BeerNinjaEsq
Jefferson's Rye Cognac Cask Finish
Rye — USA
Reviewed
April 14, 2021 (edited June 23, 2021)
I apologize for the length of this review.
You know the first time you try A Midwinter's Night Dram and you say to yourself: "Wow. Now I understand." This aims to do the same thing for rye aged in cognac that MWND did for rye aged in port. I initially wanted to say that "it just failed to achieve the same great heights," but now I'm not so sure it falls short. It's less punchy; it's more subtle; and here I am spending far more time with this bottle than I ever intended for a mid-week review.
So, yes, let me be clear, I find this to be a successful and intriguing pour, and I recommend it.
Nose: So many analogies come to mind, but there are three basic components here jostling for control: smoke, citrus, and pine - and once in a fleeting while, a hint of tobacco. In the interest of full disclosure, I tasted this in a kitchen wherein I just cooked bacon, so, I'm sure that had something to do with the first thing that popped in my head... but, I kept coming back to this image of eating a citrus braised, peppery cuban style pork shoulder in a restaurant next to a cigar lounge. Alternatively, it reminded me of being in a Vietnamese restaurant being served a mixture of salt, sugar, and pepper in a small porcelain bowl with lime to accompany some roast dishes. If neither of those food analogies work for you, you might also be reminded of Pine-sol but not in bad way. In a word, the rye quality here is very bright.
Don't let it sit in your glass too long though. After a while, you lose some of the citrusy, more unusual aromas and it begins to smell more and more like a normal rye.
Flavor: This drinks like it was never aged in new charred oak but was just a rye mash aged in used barrels from the beginning. It immediately coats your tongue like light syrup but without the sweetness. This is the texture of cognac, and this same sensation came to mind, first and foremost, with every taste. Then, before I was ready, it transformed into rye.
This is a dangerous pour.
I kept coming back, sip after sip, because I wanted to understand that hint of cognac better, but it kept disappearing before I was done. I understand why other members of this group suddenly found themselves with a half-empty bottle after a very short time.
All-in-all, the flavors here are muted, but in a good way. It drinks easily and leaves you reaching for more. There is a familair rye spice background that ties everything together, but it never over-asserts. In the finish, the cognac comes back, accompanied by black tea and the citrusy lime quality that I first noticed in the nose.
A light, smokey, sweet tea quality remains as the finish slowly fades.
70.0
USD
per
Bottle
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@PBMichiganWolverine I sampled the tequila finish at a tasting at the distillery. Almost purchased it and still plan to. Wound up getting the Manhattan finish and Double (barrel or cask). It was just the correct amount of tequila to give a twist without distracting from the rye. If/when I grab a bottle, I will send you a sample.
@Scott_E ive not tried any Sagamore, but I’ve heard the same—-the cognac and port are exceptional. I’m intriqued by their tequila finish as well
@Scott_E I'm actually not far from Sagamore and have tasted through several different bottles/finishes. I think I enjoyed the cognac but it's been a while now. The one I really enjoyed was the Distiller's finished in Sierra Nevada rye beer barrels
@BeerNinjaEsq I agree with @PBMichiganWolverine that Act 2 (and Act 3) was mind blowing (at least for me). Sagamore Rye Cognac Finish and Sagamore Rye Port finish are ones to seek out to try that fall into the same categories. Both quite good as well, IMO. Nice review!
@BeerNinjaEsq midwinter act 2 was amazing —they had 16yr rye in that. Act 3 was almost as good. Then it dropped in quality at 4,5,6. I had act 7, thought it was good, but no where as the 2 and 3; better than 4,5,6 though
@ContemplativeFox I tried Magnus in a blind with about 50 people and serveral other finished whiskies and it did somewhere middle of the pack. Dovetail was the nearly unanimous winner of that bunch followed by the most votes for Legent, surprisingly. Magnus failed to differentiate from the rest of the pack despite being the most expensive bottle in the tasting. I haven't bought one since I haven't tried the Murray Hill club or cigar batch yet
+100 million @WhiskeyLonghorn . If people start apologizing for long reviews, I'll need to get a Canadian citizenship to apologize multiple times for every single one of mine.
Wow, beating Magnus and competing with MWND. Why did you post a tasting here instead of just emailing me a tip?!
@PBMichiganWolverine I never had the pleasure of the early ones but I have had Act 5 onward, and I think this compares, in spirit, to the recent releases. IMO, MWND Act 8 is better than both Acts 6&7. Maybe Act 5, too, but I don't have it anymore to make the comparison
@Bourbon_Obsessed_Lexington I think so! I thought Magnus was fine but this was better
Never apologize for a long review. Good whiskey deserves to have nice things said about it.
Sounds more well rounded than Magnus finished in cognac barrels... maybe rye and cognac are meant to be friends?
@BeerNinjaEsq The early Midwinters were some of my favorites. If this is comparing to that in terms of stature, it’s worthy praise