Why do hangovers get worse with age?

hangovers and age the three drinkers.jpg

Remember your early 20s? After a few too many drinks, you’d wake fresh as a daisy, ready to tackle work, run a marathon, pen a bestseller. But, as we slip into later life, our hangovers become incapacitating. Pounding headaches, nausea and hangxiety (read our piece on what that is here) can all turn up after just a couple of tame pints at the pub. Even choosing what to watch on Netflix becomes a chore.

It’s not just your imagination  though - there is some science behind it. According to physicians, as you age, your body’s metabolism slows down and that doesn’t just mean the inevitable waistline expansion. Your body no longer metabolises certain things, including alcohol, as well because your liver doesn’t work quite as efficiently as it did when you were 21.

Enzymes in your liver begin to process alcohol by breaking it down into acetaldehyde, a toxin commonly thought to be a contributor to hangover symptoms. From there, enzymes break the acetaldehyde down into non-toxic acetate. But, here’s the thing: your liver can only do that so fast, and it gets slower as you age. So, in effect, acetaldehyde hangs around in your body for longer, getting pushed into your bloodstream – and increasing that grim hungover feeling.

Of course, there are other factors at play. Your genetics are important – we all have those annoying friends who ‘don’t get hangovers’, at any age – as is the quantity you drink and how often. And, perception matters. You might recall that you didn’t get hangovers when you were younger, but was that really true? Your hangovers may be more about feeling anxious and having low productivity rather than nausea and headaches. 

Earlier in life, feeling rubbish after a big night out with mates almost feels like a badge of honour. Yet over time, the novelty wears off. And, when combined with increased responsibilities like high-pressured jobs or childcare, hangovers genuinely are worse  - and longer - than they used to be as you take longer to recover. 

Want to know why we get ‘hangxiety?’ Read all about it here.

Thursday Club with Talk Radio: Top Tesco Picks

Thursday Club with Talk Radio: Top Tesco Picks thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

We’re still in supermarket press tasting season and so on today’s Thursday Club with Mike Graham on Talk Radio, we look at three top picks from Tesco - and they are all on a theme of Sauvignon Blanc:! This is the grape that famously makes Sancerre , Sauturnes and white Bordeaux.

Tesco Finest Sancerre 2020

Sancerre is the original home of the Sauvignon Blanc grape and arguably the most famous region for it in the world, with Marlborough New Zealand sneaking up from behind. It’s just here in France, wines are named after region not grape! Sancerre is a famously understated version of Sauvignon with grassy notes of nettle and cut grass with a subtle, citrussy undertone. Given its pedigree, this is a classic version at a very reasonable price. 

Find it here for £14

Bruce Jack, Sauvignon Blanc, Western Cape, South Africa, 2020

With Bruce, we go from understated to full on, New World power! Yes, it’s in-your-face but it’s also a fabulously characterful wine with complex notes of smoky guava, lemon, lime, wet grass and passionfruit. Lots of bang for not so much buck and well worth seekign out. This will be epic with goats cheese.

Find it here for £7

Tesco Finest Sauvignon Blanc Semillon 2020

Sauvignon Blanc is often paired with the Semillon agrape s a blending partner as the two complement each other perfectly, with Sauvignon’s zippy zesty freshness balancing up Semillon’s waxy, weightiness. This is the main blend you will find in sweet wines like Sauternes as well as the classic, still, dry white wines from Bordeaux. This Aussie version shows the perfect combination of both grapes. 

Find it here for £8

The Best UK Vineyard Stays

Best UK Vineyard Stays English wine thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

What’s better than a visit to a UK winery? An overnight stay at one. Book into the best, and after the daytrippers head home you’ll be left to bed down with bottles of fine English fizz – and to wake to a sunrise over sleepy rows of vines. If it wasn’t for that hallmark British summer weather (ahem), you’d swear you were in the south of France…

Rathfinny Wine Estate, East Sussex

Best UK Vineyard Stays Rathfinny thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Encircled by gently sloping vineyards and open Sussex skies, Rathfinny’s historic Flint Barns are Instagram-perfect inside and out. Ten rooms come with a shared snug – accented with exposed brick walls, cushy leather sofas and a wood burner – though better for summertime is the courtyard, a dreamy place to savour the Classic Cuvée sparkling, a typical Champagne blend aged for 36 months in bottle. Given you’re just three miles from the coast, break up sipping sessions with strolls to nearby chalk cliffs and beaches. Return for gastropub-style cooking in the onsite restaurant, plus hearty breakfasts of shakshuka or oozy Burford Brown eggs.

