Summer Wine Booze Question

Bora Natty

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I was just watching the trilogy when Compo passed on Gold the last couple of days. Truly is at Clegg's and they have a drink of whiskey, would anybody know the brand? I've tried to get it, but without a DVR, I'm not having much luck..
 
Well, here's half an answer!

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The wording "McBain's" is clearly visible at the top of the label, but the rest is not clear.
Stewart McBain Ltd is a whisky bottler - they buy from a distillery and sell under their own name.
There is a specialist whisky shop called "L & C McBain".
Dennis McBain was a coppersmith at a distillers 50 years ago, whose recollections of working there are used in promotional material for a £9,000 bottle produced by The Balvenie.
There is also Bain's, a South African whisky brand.

The simple bottle and understated design of the label - and the fact I have looked at 100's of whisky bottles without seeing anything like it - tends to lead to the conclusion that it is possibly a "fake" brand.
 
I was just watching the trilogy when Compo passed on Gold the last couple of days. Truly is at Clegg's and they have a drink of whiskey, would anybody know the brand? I've tried to get it, but without a DVR, I'm not having much luck..
Whatever it was, I take it that it was actually whisky.
 
Whatever it was, I take it that it was actually whisky.
Well, here's half an answer!

View attachment 6613

View attachment 6614

The wording "McBain's" is clearly visible at the top of the label, but the rest is not clear.
Stewart McBain Ltd is a whisky bottler - they buy from a distillery and sell under their own name.
There is a specialist whisky shop called "L & C McBain".
Dennis McBain was a coppersmith at a distillers 50 years ago, whose recollections of working there are used in promotional material for a £9,000 bottle produced by The Balvenie.
There is also Bain's, a South African whisky brand.

The simple bottle and understated design of the label - and the fact I have looked at 100's of whisky bottles without seeing anything like it - tends to lead to the conclusion that it is possibly a "fake" brand.
If it was a "fake" brand maybe it was a Chinese whisky?.
 
Whatever it was, I take it that it was actually whisky.

Imagine it was, a glass each and they would have been slurring their words , forgetting their lines and the scene would take days to shoot . Very rare they use alcohol on a show for that very reason.
 
The few times I have been involved in pub scenes, it was always non alcoholic beer etc used
 
They say that in The Likely Lads, real beer was actually used.

I believe that due to re-takes, Rodney Bewes estimated he drank something like nine pints of beer on one episode.

(I'll check the figure somewhen.)
 
Whatever it was, I take it that it was actually whisky.
I think the viscosity of the liquid looks very genuine - and in a later scene when Peter Sallis is looking out of the window, realising it is dawn - he does sound a bit sloshed! Also, he was inevitably emotional, grieving for his friend, Bill Owen.
 
Thank you for all of the help, you're good mates! I'm narrowing this down and I want to try and get a bottle. If it's Scotch whiskey though, I'll pass. I can't stand the stuff, but, being it was on the show, I might give it a go?
 
Not a Tennessee whiskey. Not from Kentucky as most everything there is bourbon.
 
I remember in one of my Coupling comedy episodes during a Director's Commentary audio track. They mentioned the guys drank real beer in the bar scenes while the ladies drank colored water in their wine glasses.
 
I think the viscosity of the liquid looks very genuine - and in a later scene when Peter Sallis is looking out of the window, realising it is dawn - he does sound a bit sloshed! Also, he was inevitably emotional, grieving for his friend, Bill Owen.
He was also a damned good actor, and with all these factors present, made one of tv's most poignant moments.
 
Imagine it was, a glass each and they would have been slurring their words , forgetting their lines and the scene would take days to shoot . Very rare they use alcohol on a show for that very reason.
I would like to think that the bottle was fake but the drink was real to allow them to properly give Bill Owen a send off on screen.
 
It's not whiskey, it's whisky without the e, scotch whisky.
Thanks Roger, I looked at the snaps again and I see that now. I did a bit of looking and don't see anything so far other than a place in the UK selling miniatures and most of them are $12 and $13 U.S. at least I didn't see the pound notation. I really want that exact whisky <--- (notice the spelling by the way) That Clegg and Truly had if at all possible. I can't imagine a 1/5 price, if a miniature is that much?
 
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