For most, the joyous recovery of ancient alcohol means "finding a forgotten Bud in the back of the fridge." But a lucky few get to taste truly ancient elixirs, like a sailing team led by Christian Ekstrom, which discovered 30 bottles of hundreds-of-decades-old champagne on a wrecked ship between Sweden and Finland.That's true luxury -- sailing on a boat, drinking an irreplaceable alcohol from 1780 just because you can.
Keep reading for five more of the world's oldest alcohols.
5. Cryogenic Whisky Sir Ernest Shackleton was a hell of a guy: setting the then–world record for getting closest to the South Pole in 1909, turning back to save the lives of his team, making an 800-mile sea trip (in an open-topped boat painted in seal blood) to fetch help for his shipwrecked crew and now we find that he left us all a drink.
The New Zealand Antarctic Heritage Trust found crates of Whyte and Mackay whisky frozen in the basement of the base camp for Shackleton's South Pole expedition, and no one's happier about this than Whyte and Mackay. The original recipes for this blend had been lost and they've already made plans to analyze and replicate the original blend.
They could call it "Whyte and Mackay's Goddamn Hero Whisky." You should probably resist the urge to order it with ice.
4. Fossil Fuel Beer A century is old, two centuries is better, but 450,000 centuries is ridiculous -- and real! The Fossil Fuels Brewing Company realized that Jurassic Park's main problem was cloning vicious predators (which consume humans) instead of beer (which humans consume).
Doctor Cano, who, despite his name, is not trying to kill James Bond, recovered 45-million-year-old yeast from a Lebanese weevil preserved in amber, and he did the natural thing for a super-scientist hero: used it to brew an anciently delicious beer.
3. 64-Year Glenfiddich Good things come to those who wait, better things to those who wait longer, and $37,000 come to Glenfiddich for waiting 64 years to sell some Scotch. That's $500 a sip, so it's worth considerably more than you'll be at that age. It's also much more enjoyable to spend time with, and we can guarantee no one will put any part of sextuagenarian-you in their mouths no matter how many dollars you offer.
Only 61 bottles were ever produced, and some speculators are turning to Scotch as a safe investment as opposed to the stock market. It's a smart bet because, unlike shares, bottles of Scotch base their worth on something you can hold in your hands, tastes great and will be useful after the collapse of civilization.
2. The $60,000 EveningAn unknown businessman showed every single one of those Scotch-saving nancies exactly how it's done: He walked into a hotel displaying a bottle of Dalmore 62, one of only 12 ever made (and the only one not in private collections or held in storage at the original distillery), bought it for $58,000, marched up to a hotel room with some friends and drank it.
Understand: This bottle wasn't part of the bar, it was a luxurious hotel decoration and, at that price, probably counted as part of the architecture. The blend was bottled 62 years ago (duh) from four extraordinary single malts up to 142 years old. Even the bottles were hand-blown and individually named. This was the first time one has ever been opened (never mind emptied). And according to luckiest barman in the world -- who was gifted a glass of the spirit -- it's the "most beautiful thing" he'd ever tasted.
1. Through the Fire and Flames (Beer edition)The most expensive beer in the world sold for $16,000 last year. It's only 70 years old, which might make it immature compared to its older brothers on this list, if it wasn't for the fact it survived the Hindenburg.
The flame-scorched-but-still-sealed bottle was found with five of its friends by a firefighter responding to disaster. He buried the bottles where he found them, returning to recover his booty when the fuss had died down. He gave four to friends, one to the original brewery, and took one for himself -- which his family auctioned for a giant cash prize last year.
It's the most expensive bottle of beer ever sold, and also the most pointless, because beer can't be saved that long -- even the warmest bottle of Natty Ice would be more drinkable. Though seven decades of skunked-beer rot would still taste better than Bud Light Lime.
Myra Chanin: Cary Hoffman Shares his Weird and Wonderful Lifelong…


























What Happened When Alex Kenjeev Paid His Student Loan in Cash
The Richest Woman in the World: How Gina Rinehart Earns her Billions
Preserve Your Budget by Freezing Foods -- Savings Experiment
Lingerie Worker Claims She Was Fired For Being 'Too Hot'
Grieving Pit Bull Refused to Leave Dead Companion's Side
Facebook's IPO Debacle, Day 3: Un-Friended and Dis-Liked on Wall Street
It's Legal To Shoot And Kill Animal Poachers, Indian State Orders
Jennifer Lopez, Casper Smart TV Show: J.Lo to Star in Reality Series With Boyfriend (REPORT)
Vet Saves His Own Cat's Life After Car Accident







Comments:
Add a comment
Tuesday 07 September
By Draconian
The only drinks that deserve an outragious expense are the champagne and beer bottles recenly discovered from a 19th century shipwreck at the bottom of the Baltic.
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By Yungsire
I just had a nice drink this past sunday, very good. It was free too, my uncle had a couple of bottles.. (1798) very smooth.
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By vern
have a unopend bottle of Old crow 1961 what is it worth to some one
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By Ann Walker
You really need to go to school too! Look in the dictionary under DECADE. You will find that a Decade is ten years. Where did you go to school?
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By Joe
Ann. Im really trying to help ya here. First, a bottle made in 1780 is only 230 years old, not "over 300 years old". That would make it 23 decades old. I promise you that is 100% correct. I was tempted to bust on ya, but I couldnt.
Wednesday 08 September
By reed stoops
I have bottle of 1918 Hill and Hill Kentucky bourbon with original cork and seal. I used to have two, but drank one, and it was superb. Any idea of what the remaining bottle might be worth? It came from a boarded up attic in Chicago, likely hidden during prohibition.
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By BTDT
Sorry Ann. That would be two hundred, thirty years or twenty three decades.
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By Craig
None of those drinks can taste better than the original Mr. Pibb.
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By cliffoner
ya the piece is a little sketchy...like the dalmore 62? bottled 62 yrs ago? it doesnt work that way. next year the dalmore 62 would be bottled 63 yrs ago?
the year denotes how long the batch was aged in a barrel for a single malt and the youngest of the blend in a blended malt. if u saved a bottle of jack daniels today for 100 yrs it would taste no different than one bottled in 100 yrs (provided they didnt change the blend).
whisky only gets better with age IF its being aged (in a barrel). once it hits the bottle, its flavor is locked into place
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By ed
i'll just stick with single barrel jack daniels.for the price of one of these old bottles you would probably be set for life with single barrell or private select.
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By femmina
I have searched all over the internet to find someone who knows how much a very old bottle of Armagnac is worth also from the 1700's, but no one is knowladgeable enough to give me a clue
Wednesday 08 September
By Campbell Hayden
I am unfamiliar with everything but the price of one of my favorite drinks: Johnnie Walker Blue Label. Very light and no sting. One very fine drink.
Reply
Wednesday 08 September
By Jim
Interestingly, whiskey stops aging when it’s taken from the barrel and bottled. So, this article doesn’t really state how long these whiskeys were “aged”. Prices may be for nostalgic reasons. Give me a Jack, please...
Reply