Perkins : Reborn
Bluelighter
It's currently £2.25 in Morrison's. Not bad really.Yeh I don't know the exact price further north but its def more than 2 pounds ,which puts me off buying it ,I'm sure you could get it online cheaper ,maybe
It's currently £2.25 in Morrison's. Not bad really.Yeh I don't know the exact price further north but its def more than 2 pounds ,which puts me off buying it ,I'm sure you could get it online cheaper ,maybe
That's not bad ,I thinks it's 500ml I've bought it twice now ,wife's away this weekend so might buy a few bottles for the footballIt's currently £2.25 in Morrison's. Not bad really.
Old jocks ,its like a mcewens export but twice as strong nearly 7 percent ,tesco although it costs like 3.50 a bottle.minimum pricing crap
I work for a few customers who brew their own beer but not spirits as I was told its quite dangerous to distill high percentage alcohol in your garden shed lolYou know, I'm glad you mentioned that because I saw a news item were a student in Scotland got on the train to buy alcohol in England. It was summer (what journalists terem 'the silly season' because serious news items are thin on the ground) but I did a back-of-a-fag packet calculation and wonder if people are buying say white cider in bulk just south of the boarder and selling it on.
A few years ago just a couple of miles from my home 8 people were killed in an explosion. Investigators discovered they were making vodka in bulk. So clearly people still see UK pricing as an invitation to make money illegally.
Theirs different attitudes to drinking in Scotland I feel ,it can be a solitary thing compaired to England. One person and their bottle aloneI dread to think what I spend on alcohol and you know what the sad thing is if it was cheaper I would just drink the same amount but have more change left in my pocket. Minimum pricing dosnt work .they can spout all the figures they want on sales reducing compaired to England but your average scot drinks more than their neighbour south of the border .i have no evidence to back this up only a hunch
its getting better with the younger generation who dare i say it are more educated to the pitfalls of drink ,it depends which part of Scotland i suppose but in my long running battle with the bottle i firmly believe Scots have a magnetic attraction to drinking not only in pubs but more worryingly at home by their selves .im sure its the same all over the uk .i havn't lived in England so cant say for sure .there was a long running culture in the building trade to get steaming at lunchtime ,return to work and tidy up your tools then disappear to the pub and spend your wages ,this was still going on when i served my time and im 43 and was accepted as the norm hence the 2.30 finish on a friday for most electrical firms .Well DDN (Drink and Drug News) suggests that the peoples of Scotland are drinking less. But I made the point that it's possible to brew beer and we KNOW people are making spirits... and they declined to comment.
But I have witnessed a couple of Scots who would arrive at a party with their bottle of spirits, sit down and drink the lot. I didn't know it was common.
We all drink but from experience, it's us English who tend to get more fighty after a drink.
I rarely drink. I can't even recall the last time I had a pint but I do recall not touching a drop even over the Christmas period.
yea im not sure i can only speak for myself and the people i know who def like a dram most nights but not necessarily to anywhere near excess.i always say my old man dosnt drink but he has 2 whiskys and coke every night then bed ,i dont see that as drinking as he waits till 8 pm never earlier never laterNot too sure about the Scots, although they certainly have the history and the stereotype, and the Glaswegian drunk has long since become a stereotype thanks to Rab C Nesbit, and was the case long before that.
But it seems to me that the whole of the UK has a massive drinking culture, with the Welsh, and Irish being about the same as the English.
Although maybe the Welsh and Irish are perhaps slightly more hardcore with their drinking in general, although it's hard to say.
I haven't met many Scottish people, or spent enough time out and about up there to comment properly on that, really.
So I'm not sure if the drinking culture is actually any heavier up there than it is in Ireland, Wales, or England, and all of the separate nation's diaspora or exiles.
i think thats a football thing Britannia rules the waves etc .its getting better through time but the English certainly dont have a particularly good football supporter history to be proud of.possibly due to the expectation of their team and previous events in wars .unfortunately Scotland dosnt have that problem with expectation anyway although we all fought together during warsWe all drink but from experience, it's us English who tend to get more fighty after a drink.
I rarely drink. I can't even recall the last time I had a pint but I do recall not touching a drop even over the Christmas period.
without looking at dubious tables on wiki i know eastern bloc states have a huge problem with high percentage spirits,maybe a way to keep warm in the winter lol.i know some indigenous people in colder climates have strong spirits whether made from milk or something elseDid you know that in Russia, any alcoholic drink with less than 10% alcohol is considered a food.
For a while in the 90s a few smart brewers figured out there was money to be made. I think that might have changed but evidently enough people did the calculation and worked out 10% larger was cheaper than vodka in terms of cost per unit.
without looking at dubious tables on wiki i know eastern bloc states have a huge problem with high percentage spirits,maybe a way to keep warm in the winter lol.i know some indigenous people in colder climates have strong spirits whether made from milk or something else
ive seen alcohol dens in Russia on tv that resemble hard drug gatherings with a steel fire drum to keep warm not a pretty sightWell in Russia someone found a loophole i.e. alcohol is often used as the solvent in perfumes. So for a while they were selling 750ml bottles of 'perfume'.
Thing is, it was industrial alcohol and while most nations denature ethanol in a way to make it undrinkable due to the taste, in Russia they went down the easier route of adding methanol...
… 10% larger was cheaper than vodka in terms of cost per unit.

What was it called? Searched Sainsbury's for it but drew a blank. I used to like living near a Sainsbury's. The selection is superior to every mainstream supermarket bar Waitrose.Saw a 12% beer in Sainsbury’s t’other day. £6 for a 500ml can with minimum pricing, mind, so a bit steep… although I’m sure I’ll try it sooner or later![]()