

[-] thirdorbital 22 points 1 year ago

I don't love this example because enjoyment of the object isn't really a cost. If I buy a book or a videogame or a movie, the time it takes to enjoy the media is the value, not the cost.

If you're talking about maintenance and upkeep on your car, that is a different type of cost that has to be weighed against the cost and time expenditure of a bus pass or whatever your alternative was.

In other words I feel like this is a catchy phrase that kind of falls apart once you start to dig at it.

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submitted 1 year ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/467414

Distillery: Compass Box

Product Line: -

Product: Canvas

Aged: Vino naranja and American oak

Category: Blended

Nose: Delicate custards and marmalade. A citrus of bitter sort, with under-ripe figs.

Body: Rich honey over apricots and oranges. A light, English muffin sort of biscuit. As it goes on, a rich dark chocolate encroaches.

Finish: A bold, malty surprise. Loses nearly all the delicate fruit notes in favor of wheats and grains and fresh baked bread.

Activation: Really opens up some of the rich juicy fruits. Oranges, grapes, pears. Recommended.

Notes: I've always been fond of Compass Box, but they went through a phase for a while where seemingly every new limited release was (over) aged in a sherry cask. I'm glad to announce that Canvas breaks this pattern- in fact, there’s no sherry here at all! Just some Spanish orange wine, a beverage I didn’t even know existed until I picked up this bottle. It’s sweet and rich and creamy and endlessly drinkable, without that bitter or medicinal quality that can frequently come through with sherried casks. After such a fruit forward body, the malted finish is a welcome surprise as well. One of the best blended malts I’ve had in a while, though it is on the pricier side at ~$135.

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submitted 1 year ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]

Distillery: Compass Box

Product Line: -

Product: Canvas

Aged: Vino naranja and American oak

Category: Blended

Nose: Delicate custards and marmalade. A citrus of bitter sort, with under-ripe figs.

Body: Rich honey over apricots and oranges. A light, English muffin sort of biscuit. As it goes on, a rich dark chocolate encroaches.

Finish: A bold, malty surprise. Loses nearly all the delicate fruit notes in favor of wheats and grains and fresh baked bread.

Activation: Really opens up some of the rich juicy fruits. Oranges, grapes, pears. Recommended.

Notes: I've always been fond of Compass Box, but they went through a phase for a while where seemingly every new limited release was (over) aged in a sherry cask. I'm glad to announce that Canvas breaks this pattern- in fact, there’s no sherry here at all! Just some Spanish orange wine, a beverage I didn’t even know existed until I picked up this bottle. It’s sweet and rich and creamy and endlessly drinkable, without that bitter or medicinal quality that can frequently come through with sherried casks. After such a fruit forward body, the malted finish is a welcome surprise as well. One of the best blended malts I’ve had in a while, though it is on the pricier side at ~$135.

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submitted 1 year ago by thirdorbital to c/goodnewseveryone
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submitted 1 year ago by thirdorbital to c/[email protected]

Any hikers, climbers, or wanderers here? Where's the most exotic place you've had a glass of whiskey?

[-] thirdorbital 16 points 1 year ago

I agree with the spirit of this 100% and will support any way I can. I only hope the implementation is free of trolls, bots, and other bad actors.

[-] thirdorbital 10 points 1 year ago

I prefer when areas are designed to be handled by higher level characters rather than always scaling with the player like Skyrim does. My ideal is when said scaling is somewhat subtle like in Elden Ring - there's an intended route, but if you go somewhat out of order it's not the end of the world and player skill matters more than a few levels anyway. I guess we'll see how much level matters in this universe.

[-] thirdorbital 11 points 1 year ago

I naively want to believe that this won't be an issue for most users having most conversations. But out of curiosity can you link what the ban list actually contains?

[-] thirdorbital 34 points 1 year ago

Like a lot of new users I'm only here because Reddit killed the app I used. I don't like the official Reddit app. But if I'm honest, it's still a better experience than Lemmy right now. You can't deny that Lemmy has less content and more warts.

Like any early adopter, I'm here for the potential. For what I hope this can one day become. That's not something a majority of people care about. If/when Lemmy reaches parity for "normal" users, attitudes will change quickly.

[-] thirdorbital 12 points 1 year ago

You can search for existing communities using the community browser.

I'm not even certain what all "Datahording" entails but [email protected] appears to be one such community.

[-] thirdorbital 15 points 1 year ago

Ok so help me understand here. The root post is Beehaw complaining that their four admins can't handle the new influx of users. But isn't that the entire point of moderators? Shouldn't each community be responsible for dealing with trolls, etc? From what I've seen of Beehaw, they're attempting to have the same handful of admins moderate every single community, which was never going to be sustainable and IMHO misses the entire point of this sort of experience.

[-] thirdorbital 35 points 1 year ago

I find this very disappointing, not because I'm hugely attached to Beehaw (although their large gaming community has dominated my feed this week). But rather because the first response to whatever adversity they were facing, real or perceived, is to take the nuclear option. The biggest drawback to Lemmy as opposed to Reddit is the over fragmentation and the lack of quality content, so intentionally increasing those challenges feels short-sighted and bad for the ecosystem as a whole.

[-] thirdorbital 14 points 1 year ago

Not what you're asking, but it took me the longest time to figure out that you can set your default home page to your subscribed communities instead of whatever is more-or-less-randomly hosted on sh.itjust.works. (It's the "Type" setting in your user profile). Hopefully this helps anyone who stumbles on this.

[-] thirdorbital 12 points 1 year ago

Just a heads up that with their loosely moderated contributor model, you can find anything on Forbes these days. Up to and including outright scams and misinformation. It's a far cry from the reputable source it once was.

One article of many.

[-] thirdorbital 31 points 1 year ago

As yet another former Redditor trying to make sense of the decentralized model, there is something very comforting knowing "sh.itjust.works". Thanks for doing this.

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thirdorbital

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