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Tag: Heaven Hill

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof – C923

Posted on September 27, 2023 by Nick
Elijah Craig Barrel Proof – C923

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof - C923 Bottle

We’ve highlighted before the idea that proof means flavor.  Proof on it’s own isn’t doesn’t mean flavor though.  While many factors are important to create the flavor profile of bourbon (mash bill, cask type, etc), perhaps few are so regarded as longer aging.  So when the most recent Elijah Craig Barrel Proof – C923 – showed a 133 proof and a 13 year, 7 month age people became understandably excited.  So does this combination of age and proof work out.

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof – C923

  • Proof: 133 (66.5% A.B.V.)
  • Age: 13 years, 7 months
  • Filtration: Non-Chill Filtered
  • Price (MSRP): $75

Sight:  Auburn to Mahogany

Smell:   To start, it’s 130+ proof, so just don’t stick  your nose directly in it.  There’s undeniable heat, but behind it are sweet layers of lacy caramel, spiced oak, vanilla, burnt marshmallow, sarsaparilla, and brown sugar.   The vanilla in particular is fragrant and luscious, wrapping floral vanilla bean notes around the baking spices.  There’s a bit of nuttiness in the background, and a bit of preserved cherry.

Sip:  The body is rich and silky from the start, and the heat begins to build, but slower than the nose would suggest.  The flavors gather steam, pulling in creme brulee like vanilla and burnt sugar.  Caramel wraps around and builds elements of bing cherry.   The oak then steps in with plenty of spice and almost a hint of candied orange.   There’s a subtle brown sugar like sweetness, but it gives ways to a strong hazelnut note and perhaps some other nuts.  A hint of char is present as well.

Savor:  The ending carries forward a wonderful candied praline and layered with vanilla and almost latte like mellowed coffee and char.  The spices linger in the background and lean toward a dessert like mocha.  Somehow the finish almost feels creamy and coating.  As it lingers, the tannins of the oak expand, give a velvet feeling as the flavors continue to linger.

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof – C923 is impressively balanced, sweet, complex and rich.  The flavors are built on a dessert like sweetness but have a great reflection of the char and spice of the oak.  Amazingly, despite the proof, it never really gets hot.  The lingering finish is pretty, and carries forward the mix of oak and sweet in a balanced way.  There’s a ton to love about sipping this, and it should only get better with time.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan Elijah Craig Barrel Proof is unsurprisingly aggressively and powerful.  The notes of oak and perfumed vanilla take the lead here with burnt marshmallow, caramel, praline, and mocha leading the charge.   The flavors are assertive and pleasant, but beg you to take notice.  The ending has a lovely dark chocolate and concentrated brown sugar note with plenty of oak.  There’s a nice luscious caramel drizzle and creamy note that occasionally comes through.  Overall, this is a heavy handed Manhattan that will mostly apply to those who are a big fan of barrel proof whiskey offerings.

In Review – Elijah Craig Barrel Proof – C923

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof – C923 is delicious neat.  There’s no getting around the fact that the team at Heaven Hill has produced a particularly good batch with a 13 year age statement.  Without a doubt this whiskey will be showing up on several ‘top whiskey of the year’ lists  As a result, this is a no brainer at MSRP ($75), and one that those who enjoy high proof, high age statements should hunt down.   Unfortunately, as of the time of writing, the secondary market on this is asking for up to double that price.  While it’s good, that’s a bitter swallow (approaching $150).

Those looking for cocktails are going to find this one a little harder to justify.  While the flavors are delicious, there’s a lot going on here for the average drinker.  Additionally, many cocktail elements may impact some of the neat nuances.  Combining this with the proof, and you could also set some guests down a path to more consumption than plan.  For all these reasons, this is a bottle that we definitely recommend, but more so for enjoying neat than making drinks.

