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Revealed: the truth at the bottom of a bourbon shot
Cosmos Magazine ^ | 3/27/20 | Barry Kelly

Posted on 03/26/2020 10:34:38 PM PDT by LibWhacker

Revealed: the truth at the bottom of a bourbon shot


Scientists discover that spilt Jim Beam has forensic value.


A drop of American whiskey evaporated to form a distinctive web-like pattern of solutes.

Adapted from ACS Nano 2020

By Barry Keily

The mark of a particular bourbon, it turns out, is not its taste, nor its price-point, nor even the clever design on its label.

No. Scientists have now demonstrated that what truly distinguishes a drop of Bulleit from a drop of Knob Creek, or a snifter of Jimmy B from a slurp of Wild T is the mark it leaves on the coaster.

The discovery, outlined in detail in the journal ACS Nano, is actually more significant, and more complex, than it first sounds. It has a potential real-world use as a method of detecting adulterated products. Mostly, however, it is just very cool.

Bourbon – and only bourbon – makes its mark.

AROON PHUKEED / Getty Images

Researchers led by mechanical engineer Adam Carrithers from the University of Louisville in Kentucky, US, turned their attention to the previously neglected chemistry of whiskey stains, inspired by long-established research concerning another popular beverage: coffee.

Everyone who drinks coffee is well aware that if a small amount is dropped on a non-porous or semi-porous surface and left to look after itself it will dry and form a distinctive pattern.

This is known as a “coffee ring” and arises because the liquid at the edge of the spill evaporates more rapidly than the stuff in the middle. This induces a capillary flow from the centre to the outside, which gets faster as the total amount of coffee declines. The result is a distinctive ring, darker at its outer borders.

The chemistry and physics of the process was first described in 1997, and coffee ring science has gone on to be pretty much its own discipline, prompting dozens of papers every year.

Spilt bourbon doesn’t behave in the same way. Carrithers and colleagues discovered, however, that it does something just as interesting. It forms a web.

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Chemists say watering down whisky improves the taste

Chemistry

The researchers first noticed this when observing diluted bourbon drips left to dry on glass surfaces. With remarkable attention to detail – perhaps a mindset that can only be achieved while contemplating an empty whiskey tumbler – they noticed that the web formations that developed as the liquid evaporated appeared to differ depending on the brand.

Intrigued, they decided to look more closely and examine the process using uniform samples under laboratory conditions. With the aid of time-lapse microscopy, they got to work on a range of bourbons.

In any droplet, they discovered, non-volatile organic compounds called aromatics, phenols and esters clustered together on the surface and formed a layer just one molecule thick. As evaporation proceeded and the droplets grew smaller, the layer collapsed, creating the stands of a web.

These patterns, they realised, were brand specific. To test this, they arranged for a set of stains to be prepared, in circumstances where they were blind to the source bourbon. They then set about identifying each drink using only the web layout – and guessed correctly in 90% of cases.

This, they suggest, once properly codified, could provide a novel way to identify counterfeit booze.

But it would only work, it seems, in bourbon. In the ACS Nano paper, Carrithers and his team report that the same sort of distinct webbing does not develop in scotch, nor in Canadian whiskies.

And it is that sort of detail – that dedication to research – that is the mark of true scientists.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Science
KEYWORDS: adulterated; bourbon; detecting; products
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To: Southside_Chicago_Republican

https://youtu.be/zwMODr-512c?t=21


41 posted on 03/27/2020 3:32:57 AM PDT by wally_bert (Spend like you were going to the electric chair!)
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To: LibWhacker

And, THAT, LibWhacker, is simply Anti-American. To attempt to pass off Jim Beam as Pappy? Deserving of a firing squad, or a noose.

Because, as we all know. Life is too short to drink bad booze.


42 posted on 03/27/2020 3:36:15 AM PDT by PubliusMM (RKBA; a matter of fact, not opinion. Mr Trump, we've got your six.)
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To: Cletus.D.Yokel

Bourbon ping.


43 posted on 03/27/2020 3:58:45 AM PDT by kosciusko51
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To: LibWhacker

In wine making, it’s called “Terroir”; the impact the local environment makes upon the product.


44 posted on 03/27/2020 4:31:33 AM PDT by Cletus.D.Yokel (Scatology is serendipitous)
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To: kosciusko51

Purged the list. Sorry.
Won’t be reviving it.


45 posted on 03/27/2020 4:54:00 AM PDT by Cletus.D.Yokel (Scatology is serendipitous)
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To: LibWhacker

bookmark for later alone time reading.


46 posted on 03/27/2020 5:25:56 AM PDT by stump56 (Freedom isn't free.)
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To: LibWhacker

Most bourbons in the US are already over 50% water.


47 posted on 03/27/2020 6:09:20 AM PDT by mfish13 (Elections have Consequences.)
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To: LibWhacker
Watering down whiskey is just wrong. 😆
48 posted on 03/27/2020 6:15:05 AM PDT by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped)
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To: PA Engineer

BTTT


49 posted on 03/27/2020 6:37:55 AM PDT by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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To: LibWhacker

I am skeptical. The only thing to do is to repeat the test at home with 10-12 seperate bottles of bourbon.


50 posted on 03/27/2020 9:12:57 AM PDT by jimmygrace
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To: LibWhacker

Interesting article, although I’m not sure that I’ve ever tasted bourbon.


51 posted on 03/27/2020 9:16:44 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: ETCM
Since you seem to be a connoisseur allow me to introduce you to the whiskeys voted best in America by Whisky Magazine in their April 2020 issue (note: I am only listing American brands. Best in America in its category may not be best in the world):

WORLD’S BEST NEW MAKE

291 Colorado Whiskey White Dog - Rye Whiskey 50.8%

WORLD’S BEST FLAVORED

Few Spirits Cold Cut Bourbon 46.5%

WORLD’S BEST GRAIN

Bainbridge Yama Mizunara Cask 45%

WORLD’S BEST RYE

Col. E.H. Taylor, Jr. Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey 50%

WORLD’S BEST CORN

Snitching Lady Distillery Buttons Blue Corn Whiskey 50%

WORLD BEST BOURBON (Non-Kentucky)

Ironroot Harbinger 57.5%

WORLD BEST BOURBON (Kentucky)

Peerless Small Batch Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey 54.7%

WORLD’S BEST SINGLE BARREL BOURBON (Kentucky)

Rebel Yell Single Barrel 10 Years Old 50%

WORLD’S BEST SINGLE BARREL BOURBON (Non-Kentucky)

John J. Bowman Virginia Straight Bourbon Whiskey 50%

WORLD’S BEST TENNESSEE

Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey 1820 Single Barrel 58.6%

WORLD’S BEST CANADIAN BLENDED

J.P.Wiser’s Alumni Whisky Series Darryl Sittler 40%

WORLD’S BEST WHEAT

Bainbridge Hokkaido Mizunara Cask 43%

WORLD’S BEST BLENDED MALT

Virginia-Highland Whisky Port Cask Finished 46%

WORLD’S BEST SINGLE CASK SINGLE MALT

Westland Distillery Cask #3204 60%

WORLD’S BEST BLENDED

FEW Spirits American Whiskey 46.5%

WORLD’S BEST SINGLE MALT

The Notch Nantucket 15 Years Old 48%

Drink, drink more and be merry

52 posted on 03/27/2020 11:09:53 AM PDT by Oshkalaboomboom
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