![]() Simply place the stones in the freezer, and in a few hours they'll be ready for use! Included is a convenient black velvet storage bag for easy transporting or storing when not in use. They stay cold longer than ice and will add a touch of elegance to your beverage. Or you could just ignore this article and drink your whiskey like a Kentuckian: however the hell you want to.The solution to diluted drinks is here! Chill whiskey and spirits without watering them down with this set of nine polished black granite whiskey stones. A sphere delivers the greatest cooling with the least dilution, and a press makes it denser and more efficient. And if you really hate dilution but really want cold drinks, your best bet is an ice sphere. I’ve probably still got some sitting politely in my freezer maybe enough time has passed for them to be “misplaced.” Just throw them in the garden, replace all your scratched-up tumblers and get on with your life. We’ve all had them clanking around at the bottom of our drink at one point in our past. If you’ve given or received whiskey stones, don’t sweat it. The recent trend of high-ABV bourbons hitting the market comes from bartenders demanding higher proofs that they can dilute with mixers while still maintaining high alcohol content. Half the fun of throwing an ice cube into a drink is to taste the drink change as the ice melts (the other half is that you can throw a cube in your drink without shattering the glass, because it isn’t a whiskey stone). It “opens up” the whiskey, as they’ll say with a lot of hand waving. It takes the fun out of drinking, but it illustrates a point: even experts dilute their drink. ![]() You sip, you take notes, you add a drop of water, you repeat. If you are a true whiskey snob, you drink your whiskey at room temperature (chilled drinks lessen the effectiveness of your taste buds and olfactory senses) and you drink it with a water dropper. (And is also true of reusable ice cubes, which are loads more effective than stones, provided you can bear to watch them float around at the top of your drink like a bad drink umbrella.) This is also sometimes a bad thing. The second claim is that stones prevent dilution. This phase change doesn’t occur with stones. In fact, the process of melting ice absorbs the vast majority of heat in your drink. Melting ice into water takes an incredible (relatively) amount of heat. (Or in this case, how much heat that that something can absorb from a room-temperature drink.) Ice also benefits from the phase change. Water, and ice to a lesser extent, has extremely high specific heat, which can be thought of as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of something. Ice is - and has - been the predominant way to cool beverages for centuries, so much so that it seems odd to have to explain why. ![]() In regards to the claim that whiskey stones cool your drink: In this arena, the stones, typically made of soapstone to help protect your highball because for some reason you decided to put an actual rock in it, are up against a world-class cooler. In each of these pursuits the whiskey stone fails. Whiskey stones are intended to do two things: cool your drink down and prevent dilution. And thus spreads the myth of the whiskey stone.īut the simple fact is, no one needs, wants or actually uses whiskey stones. On the surface, they seem to be the perfect gift: they let your bourbon-drinking father chill his drink without diluting it, an apparent sin in the drinking world, and they strike a perfect balance - a touch too ridiculous to buy for yourself, but welcome when disguised with wrapping paper and a bow.
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