Book here

Denbies Wine Estate, Surrey

Best UK Vineyard Stays Denbies Wine Estate thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

One of England’s oldest and best-known wineries, Denbies gives good vineyard: 265 acres of it, to be specific. And tucked among the manicured rows of Bacchus, Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Rondo you’ll find a properly lovely hotel. Seventeen rooms, dressed in contemporary stylings with citrussy pops of colour, stripey hues and (as you’d expect) enticing views over the estate, are split between an 1850s restored farmhouse and a new extension, The Brokes. Pick the wing that suits you best, drop your bags, then head off on a tour and tasting – there are several to chose from – or for a lazy meal at one of the multiple on-site restaurants. 

Book here

Three Choirs, Gloucestershire

Best UK Vineyard Stays Three Choirs thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Get that camera ready. Floor-to-ceiling – and wall-to-wall – windows on the contemporary lodges at Three Choirs mean that scenic vistas to vineyard and lake pervade every minute of your stay. Just a short stroll from the winery’s popular tasting area – but pleasantly private – the lodges also come with wraparound verandas, so you can soak up the summer sunshine over a glass of Three Choirs elderflower and nettle-scented Bacchus, or strawberry-bright Pinot Noir Rosé Sparkling. You’ll get a discount on the informative afternoon vineyard tour, too, a natural follow up to a tapas lunch of patatas bravas, blackened padrón peppers and smoked mackerel pâté.

Book here 

The Fallow Treehouse, Hampshire

Best UK Vineyard Stays Fallow Treehouse Black Chalk Wine thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

How to make a vineyard stay even more spectacular? Combine it with an epic, luxury treehouse. This glam pad in the Test Valley, on the edge of award-winning Black Chalk Wine’s vineyard, is built around a mature tree and comes with an outdoor bathtub, herringbone wood floors, button-back sofas and a toilet straight out of a glossy interiors mag. (And, of course, a bottle of Black Chalk Classic 2015 sparkling, a crisp blend of Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier.) Visit during harvest and you can watch the grapes being plucked over your morning cuppa; come in November, and you can partake in truffle hunting tours among the neighbouring trees.

Book here

Oxney Organic, East Sussex

Best UK Vineyard Stays Oxney Organic Wine thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

The very picture of a cutesy English cottage, Oxney’s Vineyard House is perfect for a small crowd – it will sleep you plus seven of your nearest and dearest, across three bedrooms within grape’s toss of the vines. Tumble out from the beamed-ceiling interior on a Saturday morning to join a tour around the vineyards, then return for a BBQ feast in the sprawling garden. Travelling as a twosome? Book the quaint shepherd’s hut instead, set in a small paddock near Pinot Noir grapes. Throw open the French doors, then enjoy your complimentary bottle of wine in a cute picnic area, complete with fire pit. When darkness falls, there’s a wood burner to keep you cosy.

Book here

Llanerch Vineyard Hotel, Wales

Best UK Vineyard Stays Llanerch Vineyard thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

It’s not just the rows of photogenic vines – taken in through floor-to-ceiling windows from homely but contemporary rooms – that draw visitors to this hotel. There’s the slick restaurant, serving up fluffy scones at afternoon tea and heirloom beetroot tarts at dinner. And, of course, the top-notch cookery school from chef Angela Gray, where you’ll learn to whip up barbecue fish tacos or grilled mascarpone peaches with bourbon caramel. Join a tour around the vines, sip your way through the Cariad wine range, then retire to a suite, dressed in white walls, countryside prints and cushy throw pillows.

Book here

Don’t fancy a stay but still want to enjoy yourself? Then how about checking out some of the Best Cocktail Terraces in London? Or if it’s a city stay you are looking for, click here for more hotel inspiration!

Thursday Club with talk RADIO: Bargain wines from Aldi

Thursday Club with talk RADIO: Bargain wines from Aldi thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

It’s supermarket press tasting season! On today’s Thursday Club with Mike Graham on Talk Radio, we look at three ALDI wines that really impressed me for the price - and they’re all a bit of a step away from the norm!

White wine: Filos Estate Assyrtiko, 2020, Greece.

Assyrtiko is the famous white wine grape from Greece that is making a splash in the UK. This one hails from North West Greece with grapes harvest from one single vineyard. If you love Chablis and Albarino, you will like this. It's citrussy and fresh with a saline tang and a peachy note balancing everything up. Perfect for hot summer days - when we eventually get them! 

Find it at Aldi for £6.99 here.

Sangiovese Reserva, Estevez, Chile.

Sangiovese is the Italian grape that is most famous for making the wines of Chianti, Brunello di Montalcino and Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, so it’s fascinating to find it out in Chile. Here it's fuller-bodied and more juicy, but showing classic Sangiovese notes of sour cherry, dried herbs and coffee beans. Beautifully made, big and ballsy but with soft tannins. 

Find it at Aldi for £6.49 here.

Aglianico del Vulture, 2017, Italy.

