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File:Whiskey, Explorers.jpg

A bottle of whisky

Whiskey (or whisky) was an alcoholic beverage made from grains such as corn, rye, barley, or wheat. It was distilled from a fermented mash of the grain, then aged in oak barrels or other wooden containers.

In 1893 San Francisco, Data was confronted by a begging man asking for whiskey, claiming that he required it as liniment. (TNG: "Time's Arrow")

In 2063, Zefram Cochrane suffered from a hangover shortly before the start of the Phoenix and blamed it on either whiskey or being stunned by a phaser. (Star Trek: First Contact)

In a saloon on a Skagaran colony planet in 2153, a Skagaran named Draysik served some whiskey to Deputy Bennings and two cowboy friends of his. Bennings poured a glass of the whiskey for Draysik, then used it for a toast with his own two cohorts. After the three downed their portions of the beverage, Bennings put pressure on Draysik to drink his own glass of whiskey. When Draysik tasted the drink, he reacted unpleasantly, which amused the cowboys. (ENT: "North Star")

This drink is not identified on screen. However, it was referred to as whiskey in the final draft script of "North Star".

Jonathan Archer occasionally enjoyed whiskey. In 2161, three days before the signing of the Federation Charter, he opened up a special bottle to toast to "Warp 7". The bottle had been given to Henry Archer by Zefram Cochrane the day they broke ground at the Warp Five Complex. (ENT: "These Are the Voyages...")

In 2269, an Excalbian recreation of Abraham Lincoln asked James T. Kirk whether he drank whiskey. When Kirk replied "occasionally", Lincoln compared him to another whiskey drinker, General Ulysses Grant. (TOS: "The Savage Curtain")

In 2365, Danilo Odell ordered whiskey from a replicator after Worf informed him the device could produce beverages with real alcohol. Odell found the replicated whiskey to have "no bite". (TNG: "Up The Long Ladder")

In 2374, Kathryn Janeway told Captain Miller not to drink bloodwine since it was double the strength of whiskey. (VOY: "The Killing Game, Part II")

Strictly speaking Scotch whisky is spelled without an "e" unlike Irish whiskey or American bourbon.

Types

External links

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