Previous Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Reviews:

  • Elijah Craig B520

 

Posted in Bourbon, Cask Strength / Barrel Proof, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged Bardstown, Elijah Craig, Elijah Craig Barrel Proof, Heaven Hill, Kentucky, Non-Chill FilteredLeave a Comment on Elijah Craig Barrel Proof – C923

Larceny Barrel Proof (A122)

Posted on January 4, 2023January 2, 2023 by Nick
Larceny Barrel Proof (A122)

Larceny Barrel Proof A122

Some of the easiest Heaven Hill barrel proof releases to obtain are the three times a year Elijah Craig & Larceny Barrel Proof offerings.   While Elijah Craig is their standard bourbon offering, their Larceny Barrel Proof represents their wheated offering.  While opinions have suggested in years past that the Elijah Craig release has been the better, higher proof of the two, recent opinions are shifting to show that Larceny might be getting the upper hand.  Their release from the first trimester of 2022 was A122, where the discussion of which is better started, so does it live up to the hype, and should you consider making it for cocktails.

Larceny Barrel Proof (A122)

  • Proof: 124.4 (A.B.V. – 62.2%)
  • Age: No Age Statement (NAS) – reportedly 6-8 years.
  • Mash Bill: 68% Corn, 20% Wheat, 12% Malted Barley
  • Secondary Nicknames:  LBP A122

Sight: Auburn – Mahogany

Smell:  Beautiful notes of vanilla and toasted oak waft out of the nose with a smack of gamey leather.  Dark chocolate, roasted peanuts, and a rick house note run though.  A ribbon of caramel comes through with a bit of black cherry and blackberry.  The nose leans savory and sweet with plenty of oak influence, and less fruit.   A moderate amount of heat can be noted, although it’s more of a slow burn than a whack of ethanol.

Sip:  There’s a pleasant sort of smooth, sweet caramel / vanilla oak note that settles in for a while as it warms up.  It eventually starts to give way toward deeper charred notes, blackberry tea, cigar, hazelnut, and mild spice.  The oak is heavy, slightly funky, a touch bitter, and there is heat that gradually creeps in.

Savor:  The finish is warm, pulling in cinnamon, clove, and deeply charred oak.  As the finish continues, it pulls in some char, caramel, and cigar notes.   It leans dry as it goes with a bit of plum skin.  Lingering warmth – per their website – is an apt description.

Larceny Barrel Proof A122 is a deliciously oaky and unapologetic barrel proof wheated offering.  The caramel and vanilla notes are a real highlight here, and they balance out some of the weight of the oak, while not getting lost.   The nutty and fruity elements are present, but they’re pretty subdued, and usually masquerading as a fruit adjacent item (like tea).  As a straight sipper, it’s tasty, if slightly leaning into the oak / sweet element side of things.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan, the oaky nature takes center stage, showing off the oak and its vanilla.  The red fruit in the vermouth shows up and the spice comes in with a nice like pop.  Despite this, caramel that shows up in the neat poor isn’t as obvious in the cocktail at first blush.  Instead, as it heats up, caramel and butterscotch notes come forward.  Overall,  the oak dominates, and the overall character of the drink is very aggressively toward the aged wood side of the spectrum.  Sadly, the Larceny Barrel Proof Manhattan feels unbalanced.

In Review – Larceny Barrel Proof (A122)

Larceny Barrel Proof A122 is good neat, and a bit unhinged in a standard cocktail.   This isn’t to say it’s bad, but it isn’t particularly versatile.  For those that love heavily oaked offerings, like Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel, this should be a slam dunk (and is coincidentally a Heaven Hill offering).  For those that prefer fruitier, floral, or dessert like flavors, you can probably avoid this one.

Posted in Barrel Proof / Cask Strength, Bourbon, Spirits, Wheated, WhiskeyTagged Bardstown, Heaven Hill, Heaven Hill Distilleries, Kentucky, Larceny, NAS, Old Fitzgerald DistilleryLeave a Comment on Larceny Barrel Proof (A122)

Henry McKenna Single Barrel

Posted on November 9, 2022November 8, 2022 by Nick
Henry McKenna Single Barrel

Henry McKenna Single Barrel

Perhaps few bottles suffer so greatly from both hype and barrel variation as Henry McKenna Single Barrel.  Amongst the bourbon lovers, Mckenna is notorious for consumers greatly enjoying one bottle, and then being disappointed in the next.  While there are a variety of possible reasons for this, including actual differences in production and what the consumer immediately ate prior to enjoying it, it doesn’t change that this bottle has won some significant awards and has a strong hype train surrounding it.

