Generously_Paul
J. Riddle Peated Bourbon
Bourbon — Michigan, USA
Reviewed
January 23, 2018 (edited May 4, 2018)
Two James is a craft distillery located in Corktown, Detroit, Michigan, not far from my home. They are the first licensed distillery in Detroit since prohibition. All of their releases were made from sourced distillate, until this one came along. J. Riddle is their first release of their own distillate, which is a mash bill of 79% Michigan corn and 21% peated barley from the UK. It is labeled as a “Peated Bourbon Whiskey”.
Bottled at 45.5% ABV and as it is called a bourbon I would suspect that it is natural color. I have no info on whether it is chill filtered or not. The color is a honey gold. This is from batch # 17-1, which I believe means the first batch of 2017, and the first ever for this expression.
The nose is very odd at first, much like the same oddness I got from one of their other expressions, Johnny Smoking Gun. It’s hard to describe it, but it’s unique. After getting acclimated to it you can pick up on other notes. It’s very vegetal/earthy, which is probably the peat influence, but no real smoke to speak of. Toasted oak and some corn sweetness. Vanilla and toffee. A cardboard note with some toasted coconut. A little smoke starts to waft in. Green vegetables like cooked green bell peppers or celery, can’t quite put my finger on it. More corn and a bit of malted barley. Floral honey and melons like cantaloupe or honeydew. With time some brown sugar and butterscotch are revealed along with pickled ginger. Much more complex than I was expecting, but nothing spectacular.
That same odd feeling that was one the nose shows up on the palate as well. The peat smoke is stronger here than on the nose. Very weird to get that from a bourbon but I like it. Vegetal peat as well. Green oak, clove and ginger. Undercooked corn and honey with a little barley sugar. Light toffee and butterscotch.
Medium bodied mouthfeel that is very dry.
The finish is quite short and again very dry. Vegetal, celery and corn. A hint of mint and fennel.
That odd note I kept getting never really goes away, but you get used to it. Much better than the Johnny Smoking Gun. Peated bourbons are not a common thing as far as I know so I’m glad I was able to try this, and the Islay Rye I had from G.T.D. which was a peated rye. Not really worth the $54 I paid for it, but you do pay a premium for craft distilleries. 3.75
Cheers
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Also a big thanks to @Distiller for adding this bottle.