pkingmartin
Willett Family Estate Single Barrel Rye 7 Year
Rye — USA
Reviewed
September 23, 2021 (edited October 4, 2021)
To change things up, @Bourbon_Obsessed_Lexington sent me a series of samples that have either shapes or some code on them to prevent me from being able to know what they are until after I’ve tasted them. Will I mistake a rye for bourbon or completely miss a finish, who knows, but I’m dying to find out so let’s continue this blind challenge with the vial that has an R1 on it.
On the first nosing, this is an apricot rye alcohol blast that caused sinus damage and needed a few drops of water in it to calm it down. I then let it sit for 15 minutes to calm that Mike Tyson alcohol punch down while I my sinuses had time to recover and then approached with caution to find that the water tamed this beast to be able to identify some flavors instead of an alcohol uppercut, but found that the new challenge is the hodgepodge of eclectic flavors.
I apologize in advance if this is me having some sort of brain aneurysm but I’ll just write these notes down and hope this makes sense when I find out what this is.
The nose starts with dehydrated apricots or peaches then possible rum notes of canned pineapple and bananas foster followed by red vines along with an earthy note that transitions to a mix of spearmint, evergreen pine needles, star anise and fresh bandages with high ethanol burn.
The taste is a viscous mouthfeel starting a rye blast up front followed with dehydrated apricots then rum notes of canned pineapple and bananas foster followed by a medium rye spice that fades to a mix of spearmint, evergreen pine needles, star anise and fresh bandages with high ethanol burn.
The finish is long with apricot, maraschino cherries, Dr. Pepper, almond liqueur, pumpernickel bread, spearmint, and fresh bandages.
Ok wow, what a flavor ride that must be a rye that’s been finished in rum casks and bottled at high cask strength. It’s a bit of a wild, unbalanced ride that has a mix of rye, tropical fruits, citrus and red berries that brings in earthy rye notes throughout the taste with a long finish of sweet fruits and rye spices. At first the flavor ride and proof were overwhelming but with time this grew on me to be very enjoyable with those strange combinations of flavors and a long enjoyable finish.
If you’re looking for a weird combination of flavors and are a bit of a high proof nut, this might be a great rye for you.
So what is this funky weird rye…… Willett 7 year Single Barrel Rye “Lion’s Share” 2019 bottled at 59.5%.
Well hot damn, it’s not a finished rye after all and it turns out to be a freaking unicorn bottle on top of that. A huge thank you again to @Bourbon_Obsessed_Lexington for the sample because I don’t think I’ll ever find one of these in the wild for a price I’d be willing to pay.
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@PBMichiganWolverine the 10y and older bourbons were all sourced and probably disappeared as active bottlings 5 or more years ago and now command $1,000s (which seems steep for what is likely good Heaven Hill bourbon) - the 6-8 year offerings that show up in KY are now all barrel picks, the vast majority of which are their main distributor, aka”Lion’s Share” which is where this 7yo bottle came from; sadly the Family Estate bottlings are no longer available directly from the distillery they way they once were
@Bourbon_Obsessed_Lexington That’s a tough one! I really liked the 4 year, especially its low cost and will have to get another bottle to rate again. @PBMichiganWolverine These are similar and fly off the shelves at high prices for anything 6 years and above. I think Jack Rose whiskey bar in DC made it through the pandemic just selling Willett bottles under 10 years old between $250-500 and thousands for the 14 year and above age statement.
Didn’t know this even existed. Is it a unicorn like BTAC ?
I go back and forth wondering if I actually like this better than their 4 year. There are trade offs and the oak on this is welcome but the signature eucalyptus and fruitier notes (together with it spring someone from parting with a painful lump sum of cash) of the 4 year make a strong case for bottling this at 4 years after all.