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_Connor t1_iudv4yg wrote

They don't make one batch of whiskey and then sit on only that batch for 12 / 15 / 25 years until they can/want to sell it.

They're barreling whiskey every year, and every year they're also bottling whiskey that has been aging in barrels for X amount of time. So it's essentially just a revolving door of barreling and bottling.

So for example, a 3 year aged cycle would look like this:

Barrelled / Bottled

1 / 0

2 / 0

3 / 0

4 / 1

5 / 2

6 / 3

After the first 3 years, you then have a constant supply of 3 year old whisky. Companies putting out 15 / 25 year old bottles aren't just selling those. They definitely have more short-term aged whisky that they sell in the meantime. But they also likely have batches of 15 year old whisky that come of age on a yearly basis.

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FrillySteel t1_iudxrea wrote

They also don't only bottle 12 year whiskey.

The whiskey that they barrel this year, a portion of it will be bottled 12 years from now, a portion of it will be bottled 15 years from now, a portion of it 25 years from now, and so on.

They'll also barrel different portions in different types of barrels. So, of the 12 year whiskey, some will go in traditional oak barrels, but, if it's a larger production house, some in others types of cheaper barrels, and some will likely go in metal vats.

I assume that the ratio of those portions gets smaller and smaller as they get older. Like 50% of today's barrellage will get bottled in 12 years, another 30% will get bottled in 15, etc, to make whiskey more and more rare the longer it's aged. Plus, the longer you keep the whiskey in barrels, the more will evaporate.

All this plays into the price of the whiskey once it's on the shelves. With the metal-vatted whiskey being the cheapest because it won't have any taste, and because it will have evaporated the least.

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