Another example of how southern Italian grapes are well worth looking out for. Aglianico (that’s the grape) thrives on the volcanic soils around Mount Vulture in Basilicata. This is for you if you like Barolo or punchier Tuscan reds. It’s black and savoury with notes of grilled meat, tobacco, stewed fruit and cocoa powder, partly thanks to the extra age on it. Incredible value:

Find it at Aldi for £6.99 here

News: We're shaking things up at The Three Drinkers!

Aidy & Helena The Three Drinkers

Hello lovely readers. We have some news for you!

As you know, Colin, Aidy and Helena joined forces in 2018 as the Three Drinkers in order to shake up an industry known for its very traditional values. Today, with our returning TV Series, online magazine and our Bring a Bottle podcast (have you listened yet? ) we are shaking things up once more.

Helena and Aidy will continue to lead at 3DHQ, but our Third Drinker slot will now showcase an exciting, revolving range of guests, be they brands, communicators, winemakers, distillers or even you; our readers, listeners and viewers!

This news comes as Colin plans to concentrate more on his international whisky pursuits, stepping down as a full-time ‘Drinker’ in order to allow a broader range of talent to be represented. Aidy and Helena already fly the flag for disability communities, with Aidy being one of the only global TV presenters with Tourette syndrome, alongside one of the few drinks personalities within the LGBTQIA+ community. Helena has also been an active voice for female empowerment within a typically male-dominated world. Colin’s fans need not be disappointed though; he will be back sporadically, sharing his investment advice and global whisky discoveries as a guest Third Drinker.  He says this:

“I am incredibly lucky to have been able to work with two of my best friends. I’ll always be the original ‘Third Drinker’ and am grateful to have been given the time and space to explore new ventures, although I will be back periodically. I hope this leaves room for new faces and new ideas to further the diversity in all things for The Three Drinkers.”

Helena says “We’ve loved continuing to build The Three Drinkers brand and watching our audience grow during lockdown. We will miss our friend Colin and his whisky-fuelled antics, but wish him well on his travels and look forward to welcoming him back from time to time.”

“It’s bittersweet for us,” says Aidy. “While we are sad to be saying ‘au revoir’ to Colin, what this change will allow us to do now is very positive. We’ve listened to what the drinks world needs right now and that is a much needed diversity push, giving more support to under-represented communities, be they communicators, brand owners, winemakers etc. Having a revolving Third Drinker slot will give us even more opportunities to use our platform and make a tangible difference here.”

Their first series The Three Drinkers do Scotch Whisky is streaming on Amazon Prime in 172 countries and territories and will be available on British Airways, Aer Lingus, Iberia and Lufthansa flights from June onwards. Having just passed its one year anniversary, their Bring a Bottle podcast has just secured sponsorship for two more series and will continue to include a roster of guests, 70% of which will be welcomed from underrepresented and diverse backgrounds as part of their ongoing inclusion ethos. 

Thank you for your continuing support of us! Keep reading, listening and watching! More news coming very soon…

STRYKK: NOT R*M Espresso Martini

Best Mocktails STRYKK espresso martini thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

We love a good Espresso Martini (I mean let’s face it, who doesn’t?!) and now we’ve found the perfect way to enjoy it on days when we want a day off the booze - and it still taste great! Introducing STRYKK: NOT R*M; a superbly balanced spiced rum alternative that blends sugar cane and raisin notes with vanilla and oak wood tone to create a very delicious serve!

Ingredients

50ml STRYKK NOT R*M
50ml Cold Brew concentrate
15ml Sugar syrup
Coffee beans to garnish

Method

Combine all the ingredients together in a shaker with ice. Shake well before straining into a martini glass.

 Find STRYKK here: £14 if you use STRYKK code ‘THREE14’ at checkout (normally £18.99)

Thursday Club with talkRADIO: Rum Cocktails

Thursday Club with talkRADIO: Rum Cocktails thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

What is Rum?

Rum is a spirit that is usually made by fermenting and distilling molasses (a byproduct of converting sugar cane into sugar) before ageing it in oak barrels, often old whisky ones. Most rums are blended with other batches from the same distillery to create unique flavours.

Central and South America are most famous for rum, with sugarcane having been introduced to that part of the world by Europeans in the 1400s. Colonialists started sugar plantations that used slave labour and rum came from here. Other countries around the world are producing rum now too and we are seeing some big names come out of the Philippines and India.

The Rum ageing process is faster in hot, humid climates, where the interaction between the wood and spirit is accelerated. Almost all rums are blended with other batches made at the same distillery to create unique flavours. The key styles are light or white rum, Amber rum, which has had some oak age and dark rums, which are aged in charred whisky barrels. There are also spiced rums, which have spices such as clove added to them and a whole host of flavoured and sweetened rum. 

