Moutai Chinese whis...
 

MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
We will be in touch

[Closed] Moutai Chinese whisky

16 Posts
10 Users
0 Reactions
132 Views
Posts: 915
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Any whisky lovers have any experience of this Chinese whisky? I got given a bottle a few years ago by a Chinese friend and it’s sat unnoticed in a cabinet since. I was in Heathrow last week and killing time in the Whisky shop there and saw two bottles for sale, one was £180, the one I had was £295!!! It’s not even very big, 500ml I think.

Clearly I’ve tried to cultivate an appreciation for it now, and had a little taste, imagine rotten cabbage fermented in turps for a year or three!

So, is anyone aware if there’s a ‘right’ way to drink it to make it more palatable? E.g. tequila? Or should I just take it to my Chinese takeaway and see if the owners will buy it off me?


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 8:19 pm
Posts: 50252
Free Member
 

It's not really whisky, it's baijiu. Prices tend to be inflated, as with many Chinese 'delicacies'.


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 8:23 pm
Posts: 915
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Baijiu? What’s that then? Does it go off?


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 8:25 pm
Posts: 50252
Free Member
 

Maotai is distilled from a blend of sorghum, wheat, and peas. Its taste is tough to describe. Imagine rotten cabbage, ethyl alcohol, and paint thinner, blended and strained. It smells like ammonia; the Wikipedia page for Maotai notes its "solvent and barnyard aromas." The taste lingers long after swallowing, shadowing the rest of the meal like a culinary revenant.

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2009/04/is-this-the-best-selling-liquor-in-the-world/13060/


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 8:27 pm
Posts: 915
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Cheers flash, particularly liked the comment ‘people who try it involuntarily screw up their faces and cry out in pain’

think i’ll keep it for when we have people round!!


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 8:32 pm
Posts: 50252
Free Member
 

I've been given it on occasion when being the 'honoured' guest with Chinese clients.

Vile.

Second only to the durian my team in Singapore try and cram down me. I accepted politely the first time, but no more! It's another flavour that lingers with one for an age...


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 8:35 pm
 kcal
Posts: 5448
Full Member
 

ha, the food banned on aircraft. like eating custard whilst sitting on an open toilet..


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 8:58 pm
Posts: 6270
Full Member
 

I acquired a taste for these bad-boys whilst in Thailand...

Strangely moreish.

I also absolutely love the Swedish salt licorice. Mmmmm, ammonium chloride!

Like piss flavoured sweets. Again, incredibly addictive once you get the taste for them.


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 9:36 pm
Posts: 3420
Free Member
 

Having had moutai and soji and raki and all manner of horrendous spirits over the years I have found somenthing worse.

Korean Ginseng 'wine', comes in a bottle with a ginseng root in it. If you ever played rugby, you'll know the taste you get when you land face down on the pitch, that muddy/grassy/slightly old manurey taste, well it tastes just like that, only massively alaocholic and immeasurably worse for it.


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 10:07 pm
Posts: 2642
Free Member
 

"Does it go off?"

No, it's off to start with.


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 10:30 pm
Posts: 4421
Free Member
 

Weirdly, it is the most widely consumed spirit in the world.

Looks like we don't have our finger on the pulse


 
Posted : 25/06/2018 10:37 pm
Posts: 19452
Free Member
 

Or should I just take it to my Chinese takeaway and see if the owners will buy it off me?

^^^ This.  Make yourself some cash.

I have never tasted them before as I have only tasted rice wine of all sorts ...


 
Posted : 26/06/2018 5:58 pm
 Earl
Posts: 1902
Free Member
 

Its pricey because its the bribing sprit of choice for government officials.


 
Posted : 26/06/2018 6:07 pm
Posts: 840
Full Member
 

What @CaptainFlashheart said. I lived in Beijing for a number of years, and can attest that it's nasty nasty stuff. Smells like diesel, tastes worse. I brought a bottle back to a friend of mine in the UK who will notoriously drink anything - he couldn't drink it. Used the rest to light the BBQ a few times.

Strangely, or not, my Greek friends loved the moutai I brought them.

There are some nice "herbal wines" (not grape-based) in China, but even the expensive moutai is foul. For the record - having also lived in Singapore - eating durians is child's play compared to a night downing moutai shots with your Chinese coworkers/customers.


 
Posted : 26/06/2018 7:00 pm
Posts: 50252
Free Member
 

Bribery, you say?

Hmmm...

🕵️‍♀️


 
Posted : 26/06/2018 7:34 pm
Posts: 915
Full Member
Topic starter
 

£295 a bottle - that’s some seriously expensive barbecue lighter fuel!!


 
Posted : 26/06/2018 10:05 pm
Posts: 915
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Actually flashheart, if you want a bottle to schmooze a business deal through....


 
Posted : 26/06/2018 10:07 pm