Would a bottle of Goldschlager schnapps from 1998. Still be good and worth anything?!


Question: I bought a bottle of Goldschlager schnaps from the Vienna Schnaps Museum in 1998. It's actually labeled Fischer's Sch?nbrunner Gold Lik?r. I completely forgot about it and it's been sitting in the top of the closet for the last 9 years. It's actually made of 23k gold flakes. Anybody know if it's still good and if it's worth anything?


Answers: I bought a bottle of Goldschlager schnaps from the Vienna Schnaps Museum in 1998. It's actually labeled Fischer's Sch?nbrunner Gold Lik?r. I completely forgot about it and it's been sitting in the top of the closet for the last 9 years. It's actually made of 23k gold flakes. Anybody know if it's still good and if it's worth anything?
Liquor has too much alcohol to go bad, but it also doesn't age. It should taste the same as a new bottle, and should be drinkable.

Since the flavor doesn't change, you can't age liquor, thus its value is the same.
Yes, it will be worth whatever it's worth right now, PLUS the increase in the value of the gold!
Liquor, unlike wine, stops developing more flava the moment it's bottled.
Drink it and enjoy!
Cheers! >|<




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