Bourbon_Obsessed_Lexington
Kentucky Owl Bourbon (Batch #10)
Bourbon — Kentucky , USA
Reviewed
February 4, 2021 (edited November 27, 2022)
Very cherry, much wood. Dust?
Bottle 8058/14030. Hardly feels exclusive. Let’s see where this fits into my track record of poor choice, NDP splurges. I’ve never tried KY owl before. When I could have picked up a batch 3 or 4 of their bourbon at $150-180 I scoffed and passed in my fleeting youth. Then this batch pops up everywhere around town. And it sits. And it sits. And I wonder...
Probably because this now commands a $300 ticket to ride. When I randomly see it for $230 my feeble mind thinks “What a bargain!” And now we pour, either to celebrate or forget - we will find out soon.
The color is nice - a bit of a rusty orange or even light copper.
The nose right out of the freshly opened bottle is somewhat robust with cherries, candies fruit, baking spices, vanilla and wood. Fairly classic. As it rests a bit of earthy, dusty funk comes out and something like an old leather couch. Still, the nose is predominantly sweet but suggests an entertaining balance.
This is not bad. Medium bodied at first and like a winding country road - it takes you around a few bends before an oily, long finish sets in. Let’s apply throttle and carve again.
Butter cake, vanilla, brown sugar, dried pineapple, marzipan, tobacco on the nose.
This lands so nicely with a balance of brown sugar, butter, nutmeg, clove and then cherry, marzipan and then the oily walnut and oak turn until we start to fade into bananas foster, cinnamon and brown, dry tobacco finish.
Ok, so I’m impressed. As in really happy with this. It takes me places. Few pours do that these days. All of this from an initial pour. It just checks my boxes.
So now we turn to the question of financial regret. At $230 this is one of the most expensive bottles I’ve purchased. Garrison Bro. Cowboy is there too. If I had to pick? Don’t make me do that... the Cowboy might win but might lose depending on the day. The finish on this is just so classic, so lasting.
That said, how far off is a $60 bottle of ECBP, an $80 bottle of Remus III/IV or a unicorn $75 ($699) bottle of Weller Full Proof? Well, truth be told it is more complex with a better finish but only slightly. It’s like when Car and Driver posts 0-60 times and you see a 2.9 instead of a 3.6 and think holy smokes!! And then you realize both are more than what most could handle. Neither are practical on the daily. They both will cost you. And frankly a 4.1 second launch will still thrill.
And with that I say adieu. Not often will I praise a NDP, but this is an exception. I would like ~$50 back but whatever, I’ve done worse.
230.0
USD
per
Bottle
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@Bourbon_Obsessed_Lexington Bookers here in NJ/NYC is upwards $120. And the Little Book series are close to $200.
Great review and what a phenomenal bourbon! Thanks again for sharing and now I need to track one of these down.
@ContemplativeFox I was convinced ECBP was up to $85 based on the distillery release and a local chain, only to find an A121 at the grocery for $65... all while Bookers has become scarce and upward of $90. Heaven Hill, if you are reading this - THANK YOU! Hands down my #1 KY distillery (DSP KY-1 for a good reason).
Now you're making me want to open my bottle of Cowboy. And buy a case of these to bunker. Realistically, I'll probably be sticking with ECBP though. As awesome as this is, it's nigh impossible to beat ECBP on value.
@ghill40509 the spice profile (almost a cedar quality) reminds me a bit of Remus but with more brown sugar and butter on top. Hopefully the bootlegger will still be flying below the radar when this is gone to help me get over the loss.
Had to laugh at " If I had to pick? Don’t make me do that... the Cowboy might win but might lose depending on the day. The finish on this is just so classic, so lasting." I truly understand. Working on a Remus IV now and happy to see it bears mention.