None of the Anglosphere currencies would make this anything other than the price of a car anyway. This is absolutely just a collector's item for those with more money than sense, never expected to be actually drunk
There's a bar in Chicago, Lady Gregory's, that has a whiskey bible. They will sell you 40yo Scottish single-malt whiskey--they have multiple choices, including from distilleries that have been out of business longer than I've been alive--by the dram, at up to about $250 per dram (as of the last time I was there, in 2016). Assuming that they're using the American standard dram measurement of 4ml/dram, that works out to up to $46,000 for an entire bottle.
I assume you've tripped up on your measurements somewhere, because 4 ml would be a very sad dram. A spirit measure in the UK is 25 ml, so you get 28 of those out of a 700 ml bottle for $7,000 at that bar.
Edit: upon looking it up, apparently a dram actually is 4 ml in America? In Scotland that's just the word for a glass of whisky, assumed to be an approximate "one drink" rather than an actual specification of volume. If you offered someone a dram and poured them 4 ml here, they'd think you were the stingiest person since Ebenezer Scrooge
However bars mark drinks up like mad, and they will absolutely do so on extremely premium drinks because the only people buying those are people who do not care how much it costs. If you take $3 for a shot of a basic vodka, that's $84 for the bottle, and there's absolutely no way you'd pay $84 for that same bottle in a supermarket.
You definitely could spend seven grand on a 40 year old bottle of whisky if you went looking for one. This specific bottle is 51 years, but it's commanding this price because it's a very rare special edition from a big and popular distillery
I doubt this is in the US. The key indicator for me is the Napa valley wine beside it. Unless Costco does things very differently, imported bottles are always grouped into the same aisle. Given that I'd guess its outside the US.
The Kirkland branding is everywhere. I see it at the Australian stores.
None of the Anglosphere currencies would make this anything other than the price of a car anyway. This is absolutely just a collector's item for those with more money than sense, never expected to be actually drunk
There's a bar in Chicago, Lady Gregory's, that has a whiskey bible. They will sell you 40yo Scottish single-malt whiskey--they have multiple choices, including from distilleries that have been out of business longer than I've been alive--by the dram, at up to about $250 per dram (as of the last time I was there, in 2016). Assuming that they're using the American standard dram measurement of 4ml/dram, that works out to up to $46,000 for an entire bottle.
I assume you've tripped up on your measurements somewhere, because 4 ml would be a very sad dram. A spirit measure in the UK is 25 ml, so you get 28 of those out of a 700 ml bottle for $7,000 at that bar.
Edit: upon looking it up, apparently a dram actually is 4 ml in America? In Scotland that's just the word for a glass of whisky, assumed to be an approximate "one drink" rather than an actual specification of volume. If you offered someone a dram and poured them 4 ml here, they'd think you were the stingiest person since Ebenezer Scrooge
However bars mark drinks up like mad, and they will absolutely do so on extremely premium drinks because the only people buying those are people who do not care how much it costs. If you take $3 for a shot of a basic vodka, that's $84 for the bottle, and there's absolutely no way you'd pay $84 for that same bottle in a supermarket.
You definitely could spend seven grand on a 40 year old bottle of whisky if you went looking for one. This specific bottle is 51 years, but it's commanding this price because it's a very rare special edition from a big and popular distillery
Kirkland Signature is Costco's store brand.
There's also a Kirkland near Montreal, so it could be Canada. But as it's already been mentioned, it has nothing to do with location in this case.
I don’t think it can be Canada because the liquor part is separate from the main store.
I doubt this is in the US. The key indicator for me is the Napa valley wine beside it. Unless Costco does things very differently, imported bottles are always grouped into the same aisle. Given that I'd guess its outside the US.