East London Liquor Co. Rarer Rum

£27.75 from the Whisky Exchange

The East London Liquor Co. is based in the old East End and they distil, import and serve a range of award-winning gins, whiskies, vodkas, rums and cocktails. This Rarer Rum has been made with Demerara sugar from Guyana in a wooden still and aged in ex-bourbon casks. Think of buttery caramel and vanilla with some citrus fruit and spice. Here are two ways to try it!

Rum Negroni

50ml Rum (we love Rarer Rum)

50ml Campari

50ml Sweet Vermouth (we love Cocchi - £19.95)

Orange wheel to garnish

Method: Combine ingredients in a mixing glass with a cup of ice. Stir to chill and lightly dilute ingredients. Strain into a rocks glass over an ice sphere (or regular ice). Garnish with an orange twist

Daiquiri

50ml Rum

25ml Fresh lime juice

15ml Sugar syrup ( we love Monin - £5)

Lime to garnish

A Daiquiri is a cocktail where the main ingredients are rum, citrus juice (typically lime), and a sugar sweetener. Add the rum, lime juice and sugar syrup to a shaker with ice, and shake until well-chilled. Strain into a chilled coupe and garnish with a lime twist.



Which Whiskies To Invest In - May Whisky Investment Index

Best whiskies to invest in May 2021 thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

Words by Colin Hampden-White

The king lives on, as Dalmore stays at the top for whisky investors, or, very wealthy drinkers were buying at auction last month! Closing the gap from last month and now in second place is Bowmore with old bottles of Bowmore doing very well.

There were a good amount of Karuizawa bottles at auction, notably a bottle of Five Decades sold for charity which was donated by Marcin Miller and David Croll raising £9800 for the Worshipful Company of Distillers Charities.

The usual suspects are still in the top ten with Macallan, Springbank and Clynelish, and they are joined by Ardbeg, which, because of the rarity of old bottles dips in and out of the top ten, and with the release of Ardbeg 25, Scorch and a very notable single cask 20 year old, Ardbeg may well move further up in the coming months.

So, my top tip for bottles to watch this month would be Ardbeg as I feel there will be plenty on the market in the coming month and it will go up the top ten. Avoid the first bottles on the market from new releases as they tend to spike in price before settling down after a month or so. It might even be worth looking back at bottles released a year ago. I’ve listed a few below.

The Dalmore 6%
Bowmore 3%
Rosebank Official Bottlings 2%
Karuizawa 1.5%
Clynelish 5%
Macallan 1%
Springbank 1%
Yamazaki 0.5%
Bunnahabhain 1.5%
Ardbeg

Bottles to Watch

Ardbeg Arrrrrrrdbeg! Committee Release 

Best whiskies to invest in Ardbeg Committee Release thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

A one-off release to celebrate the career of distillery manager Micky Heads. We had the fortune of meeting Micky on our trip to Islay and he spoke about another brilliant expression called Galileo. Another Ardbeg well worth investing in if you can find it!

Size: 750ml
ABV: 58.8%
Find here:
US from 179.49

Ardbeg Blaaack

Best whiskies to invest in Ardbeg Blaaack thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

Before Scorch there was Blaaack. This special release for the 20th anniversary of the committee was released over six months ago now means the initial spike in prices are over and are back to a good level to buy at auction, or if like this one you can find it at its original release price, then that’s a great option.

Size: 750ml
ABV:
46%
Find here: US from $139.99

Ardbeg 19 1st release

Best whiskies to invest in Ardbeg 19 Traigh Bhan thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

This Ardbeg was a new release at the end of 2019, and they are now onto their second batch with a 3rd to follow soon. If you can find the original first release, these are now being found at auction and increasing in price steadily.

Size: 750ml
ABV:
46.2%
Find here:
US from $322.70

In the UK there are a few very special bottles on sale. Along with a distillery bottling from 2002, independent bottles are also well worth looking at. With the rarity of Ardbeg official bottles, these independent bottles will also increase over time.

 

Ardbeg Committee Reserve (bottled 2002)

Best whiskies to invest in Ardbeg Committee Reserve thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

Size: 700ml
ABV:
55.3%
Find here:
£1,195

 

Ardbeg 28 Year Old Hunter Laing

Best whiskies to invest in Ardbeg 28 Hunter Laing thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

Size: 700ml
ABV:
50.1%
Find here:
£1012.22

 

Ardbeg 24 Year Old

Best whiskies to invest in Ardbeg 24 Darkness thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers Colin Hampden White

Size: 500ml
ABV:
46.8%
Find here:
£1034.95

All the brands in the top ten should do well over time. Like any of my suggestions, they are suggestions and I don’t pretend to have a crystal ball, but it will point you in the right direction to do your own research and introduce you to the possibilities of investing in whisky.

If you want to take a look at past whisky investment indexes then click here for April and here for March.