Tastes
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Boone County Small Batch Bourbon Finished in Oloroso Sherry Cask (Batch 2 - Second Fill)
Bourbon — Indiana, USA
Reviewed March 6, 2023 (edited March 20, 2023)Nose is red wine, raisins, cherries, brine, sugar, almonds, bit of chocolate. I could see green apple. Great nose. Body is heavy on almonds, with a nitrous mouth feel. The red wine comes back. Cherries, oranges, and sweet cream are there as well. Fruit punch. Finish is honey. Red wine is still there. Bitter coffee note hits on the end. Substantially better than WTMK Revival, which is mustier and more bitter in comparison. More industrial. This tastes cleaner. This may be my new benchmark for how good an Oloroso sherry finish can be. -
Bardstown Bourbon Co. Founders KBS Stout Finish
Bourbon — Tennessee, USA
Reviewed February 21, 2023 (edited February 23, 2023)Nose is musty. There’s brine, honey, citrus. Sugar. Cedar. Caramel. Smells old. Body is bitter, with coffee beans and stout beer on the front end. Sugar and paper hit later (don’t act like you don’t know what paper tastes like.) Finish is heavy on chocolate and maple syrup. Sugar lingers. Mild baking spices. The nose is the champ here. Body is funky, and overall I can’t say I like it. This is another one of those rare misses for Bardstown. I can’t find a way to justify purchasing this bottle. While the stout finish is obvious, I can’t really see a way it adds depth to this whiskey. -
High West American Prairie Bourbon
Bourbon — (bottled in Utah), USA
Reviewed February 11, 2023 (edited February 13, 2023)Nose is maple, sugar, salt, fresh dough. Tangerine. Possibly some watermelon. Strawberry. Yeast. Vanilla. Overall vibe = fruit wine. Body is watermelon, walnuts, more sugar. Orange is there. Strawberry sticks around. Super sweet up front, nutty in the rear. Giggety. Finish is sawdust, bit of cinnamon. Bubble gum. Mint. Bit of the tangerine comes back. There is a temptation when drinking whiskies that have hints of youth to pound them down. This was my intent with this bottle, and I’m glad I gave it the nerd treatment. This was shockingly good, and I don’t know why I undervalued it to date. I think I had mentally labeled High West as a rye brand, and although their ryes are good, I think this beats any of their main-line ryes. To me, this is right up there with Four Roses and 1792 as an affordable, delicious lower shelf bourbon (let’s say: shelf 2 out of 5). Bonus fun fact: this is apparently no longer being bottled as “American Prairie Bourbon” as of January 2023 (if not earlier). The new product, “High West Bourbon” is allegedly the same bourbon with a new label, so of course I bought one and did a side by side. Y’all know how I feel about science. For my bottles, the High West Bourbon is a noticeably inferior product. I would describe it as a flatter, less flavorful version of my American Prairie. However: AP is described as a blend of bourbons up to 13 years in age. A lot can happen in 13 years. I would be willing to accept that a very talented group of whiskey blenders used the same methodology on *similar* stocks of bourbon for both of these blends with the intent of making the same product. The deviation in the two bottles is within the margin of error of reasonable deviation within a product line. I’ve had two different bottles of Rock Hill Farms that were more dissimilar than these two. I buy that these two bourbons are the same product, and I hope that some of the new High West Bourbon blends will be as tasty as this 375 mL American Prairie. -
Ancient Ancient Age 10 Star
Bourbon — Kentucky, USA
Reviewed February 6, 2023 (edited February 9, 2023)Nose is apple, sugar, sweet tarts. Cherry. Fantastic nose. You could stop here and be all set. You should stop here and be all set. Body is apple, cherry. Herbal. That herbal note is where it starts going downhill. To expand: twigs, waxy leaves, pollen. Finish is mild baking spices. The cherry here turns to cough syrup. The herbal: mint, formaldehyde. That minty cough syrup sticks around, like peat does on Lagavulin. It’s not great. It shows the same promise as main line Ancient Age, but it gets funky toward the end of the sip. I think that funk is what (with age) BT manages to extract some really great stuff in the mid shelf mashbill 2s, particularly Blanton’s. But at this production level it’s whacked out, and I prefer the purity of the Ancient Age, where you get a cheap version of that good good MB2 without adding in the funky stuff. I am sipping veggie NyQuil. -
Old Ripy Kentucky Straight Bourbon
Bourbon — Kentucky, USA
Reviewed January 31, 2023 (edited February 9, 2023)My wiser but much-less-well-endowed friend told me that this was the turd in the Whiskey Baron collection punchbowl. (One day I’m just going to start tagging this friend directly. I bet he’d get a kick out of that.) Nose is banana bread, cut grass, roses, lemon, milk. Body is cream, sugar, lemon, orange, caramel apple. There’s something harsh too I’m struggling with figuring out. Closest I can get is orange rind. Finish is gentle. There’s brine, sugar, chocolate. Orange and lemon carries through. This is tasty. I prefer the Bond & Lillards, but I think this one is better than WB Saffell. I’m not sure what a gripe with this one would be, other than the obvious high price for a 375 mL. -
Bardstown Bourbon Co. Plantation Rum Finish
Bourbon — USA
