From ABC via Yahoo News:
Man finds 100-year-old surprise in attic
Nope, not a zombie.
To save money on the installation of central air-conditioning in his St. Joseph, Mo., home, Bryan Fite began replacing the wires in his attic, prying up the floor boards on the rafters. Along with possible savings, he found a treasure beneath the floorboards: 13 bottles of century-old whiskey.
Fite, 40, grew up in St. Joseph, and after working in Kansas City for
several years, he returned to settle in his hometown in September 2011.
The house he and his wife Emily Fite chose was built in the 1850s and needed work, Fite said.
The cost of installing central A/C and heat was prohibitive, he said, so
he got to work in his attic. What first appeared to Fite as a set of
strangely shaped insulated pipes turned out to be the secret whiskey
stash of one of the house's former owners — or so goes Fite's main
theory of how the liquor ended up there.
When they purchased the house, the Fites received a paper abstract
detailing the history of its ownership. One of the owners, Fite said,
had to give up the house when he was consigned to a sanitarium "for
alcohol reasons." Fite hypothesizes that this alcoholic hid the bottles
in the attic for some future occasion.
"Unfortunately, he never got the chance," Fite said.
All the whiskey in Fite's attic was bottled in 1917 and distilled
between 1912 and 1913. Fite, a self-proclaimed history buff, said the
four bottles of Hellman's Celebrated Old Crow whiskey he found may have
been among the last of their kind. In 1918, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
in favor of Edson Bradley, the maker of the still-popular Old Crow
whiskey bottled by the makers of Jim Beam, allowing him exclusive rights
to the "Old Crow" label.
In addition to the Old Crow bottles, Fite's attic was keeping cool a few
bottles of Guckenheimer, the erstwhile Pennsylvania rye whiskey, and W.
H. McBrayer's Cedar Brook whiskey.
In 2017, when the bottles turn 100, Fite and his friends will pop them open, he said. But for now, they are simply antiques.
"Part of the allure for me is having them in their original state," said
Fite, who identified bourbon as his drink of choice. "I have high
expectations of what they'll taste like, and I'm afraid if I open them
I'll be disappointed."
The quality of Fite's findings depend largely on the liquid level of the
whiskey in the bottles, said Lew Bryson, managing editor of
WhiskyAdvocate.com. If enough whiskey has evaporated, oxygen will enter
the bottle and begin rusting the whiskey, and its "off flavors" will be
concentrated in what remains, according to Bryson.
"Unfortunately, the good stuff leaves first," he said.
But unlike wine, in which yeast continues fermenting in the bottle,
whiskey's alcohol content is too high to support any organisms. As long
as the cap or cork is secure enough not to let in much oxygen, the age
of the bottle will not affect the quality or taste of its contents.
Bryson said Fite could likely sell the bottles for several hundred
dollars apiece. Pre-prohibition whiskeys are of historical interest, he
said, adding that as a Pennsylvania rye enthusiast, he would be
interested in buying one of Fite's Guckenheimers.
The value of antique whiskey is influenced by factors such as rarity and
the reputation of the brand, he said, but it is not easy to predict, he
said. An extremely rare single-malt whiskey from the 1930s recently
sold for $100,000.
"You don't know until you try to sell it," he said.
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