There was a time, in the decades after Prohibition, when Canadian whisky was all the rage in America, when a bottle of Crown Royal sat on the bar cart of any serious imbiber. But by the time the renaissance in whiskey making and drinking began in the early 2000s, the Canadian product had long ago been dismissed as bland and bottom-shelf.
It's a story that Davin de Kergommeaux, a whiskey writer in Ottawa, knows all too well. When he published his book "Canadian Whisky: The Portable Expert" in 2012, it was the first serious guide to the category in decades — not that anyone noticed. He would give seminars at whiskey festivals and be lucky if a few dozen people showed up.
"I was very much a voice in the wilderness," he said during a recent visit to New York.
That's starting to change. Canadian whiskys are winning awards and fans as drinkers curious about the next development in whiskey turn their eyes north. In October, Mr. de Kergommeaux published a fully revised and greatly expanded edition of his book, and he is once again on the festival circuit, getting a much different reception.
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/11/dining/drinks/canadian-whiskey-crown-royal-comeback.html
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 15 2018, @05:08PM
As the posters below the parent have stated, this is not true at all.
Otherwise, all distilled spirits would taste the same unless you added things after the distillation process.
For example, tequila, rum, whiskey, brandy would all taste the same. The ones without barrel aging would all taste like vodka, while the barrel aged ones would all taste like just barrel.
If you don't ACTUALLY KNOW something, don't suppose that your simplified theory is a substitute for actual knowledge on the subject.