What Does An 80p Whisky Taste Like?

This is Tiger Whisky, Laos’ finest intoxicant.

Or, as the label has it, “Finest blended SUPER Tiger Whisky Smooth and Mellon” [sic].

And who wouldn’t trust a whisky with the manufacturer’s mobile phone number on the label?

Free shots of this stuff fuel the riverside bars of Vang Vieng, Laos, where we’ve returned for tubing, kayaking and caving.

Tiger retails in the foreigner-friendly stores around this backpacker boomtown for a princely 10,000 kip for a 750ml bottle of 40% (80 proof) hooch. That’s, roughly, 80 British pence, or US$1.25, per bottle, or approximately 5 pence a shot.

God only knows what Tiger costs when bought in bulk. But, clearly, significantly less than the rice moonshine known as lao lao, which is generally sold by the jerry can and occasionally causes blindness.

I would imagine it’s the perfect accompaniment to the other exotica you’ll find on the menus of the riverside bars. (And, yes, drugs are illegal in Laos.)

blank

So… What does an 80p whisky taste like?

Well, it would be fair to say that Tiger is not a “sipping” whisky. Not one to be rolled around the mouth and savoured, with or without ice. Definitely not one for the connoisseur.

It’s normally consumed as free shots from the bottle, or, occasionally, shot glasses or sawn-off bamboo tubes, or mixed into the backpacker South-East Asia favourite “buckets” (small plastic buckets filled with “cocktails” — and, disturbingly, also used to flush the loo).

Tiger’s colour is suspiciously dark for a whisky without an age statement – or a whisky from anywhere under the rule of international law. It has the brown and slightly cloudy hue of the urine of an unwell buffalo.

Tiger whisky bottle in riverside bar, Vang Vieng, Laos.

The taste? Well, surprisingly smooth, if not exactly “mellon”.

Sufficient sweetening has been added – I’d guess, from the colour, of the caramel kind, rather than the antifreeze variety – to make it, if you ignore the fact it’s supposed to be a whisky, quite gulpable.

There’s a little bit of spirit burn, sufficient for it to feel like you’re genuinely consuming a shot. But not one hint of the classic, smoky, woody, fruity taste of whisky.

Tiger is, essentially, the perfect whisky for anyone who doesn’t like whisky. And quite possibly the cheapest way to get drunk fast outside of a Siberian prison.

What’s the roughest spirit you’ve ever drunk? Drop me a line and let me know…

25 Responses

  1. Drew says:

    Looks like you did some damage to that thing. Still mulling over how to write the post about being the least-hip foreigner in VV who still got handed the drug menu. I mean, I guess they are not discerning, or my golfing t-shirt would have put them off me as a potential client.

    • Bets says:

      If it makes you feel better, I spent 3 days in Vang Vieng in December, and not once was I offered drugs, of any variety. And I’m a reasonably cute 20-something girl. Even my friend and backpacking buddy had to agree that that was pretty impressive.

      • Theodora says:

        Ooh dear, Bets, that can’t have been good for the ego. I FINALLY got offered drugs last night in Vientiane. Which was nice…

  2. Have you been to Romania and tried palinka? Talk about ROUGH (and strong). And they sell it in reused two-liter bottles at random roadside stands all over the country.

    Unrelated: Where will you guys be in October? We’ll be in Southeast Asia then on our ship voyage and will be visiting India, Malaysia and Vietnam, before hitting up Hong Kong, China and Japan in November.

    • Theodora says:

      Romania?! Not yet, Kristin… But one day, I hope. And, as I try and try the local hooch wherever I am, I’m sure I’ll hit the Palinka.

      We will be in China in October and November, to Hong Kong in early December — what are your movements within China? I think we’re starting in Kunming, a short Yunnan tour, then Xian, Chengdu, Beijing, Shanghai (and Confucius’s town), HK — arrive in under a week.

  3. Theodora says:

    Ya. I decided not to write that I let Z try the 80p whisky… I’m mulling over a post on my mixed feelings towards VV, in fact. It was seeing monks cross on the tubing ferry boat that did it for me…

  4. Rachel says:

    Drew, we sat down with two small children and still got offered it. Unless they think that’s a better coping mechanism than the valium I usually take. *joke*
    Slightly worried about the ‘Opium weed’ in the pic above – surely one shouldn’t mix one’s drugs like that? Also disappointed not to see the VV favourite – weed crepe – advertised there 🙁

    • Theodora says:

      I got followed down a street, with Z, in Phnom Penh by a man who couldn’t believe I didn’t want to buy weed. BUT, weirdly, in VV I have NOT ONCE been offered the drug menu.

      I must look square, or something. DAMN.

  5. Grumpy says:

    I did not try any of the whisky in Lao but have had a few of the different Thai brands. If I every make it back to VV will give it a try.

    Personally I think that grappa is some of the most god awful stuff I have ever had.

    • Theodora says:

      Mmmm… They do produce premium and ultra-premium grappas now, which still, to me, feels a bit like producing a premium Lao Lao. Some spirits, in my view, are just meant to be hooch. I’ve always avoided Thai whisky. Can’t imagine why..

  6. Thanks a lot for putting yourself on the line in order to provide this invaluable consumer information. Sounds truly exotic.

    • Theodora says:

      It’s pretty special. Unfortunately, since drugs and I parted company some years ago after a long and beautiful friendship, I’m unable to report on the more exotic menu items in Vang Vieng…

  7. Mitch says:

    Sounds like the perfect winter warmer. I am sure there would be an importer in Sydney.

    • Theodora says:

      I imagine they would have to submit the substance to fairly rigorous chemical testing first. Though it would show up precisely how much tax you guys pay on booze.

  8. As a shady lookin’ type who wears a lot of black, I’ve been getting offered drugs at a minimum 10 times a day so far in Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam. I think I’m in for some serious numbers when I make to Laos…

    • Theodora says:

      On the plus side, the Lao are constitutionally chilled. I got followed down a street in PP by some very insistent gentleman, and, after choosing the wrong guesthouse, got offered weed three times by the same guy who was too faced to remember he’d already asked me… Don’t miss Khammuan province when you do Laos. incredibly beautiful. If rather skiddy on a scooter…

  9. Phil says:

    This is hilarious. Drinking tiger from a sawn off bamboo tube – it may taste like shit, but that sounds badass. Roughest spirit for me was georgi vodka, our go-to liquor in college. A plastic handle cost less than $10. Tasted like pure rubbing alcohol.

    • Theodora says:

      Oh yes. For ultimate badassery, of course, accompany with old-school opium pipe. My single roughest spirit ever was something we bought in the Gambia, some form of palm spirit — even worse than the Indonesian palm spirits.

  10. AK says:

    Ugh have you ever tried totti? It’s absolutely DISGUSTING

  11. John says:

    Tiger Whiskey-Make you crazy like tiger!

  12. shadab says:

    I m citizen of India and I buy tiger whisky.how can I purchased it plzz provide me appropriate information