LouisianaLonghorn
J.P. Wiser's 18 Year
Canadian — Canada
Reviewed
January 22, 2020 (edited December 25, 2023)
From looking through various reviews, it appears that this pour can be polarizing. Some claim it's lacking in taste, strong ethanol on the nose, too expensive, etc. Others point to its numerous awards and remark on its craftsmanship. I have some thoughts. You're reading those thoughts. Here we go.
To look at this as an 18 year old whisky and treat it and evaluate it the same way you would an 18 year old Scotch would be doing this whisky a disservice. Yes, they share an age statement, but are made by very different processes. Learning more about how this whisky was made really enhanced the tasting experience for me.
It's mostly corn, and not only that, it's distilled to a ridiculously high proof (something around 95%), and put in the barrel to age. At that high a proof, it's mostly a neutral spirit, so in approaching this pour, it's really a study in oak. It is blended with a small amount of 18 year old rye, but this is mostly all flavor from the barrel. Wisers is really taking advantage of those loopy Canadian liquor laws.
After resting for about 20 minutes, none of the ethanol folks complain about in other reviews are present on the nose. In its place is a big hello sailor of classic Canadian notes-vanilla, maple, rye, some dried fruit, as well as that characteristic lumber note I tend to find in Canadian whiskies. It's quite elegant and complex. The taste, even at 40%, has gentle, sweet barrel spice, more vanilla and maple, butterscotch, toffee, pepper, and a little tobacco. Right on the back palate is a pithy, citrus note reminiscent of grapefruit or the orange peel from an Old Fashioned. The finish is surprisingly long, with a cooling effect, along with a lingering note of pencil shavings from elementary school while integrating all of the palate flavors.
WOW! A great pour indeed. Definitely don't regret picking up the bottle. Look, I know that here in the States we can't get most of the really good Canadian stuff (though I just heard that Lot 40 CS is coming to MA & IL). This is one of the good ones. "But it's overpriced". I've paid $130-$160 for 18 year old Scotch, so no, it's not overpriced. An 18 year old whisky for $60-$70? Sign me up. "But it's 40%". Who cares?! I've been guilty of being a snob about that in past reviews, but I'm changing my tune for some bottles. There's a time and a place for 40% ABV. Not every night is cask strength night.
I would pick this one up. You have to let it breathe. That's the key. If you do, you're rewarded with one of the best expressions this category has to offer. If you still hate it, you can sob into your glass while cursing my name, but this one's a winner for me. Cheers!
70.0
USD
per
Bottle
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@WhiskeyLonghorn After a very unpleasant encounter with Canadian Club, this might actually be a bottle worth putting on my shopping list.
@PBMichiganWolverine got it. I e also got Wisers 23 CS and Pike Creek 21 Olorosso finish.
@WhiskeyLonghorn put these on that list: Lot40 12Cs, Wiser Legacy, Wiser 35yr old, Wiser Last Barrel
@PBMichiganWolverine my wife is going to Alberta for business later this year. She’s going with a shopping list from me :)
@Whiskey_Hound I’m not 100% sure on this, but from talking to distributors, it seems like a lot of stuff comes to Texas that doesn’t go other places. One of them told me that we’re the largest whisky consuming state by volume, which may be why I was able to find this. Even in Austin, it was only available at 2-3 stores in the whole region.
They have a 35 yr old (for a fraction of the price of Scottish), and JP Wiser’s Legacy which are even better. But again...not for us neighbors to the South
Great review! How did you manage to find something like this? I've only ever seen the Wiser's bottom-shelf offering, and even that I've only seen once or twice in 100-200 stores and bars