Dave's Free Press: Journal
http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david/journal
violence, pornography, and rude words for the web generationen-usZ Whisky vs Whiskey: a style guide:
http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david/journal/id/whisky-vs-whiskey
The booze columnist for the New York Times recently made a <a href=http://thepour.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/12/04/whiskey-versus-whisky/>frightful error</a>. But to give credit where credit is due, he then <a href=http://thepour.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/02/09/for-whiskey-everything-in-its-place/>Did The Right Thing</a> and got his editors to correct their style guide. However, while the new style guide is better than the previous one, it's still wrong. The rules for when to spell it <em>whisky</em> or <em>whiskey</em> are as follows:<p><ul> <li>Malt never has an 'e', <em>unless</em> made in Ireland or the US, in which case it always does; <li>Everything else always has an 'e', <em>unless</em> it's Canadian or a Scottish blend, in which case it never does.</ul><p>"Citation needed!" I hear you cry!<p>Very well! A citation you shall have! Stroll leisurely over to your drinks cabinet, and from it extract bottles of Amrut (a single malt from India) and Yamazaki (a single malt from Japan). Notice how they spell 'whisky' - without an e. Then visit one of your friends who lacks taste, and examine his bottle of Famous Grouse. That too has no e. Now, look at your bottles of Jameson's, Knob Creek and Blanton's. They all spell it 'whiskey'. Finally, look at the website for that rare bird, the <a href=http://clearcreekdistillery.com/products.html>American single malt</a>, and also at one for <a href=http://www.glenoradistillery.com/glenbreton.htm>a Canadian single malt</a>. Notice that the American distillery uses an e, where the Canadian one doesn't.<p>Thankyou for your attention. 2009-02-11T20:43:58Z