Next up in my Buffalo Trace series are three samples of single barrel picks of Sazerac rye all bottled at 45% ABV.
First up is a selection made by a Las Vegas group.
The nose starts with a moderately sweet butterscotch with lightly charred pumpernickel bread and mild forest floor herbs then a mild black peppercorn spice with slight sourness from baked plums followed by a light vanilla orange custard, candied fennel seeds and anise with medium ethanol burn.
The taste is a thin mouthfeel starting with a moderately sweet butterscotch with mild forest floor herbs before a moderate bitter spice that slowly fades to a sour cherries, baked plums and lemongrass followed by a light vanilla orange custard, roasted fennel and anise with medium ethanol burn.
The finish is medium length with burnt pumpernickel bread, baked apples, dill, cloves and spearmint flavored candy mints.
The nose started promising with a mix of sweet, sour and herbal that leaned more toward the sour side, but not unpleasantly; however, once I went for a taste those sour notes dominated along with a bitter spice that overpowered those sweet and light rye flavors before finishing on the ashy and bitter side with light citrus and sweet herbs slightly coming through.
Score: 2.5
Next up is a selection made by a Warsaw group.
The nose starts with a moderately sweet butterscotch with lightly charred pumpernickel bread and mild forest floor herbs then a mild black peppercorn spice with slight sourness from baked plums followed by a moderate vanilla orange custard, candied fennel seeds and anise with medium ethanol burn.
The taste is a medium mouthfeel starting with a moderately sweet butterscotch with mild forest floor herbs before a mild bitter spice that slowly fades to a baked cherries, plums and candied lemon peel followed by a moderate vanilla orange custard, candied fennel seeds and black licorice with medium ethanol burn.
The finish is medium length with sautéed apples, vanilla orange custard, dill, cloves and spearmint flavored candy mints.
The nose was very similar to the Las Vegas selection, but those sour flavors were more restrained and the taste has a richer mouthfeel with a light bitter spice that isn’t overwhelming and allows for those creamy light sour fruits to come through with sweet rye spice that finishes on the sweeter side with cooked creamy citrus and candied mints.
Score: 3.25
My final sample comes from a selection made by a Los Angeles group.
The nose starts with a moderately sweet butterscotch with lightly charred pumpernickel bread and mild forest floor herbs then a mild black peppercorn spice with slight sourness from baked cherry pie followed by a moderate vanilla orange custard, candied fennel seeds and anise with low ethanol burn.
The taste is a medium mouthfeel starting with a moderately sweet butterscotch with mild forest floor herbs before a light black pepper spice along with freshly baked pumpernickel bread followed by baked cherry pie, sautéed apples and lemon hard candy followed by a moderate vanilla orange custard, candied fennel seeds and black licorice with low ethanol burn.
The finish is medium length with sautéed apples, vanilla orange custard, dill, cloves and spearmint flavored candy mints.
The nose on this one shares the same DNA as the others but is richer with sweet baked fruits, mild rye and ever so slight sourness with almost no alcohol bite followed by the taste that follows the same notes as the nose with the lightest of black pepper spice with a wonderful balance and enjoyable mouthfeel that finishes with sweet creamy citrus and light mild herbs.
Score: 3.5
Overall, I came into this expecting very similar experiences between the three samples, but found that the different casks produced variances in the level of the sourness or sweetness of the fruit along with different levels of bitter spices, mouthfeel and even the alcohol presence in the nose and taste.
It’s definitely a case of YMMV that can happen with any single cask expression which could turn out favorably or poorly depending on what flavors you prefer with some leaning into the sour and spicy profile or into the sweeter creamy fruit with light spices.
At the price of $50 or under, I’d say these could be worth a purchase and I’d be very happy to pick up the Los Angeles pick, but I’d suggest trying to get a sample before you commit to a full bottle as they can vary.
Thanks @PBMichiganWolverine for the generous samples of the Las Vegas and Los Angeles picks.
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@pkingmartin exactly—-i don’t mind paying higher for something different. I feel as if these whiskey clubs simply bottled something that I can buy off the shelf. Unless if BT prohibits their cask to be CS…not sure why, but if I bought a cask, I’ll do what I please with it.
@PBMichiganWolverine That’s a great point and I’m not sure why they wouldn’t be able to bottle at cask strength. I think you’re right about these likely being incredible at a higher strength. I’m sure that would lower the bottle count, but I’d be happy to pay a higher price or even just get a 375ml so there’s plenty of bottles for others to also try it.
Wondering why can’t these whiskey groups and clubs can’t bottle at CS if they’ve bought the entire cask ? This might be so much better if at CS