Henry McKenna Single Barrel

Henry McKenna Single Barrel is a Bottled-In-Bond whiskey aged ten years from Heaven Hill.  This age statement makes it among the older available Bottled-In-Bond offerings.

Sight:  A rich tawny.

Smell:  Rich caramel and nuts float out of the opening salvo.  Zesty spice, tobacco, and notes of oranges and peach pits join in.   There’s a slightly fruity character that comes in, a bit of heat, and a pops of toasted oak and a cereal like note.   Something akin to peanut brittle in a fudge shop occasionally comes through as well.

Sip:  The flavors are complex and layered, starting with caramel and spice it evolves into peach pits, tobacco, charred oak, cigar box, and nuts.  The flavors are somewhat random in their progression, but consistently show up.  There’s a fair amount of stone fruit, from peach to plum that comes around the edges.   There’s very little burn despite the 100 proof, and the texture is rich.  A very occasional oversteeped black tea note also appears.

Savor:  The ending maintains a stone fruit and toasted oak character with a moderate amount of oak.  The flavor lingers in a balanced and inviting way.

Henry McKenna Single Barrel is quite nice as a sipper, displaying a good amount of complexity and depth.  The continuing evolution of the flavors in the glass makes it inviting to come back to.  The texture also helps in adding to the appeal.  Overall, it’s far from a disappointing sipper.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan the wonderful texture and proof helps to create the lanolin texture of a great Manhattan.  Caramels, brown sugar, toasted oak, and stone fruit pastry notes all explode forth.   There are pleasant baking spices throughout.  The finish ends up carrying forward some of the spice, stone fruit, and caramel with just a bit of oak.  It’s a phenomenal Manhattan.

Single Barrel Side By Side

Henry McKenna Single Barrel Side By Side

A friend happened to have a bottle of Henry McKenna Single Barrel, leading us having the bottles in a side by side.  The bottle my friend had was 2 years newer than my bottle.  The other bottle was significantly stronger in the vanilla realm, but added a dustiness and reduced the spice.  There were also fruity notes, but a bit more orange marmalade sort of notes.   The palate is significantly lighter, still maintaining the vanilla notes, but also bringing in more floral elements with subtle spice.  The oak notes are also still prevalent, but it doesn’t achieve significant oak or fruit.  The weight of both is also different, with the newer bottle feeling significantly lighter.

The comparison feels shocking given both are bottled in bond products with 10 year age statements.  While some variation is to be expected, these almost stuck me like two different distilleries due to the spread of flavors and textures.

In Review – Henry McKenna Single Barrel

Henry McKenna’s hype has been real on driving it’s cost up.  When this bottle was purchased, the cost per bottle was $10 less than it is today.  Pushing $60, the flavor is quite good, but the availability and bottle variation remain problematic.  While it’s amazing in cocktails and neat,  these factors might be reasons to shy away and instead choice a lower cost single barrel such as Four Roses or Wild Turkey Rare Breed.

 

Posted in Bottled-In-Bond, Bourbon, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged 10 Year, Bardstown, Bottled-In-Bond, Heaven Hill, Heaven Hill Distilleries, LouisvilleLeave a Comment on Henry McKenna Single Barrel

Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel

Posted on July 11, 2022July 14, 2022 by Nick
Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel

Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel

Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel is a relatively new product from Heaven Hill.  Starting with Elijah Craig Small Batch, the bourbon is then finished again in a new specially toasted oak barrel.    Similar to their Small Batch, there’s no aged statement here, and the site doesn’t suggest how long it’s in the barrel.  The idea is that the new finishing step will add chocolate and baking spice flavors to compliment the oakiness.   It also adds another $20 to the price, so does it justify the cost?

Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel

Sight:  Burnished Chestnut / Sherry

Smell:  The nose is an explosion of freshly made caramel, butterscotch, and stewed cherries.  Confectioner sugar, fresh candy store fudge, and almonds follow things up.    Traditional notes of oak and spice come through with some additional fresh red fruit and plum (albeit slightly heading toward fermenting).  There’s a hint of heat to the nose as well, and a little bit of corn or grain.

Sip:  The body is on the light to medium side.  There’s a strong influence of oak that leads things off with vanilla and caramel notes.  Spice and plum skin start to pick up with a bit of dried cherry.   There are touches of butterscotch, more oak, cigar box, and almost a confectioner sugar / artificial vanillin.  There’s a touch of heat, but the flavor profile isn’t overly clear or aggressive.

Savor:  The ending hits on a deep undercurrent of oak, with flavors of charred oak giving way to vanilla and unripe cherries.  There’s a touch of nutty toffee and a little heat.  The char begins to lean bitter over time.

Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel packs a solid amount of oak into a turned up version of their standing offering.  The result is something that gives the vanilla and oak a forefront, but doesn’t appear to give a lot of room to many other flavors.  The result is a tasty bourbon with an extra step of finishing that doesn’t add a whole lot of extra complexity.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel brings a lot of oak and caramel to the party.  The result is a spicy and caramel ladened sip with some peaks of red fruit, which is followed by a literal battering of oak.  The oak is so strong it leads to bittering and tannic notes on the back end of the palate.   Which is amazing, because Carpano Antica is one of the most aggressive vermouths on the market (to the point where some cocktail groups will even recommend avoiding it for certain bourbons).  Elijah Craig Toasted just steamrolls it.

In Review – Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel

Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel is oaked.  Really oaked.   In the wine world, we’d complain when a wine was oaked to the point where the actual grape got lost in a mess of vanilla, wood notes, and caramel flavors.  Toasted Barrel is fringing into this territory.    If you happen to find the flavor of oak to be the thing you want to focus on, this is a potential winner for you.  For everyone else, $55 plus territory is going to be expensive, chased after by bourbon lovers, and outshined by other more balanced bottles.

Posted in Bourbon, Finished Bourbon, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged Bardstown, Elijah Craig, Heaven Hill, Heaven Hill Distilleries, KentuckyLeave a Comment on Elijah Craig Toasted Barrel

Pikesville Rye

Posted on June 10, 2022June 9, 2022 by Nick
Pikesville Rye

Pikesville Rye Bottle

Pikesville Rye was originally distilled in Maryland and is now owned by Heaven Hill.  Despite this, it holds the distinction of being one of the last remaining Maryland rye brands.  Reportedly, the mashbill reflects it’s new Kentucky origin, and sits at a required minimum 51% rye.   Coming in at $50, it almost doubles Heaven Hill’s slightly younger Rittenhouse Rye (coming in at 4 years).  So is it worth it?

Pikesville Rye

  • Age: 6 Years
  • Proof: 110
  • Mashbill (Unverified): 51% Rye, 39% Corn, 10% Malted Barley

Sight:  Between amber and tawny.

Smell:  Buckwheat honey and caramelized sugar come through with deep baking spices and notes of dark chocolate.    Mint, slight herb,  malt, and touches of graham cracker join in.   Undertones of forest floor and a robust nuttiness join in.    There’s also just a touch of floral.  The overall nose is sweet and relatively complicated with lots of earthy and baking notes – especially chocolate and nutty notes.

Sip:  The body starts off with a moderate to heavy weight and is smooth. It quickly opens up with a barrage of caramel laden rye spices echoing things from clove to burnt cinnamon.   Earthy notes make an underlayer here, giving a forest floor, cocoa, and slight dried mushroom underpinning.  Buckwheat honey and slight blackberry notes come in.   There’s also some mint and cereal.  Hold it too long, and the smoothness gives way to alcohol.