Reviewed January 22, 2023 (edited February 9, 2023)My initial note would have read: “This is rum. Do not buy, unless you want to buy an overpriced rum.” However, I then did the following note-enrichment procedure: 1. Pour bottle into a decanter. 2. Hate contents so strongly that you don’t touch it again for like… 3 months. 3. Decide to kill it over the course of a few days to make room for a new Bardstown product in said decanter. 4. Get really drunk one night playing Rocket League, forget that you haven’t reviewed it yet, and pour last 4 fingers over ice. 5. Immediately realize that you haven’t yet reviewed this on Distiller, and are not of sound mind nor clean palate to be able to make a reasonable review. 6. In a fierce determination to not have to buy another bottle of this, promptly pour back about two ounces into aforementioned decanter. 7. Wait until you’re not hungover. 8. Review whiskey. My methodology may sound strange, but I swear to you that it made a noticeable improvement. Genuinely. Nose is cedar, sourness, mustiness. Not a rum connoisseur but I don’t detect the rum influence on the nose. It’s honestly more reminiscent of Russell’s Reserve or Elijah Craig 18 than of a finished bourbon. Body is: rum. I get tangerine too if I really hunt, but that rum note is everything. Finish is sugar, rum, cinnamon. There’s coconut. There’s no other way to say it: this is a suboptimal product. I think that my accidental dilution and aeration did in fact reduce the bite of that rum finish, but it is still dominant. Bardstown’s finishes aren’t exactly known for subtlety, and I’d argue that nobody errs more strongly on the side of the finishing barrel’s profile (over the base juice) than Bardstown. Most of the time, that’s a blessing. Twice now, it has been… “suboptimal.” This is a step up from Destillare, which… over 2 years later, I haven’t revisited my open bottle once. But this is definitely not their best work, nor is it close to best in genre. Go for Borough (if you can find it), Blood Oath (ditto), or Jefferson’s (totes can find this one) before going for this bottle. BTW: I gotta give it to @pkingmartin… “chalky orange sports drink” is one of those brilliant, non-unlearnable whiskey notes. Once you read that, there is no untasting it. That is my new, overall takeaway from this whiskey, and I’m not hating it one bit. -
Koval Single Barrel Four Grain
Other Whiskey — Illinois, USA
Reviewed January 18, 2023 (edited January 21, 2023)Lunch pour, because: Wednesday. This holds the moniker 4 grain, which I usually don’t care for. Of course, I’ve only had a few of the cheap versions, like Lee W. Sinclair, and given that a friend of mine said this was phenomenal, fingers are crossed. Nose is grainy for sure, and bitter. There’s walnut, nail polish, sawdust, and spearmint. Body is better. Brown sugar, oat. More mint. Finish is… absent. Possibly some cinnamon. This is 100% skippable. It is better than Lee W. Sinclair, and they did a noteworthy job avoiding the water sourcing issue that plagues so many of the distilleries up this way (this is from Chicago). It’s still conspicuously young, it lacks depth, and it makes some very curious flavor profile choices. Not going to order or buy this again. -
Bardstown Bourbon Co. West Virginia Great Barrel Company Blended Rye
Other Whiskey — USA
Reviewed January 6, 2023 (edited March 13, 2023)This product is finished in infrared toasted cherry oak barrels. I’m sure it’s legitimate, but can we all agree that that sounds like bullshit? Nose is high brine, pickles, salt honey. Sugar, tangerines Body is very hot, with chocolate, cream, sugar, raspberry. Bit of tea. Finish is black pepper. Potpourri. Rose water. Watermelon. A Kentucky chew opens this up a bit. The wood notes are strong, but they seem to be the source of some really delightful floral notes. This is a solid product. Value for price is always a concern when it comes to these guys, but I think this one is on the right side of the line. It’s an incredibly complex rye, and although I made fun of the infrared toasted cherry oak barrel bit, if that’s what adds in the floral notes, then that’s a delightful touch for a rye. I’m all in. Bust out y’all’s lasers. -
Basil Hayden Red Wine Cask Finish
Bourbon — Kentucky, USA
Reviewed December 31, 2022 (edited January 1, 2023)Nose is heavy with almonds, tannins, grape juice, raspberry. Body is butter, red wine. Grainy feel, which when combined with the sweetness it reminds me a bit of a Speyside. Also super dry! The trademark sweetness from Basil Hayden’s is still there, but it is somehow present for the flavor and absent for the mouth feel. It’s strange. It’s not great. Finish really hammers the almond note. I get sangria. I get cherry cough syrup. For the record: I hate Basil Hayden’s with a passion. This is not great, but it’s also a pretty big improvement. So… I’d never buy this again, as there are much better red wine finishes out there in this mid-shelf price range (Hotel Tango, Jefferson’s). But given the choice between this and regular Basil Hayden’s, this one wins all day, and I am genuinely impressed with what they pulled off here. This one is drinkable. Happy New Years!!! -
Old Taylor Straight Bourbon
Bourbon — Kentucky, USA
Reviewed December 23, 2022 (edited December 24, 2022)I really wanted to like this. I was prepared to offer highly motivated reasoning borderlining on anti-reasoning for the sake of recommending this bottom-shelf tribute to one of my favorite figures in bourbon history. (Also a shared namesake with one of my favorite bourbons, EH Taylor small batch.) But I can’t. This is not good. Nose is walnuts, bananas, yeast. Black pepper. Body is yeast, vanilla, leather, and brine. Finish carries the brine, and I also get mild orange notes. I think this is the perfect bourbon for your friend who only drinks Jack or Jim Beam, and you want to broaden their horizons. It’s in that ballpark of mediocrity, but it does start to introduce more complex flavors like that orange note (when you really search). It’s unapologetically young, and if I had to reach for a poor-man’s EHT, this wouldn’t even be in my top 3. (Benchmark, Ancient Age, and plain ole BT, if you were wondering.) Yes, you could make the “works okay in mixed drinks” argument… but that still makes me want to rip that red signature off this label. Sad to see this suck. Won’t ever buy another. Edit: out of frustration, I mixed this 1-1 with regular Buffalo Trace to make it go away faster. It is delicious. There is an argument to be made here (especially if you are in camp “BT is too sweet”) that this blend is better than either on their own.
Results 31-40 of 291 Reviews