#10 Vieille Bon Secours Ale – $1200
As
we’ll soon see, the domain of ultra-expensive alcohol is dominated by
liquor, but that doesn’t mean beer can’t hold a spot down. Vieille Bon
Secours is an artisanal belgian beer produced by la Brasserie Caulier, a
family brewery based in Péruwelz, Belgium. Don’t worry, for $1200 you
get a lot more than a bottle. Each $1200 order of Vieille Bon Secours
guarantees you 12 litres of the world’s greatest beer to your doorstep.
Since opening in 1995 they’ve produced several yields of beer, but the
most valuable is the one that’s been aged for 10 years. The beer has an
8% alcohol content and has a taste flavoured with toffee and anise.
#9 The Winston Cocktail – $14,000
For
$14,000 you don’t get a casket of rare beer or a bottle of aged scotch;
you get a single cocktail. That’s right, a single cocktail can set you
back $14,000 if you have the abundance of means and lack of sense to
actually order it. Master bartender Salvatore Calabrese can take the
credit for crafting the expensive – but almost surely delicious –
cocktail. To mix ‘The Winston’, take 60ml of Cognac Croizet 1858 Cuvee
Leonie, part Grand Marnier Quintessence, part Chartreuse Viellissement
Exceptionellement Prolongé, with just a hint of Angostura Bitters.
Elegant, refined, overpriced; it has all the ingredients of a drink for
executives.
#8 Legacy by Angostura – $25,000
Although
the world is full of expensive drinks, it’s rare that they’re expensive
for political reasons. Legacy by Angostura is one such drink. The rum
mixture was crafted specifically to celebrate the 50th anniversary of
Trinidad and Tobago’s independence. Only 20 decanters of the rum –
composed of a mixture of several rums all aged for at least 17 years –
were ever put up for sale. Each rum comes in a case and crystal decanter
that was designed specifically by Asprey’s of London, the company that
designs jewelry for none other than
Prince Charles. For $25,000 a pop, you might as well make sure you’re in Trinidad and Tobago before you’re going to crack it open.
#7 Château d’Yquem – $130,000
Château
d’Yquem is a wine producer in the Bordeaux region of France that’s been
crafting wine for 300 years. In 1711, a vineyard was established in the
area that would survive several generations of owners and operators.
They continue to produce a multitude of wines – including Château
d’Yquem and Ygrec – but their most prestigious wine is a batch from
1811. The 1811 Château d’Yquem is one of very few wines to have been
given a perfect 100 by wine critic Robert Parker, who sampled it in 1999
and described it as ‘drinking liquified crème brûlée’. High praise.
Should you ever encounter a bottle of this increasingly rare white
vintage, expect to shell out a hefty $130,000.
#6 Penfolds Ampoule – $170,000
If
you aren’t interested in Château d’Yquem and prefer a fine red wine to a
white wine, then look no further than Penfolds Ampoule, the most
expensive red wine on the market. For only $170,000 you too can sample
the best red wine money can buy! The glass blown ampoule holds enough of
the Penfolds Block 42 Kalimna Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 vintage for one
glass, proving once and for all that if you throw several keywords at
people all at once you can override their common sense. Only 12 have
ever been produced, and it comes with a wooden piece case designed by
furniture craftsman Andrew Bartlett. The absolute best part is that when
the owner decides to sample it, he or she can request for a member of
the Penfolds winemaking team to be present. It’s like a genie in a
bottle, only this time you’re summoning a winemaker who definitely hates
your guts.
#5 Armand de Brignac Midas – $215,000
Some
drinks are expensive for their rarity, and others for the size of the
bottle. Armand de Brignac Midas captures the best of both worlds. The
champagne comes in a 30 litre bottle that is brightly, and rather
awkwardly, painted gold. The bottle looks like it was designed by a
14-year-old
Flavor Flav,
and is a sure fire way to make that table of tracksuit-wearing aspiring
rappers thoroughly jealous. After all, nothing screams class like
ordering a bottle of distilled sugar that costs a quarter of a million
dollars and has to be carried to the table by several staff members like
a funeral dirge to the last shred of respect your grandfather has for
you. He fought in the war for
this?
#4 Dalmore 62 – $215,000
Like
Penfolds Ampoule, only 12 bottles of Dalmore 62 were ever produced.
Unlike Penfolds Ampoule, it actually holds enough liquor for several
drinks and not just one. The most recent transaction involving the
vintage came from an anonymous man who purchased one of the bottles at
Changai airport in Singapore, which brings us to the question of why
such an exceedingly rare drink was being sold at an airport? Whatever
the case, that transaction made the Dalmore 62 the world’s most
expensive whiskey – not scotch, since it wasn’t produced in Scotland – a
title that it will probably hold for the foreseeable future.
#3 Diva Vodka – $1,000,000
You
may be mistaken in assuming that a brand of vodka named ‘Diva Vodka’
would cost $24 and taste like expired nail polish remover; I know I was.
Surprisingly someone, somewhere, gave the green light to this gaudy
experiment. The vodka is triple filtered, first through ice and then
through Nordic birch charcoal, and finally through sand containing
precious gems. Because if there’s one thing that makes alcohol better,
it’s knowing that at some point it came into contact with a shiny stone.
The real cost of the bottles comes from the packaging though; there are
Swarovski crystals stacked up in the middle of the bottle that can be
taken out and used as a garnishment for your drink. You couldn’t make
this up if you tried.
#2 Henri IV Dudognon Heritage Cognac Grande Champagne – $2,000,000
The
Henri IV Dudognon Heritage Cognac Grande Champagne doesn’t care what
you think, maggot. The Henri IV Dudognon Heritage Cognac Grande
Champagne has more elaborate words in its name than any other alcohol.
It’s a cognac for a king, which we kind of alluded to by naming it after
Henri IV. The Henri IV Dudognon Heritage Cognac Grande Champagne has
been aged for 100 years – which is actually legitimately cool – and has a
bottle dipped in 24-carat gold and sterling platinum that contains
6,500 diamonds, which is cool if you have no personality and try to
fabricate one using your bank account. The Henri IV Dudognon Heritage
Cognac Grande Champagne is best enjoyed over a leisurely flight above
economically devastated South Sudan in a private jet.
#1 Tequila Ley .925 – $3,500,000
Crafted
by the same minds behind the Henry IV Dugonon Heritage Cognac Grande
Champagne, the Tequila Ley .925 is a tequila that has a unique
production process, in the sense that it’s been distilled specifically
for terrible people. Like the Henry IV (…), the Tequila Ley .925 is in a
bottle that contains 6,400 diamonds, which add to the taste of the
tequila through…some kind of process. Look, there’s diamonds all over
the bottle. Just buy it, don’t be so cheap. The bottle was unveiled in
Mexico City in front of a crowd who applauded when it was revealed.
Remarkably no one is really sure just how it tastes, considering that no
one – at least to the public’s knowledge – has purchased it. The
company behind Tequila Ley .925 must really be banking on the old adage
‘build it, and they will come’. For humanity’s sake, we hope they’re wrong. Source:
http://www.therichest.com/luxury/most-expensive/the-10-most-expensive-alcoholic-drinks-on-earth/
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