Savor:  The ending carries forward notes of cocoa, caramel, rye, and a hint of earthiness.  The finish lingers – giving way to more rye spices and 100% cocoa as it lingers.

Pikesville Rye is delightfully complex and doesn’t impart quite as much wood as you might expect for a minimum 6 year release.  The flavors are deep, complex, and layered.   The earthiness bumping up against the chocolate notes with a hint of minty herbs is a beautiful combination.  It invites the imbiber to continue to seek out new flavors in each sip.  On it’s own, it’s a wonderfully layered and complex rye.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan the earthy flavors manage to pull off this interesting background note where notes of dark cocoa powder, forest floor, and a slight grilled portabella mushroom umami play background.   In the forefront is a great amount of caramel and latent rye spice.  The more minty and buckwheat notes are present, but more minimal, subdued by some of the vermouth notes.  The bitterness on the finish is more prominent, as the background note of unsweetened chocolate and forest floor come more to the fore with hints of burnt marshmallow.

In Review – Pikesville Rye

Pikesville Rye Label

Pikesville Rye has incredibly deep and complex earthy notes.  It’s important to note here that those looking for sweet flavors are going to find this more on the savory side.  It does these savory flavors really well, giving depth and robust character to each sip.  As a result, drinks made with Pikesville end up more taught and brooding than some younger more herbal – fruity ryes.  There’s a ton of things to love here though, and at around $50, this is good value that you might want to try before you buy.

 

Posted in Rye, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged Bardstown, Heaven Hill, Heaven Hill Distilleries, Kentucky, Pikesville2 Comments on Pikesville Rye

Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon

Posted on November 26, 2021November 11, 2021 by Nick
Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon

Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon Bottle

Not every bourbon involves needing to line up at 11pm the day prior to wait for the opening of the shop to get.  In fact, the vast majority of bourbons sit on the shelf and are completely serviceable.    Perhaps the best example of this Wild Turkey 101, which offers amazing value for money.  Among other bourbons we recommend is Elijah Craig Small Batch, which is made by Heaven Hill.  Elijah Craig isn’t their intro brand, an honor that instead belongs to Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon.  At around $10, can this bourbon save your time and wallet?

Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon

  • A.B.V. – 40% (80 proof)
  • Age – 3 Years

Sight:  A deep gold.

Smell:  Slight spices and a good dose of ethanol float up to start.  Touches of fresh cherries and oak come in.    The nose distinctly smells like oak, fruit, and hints of oak.

Sip:   The body is light to moderate, but ultimately smooth.  There’s a good amount of oak and light spicing here, with some fruitiness.    There’s a bit of nuttiness that lingers throughout.

Savor:  The ending is slightly oaky with just a touch of nuts and fruit.

Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon is surprisingly smooth and not overly complex.  For lack of a better way to put it, it smells like you’d expect bourbon to smell.  Slightly oaky, with a little bit of fruitiness, and some spices and other flavors.   Does it do anything particularly amazing?  Not really.  Would you be able to sip on it for a while?  Sure.  It’s easy going and not particularly offensive or hard to drink.  If anything, the biggest criticism might be that’s just kind of simple.

In Cocktails

Quality House Old Style Bourbon in a Manhattan leads to more of the same.  The drink is clearly based in bourbon, but the flavors are more of oak and spice.   The vermouth gets a strong leg up here as there aren’t a lot of other flavors to stand in the way.  The body is solid, if not noticeable.  The net result is an uninspired but serviceable Manhattan.  It somehow manages to pull the exact same trick in an Old Fashioned – which is amazing given it’s most of the drink.

In Review – Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon

Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon offers a nice value for a very unobtrusive bourbon.  At about $12 a liter, this is impressive value, but not necessarily something to go out of the way for trying to make amazing drinks.   If you want to offer a bourbon for the end of the evening or for a large group of guests, this is a nice option.  For these reasons it’s a situational bourbon, but nothing that you’d have to be ashamed to serve.

Posted in Bourbon, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged Bardstown, Heaven Hill, Kentucky6 Comments on Heaven Hill Quality House Old Style Bourbon
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