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Tag: Loretto

Maker’s Mark: Crumble Coffee Cake – OHLQ Exclusive 2022

Posted on May 31, 2023March 13, 2023 by Nick
Maker’s Mark: Crumble Coffee Cake – OHLQ Exclusive 2022

Maker's Mark Crumble Coffee Cake - OHLQ Exclusive 2022 Bottle

As mentioned in our review of Maker’s Mark Marshmallow Krispy Treat, Maker’s does a fairly substantial presence on the shelves as private selections (or store picks).   These picks are made up of combinations of finishing staves to impart different flavors on 5 – 7 year old Maker’s Mark Cask Strength.  The finished Maker’s Mark Cask Strength then aged for an additional 9 weeks in temperature controlled conditions.  Unlike their Marshmallow Krispy Treat, this offering is going for a more breakfast or dessert approach, as they’ve selected the name Maker’s Mark: Crumble Coffee Cake.

As always, be aware these combinations get reused by other private selections with different names, so double check your stave profiles to avoid duplicates or find your favorites.

Maker’s Mark Crumble Coffee Cake

OHLQ described Maker’s Mark Crumble Coffee Cake as follows:

Complex, velvety mouthfeel with aromas of roasted coffee beans, and rich flavors of brown sugar, warm cinnamon and bold baking spices, pie crust, and dried fruit.

  • Stave Profile:
    • 2 Baked American Pure
    • 2 Maker’s Mark 46
    • 2 Roasted French Mendiant
    • 4 Toasted French Spice
  • Proof: 111.3 (ABV 55.65%)
  • Age: NAS

As I split this bottle with a friend, the fill level is at half.

Sight:  A pleasant oloroso sherry.

Smell:  The nose erupts with vanilla and caramel.  Behind them comes in this wonderful unctuous, creamy coffee note.  Like a cappuccino with some cinnamon on top.  A subtle dessert pastry like note comes in with plenty of brown sugar and a hint of preserved fruits, syrupy cherry, and baking spice.

Sip:   The body lighter than the proof would imply, and before you read lots of sweet words, drier than it seems from the nose.   A coffee and perfumed vanilla note comes through, before the heat starts joining.  The midpalate has a more crumbly brown sugar note going on, with more vanilla, touches of caramel, and a bit of dried fruit.  The back end gets vanilla cream heavy, somehow feeling lanolin and thin at the same time, but nailing this vanilla frosting note.

Savor:  The ending is a cacophony of vanillas mixing with caramel and some obvious oak.  The add in of spice and brown sugars make this combination a bit muddle, but does do a good job of conveying a dessert / cake like element.  Perhaps just a bit of bitter tannins on the end.

Maker’s Mark Crumble Coffee Cake has a highly developed nose, and a palate that tries to keep up.   The influence of the different finishes on the nose is really stunning, drawing you in like you’re about to have dessert.   The taste is good but dry, but has a middling level of complexity that keeps you picking at it.  The ending is where it gets a little muddled, throwing every sweet note from the staves at you, with vanilla (capital VANILLA) wherever it can.  Overall, it’s fun to sip, but certainly not going to be the sort of bottle you shout from the roof tops about.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan, this expression of Maker’s Mark does a beautiful vanilla and caramel cream mix across a background of baking spice (leaning toward clove).  The coffee notes of the oak really come out here, giving a nice subtle roasty nature to the whole drink.  Made with Maker’s Mark Crumble Coffee Cake, the drink comes out like a mature dessert, that would probably pair well with actual coffee cake or a dessert with less sweetness (like flourless chocolate cake).

In Review – Maker’s Mark Crumble Coffee Cake

Maker's Mark Crumble Coffee Cake - OHLQ Exclusive 2022 Staves

While Maker’s Mark Crumble Cake seems like it should be a dessert, it’s more dry than the name implies.  Despite this, it’s an ok sipper that probably slightly undersells its $70 price tag.  The shine here is in making a bang on dessert like Manhattan.  It keeps your wanting another sip that goes all the way through vanilla and caramel with a cup of coffee.   While this is a good bottle, the price tag means you’ll have to weigh how much you want to enjoy quite good bourbon, versus how much you want look for great bourbon or a new bottle.

Put differently, Maker’s continues to put out solid, high floor / low ceiling bottles that range from good to very good, but slide slightly short of great.   This bottle falls toward to the good side of the spectrum, but is still very enjoyable.

Posted in Bourbon, Spirits, Store Pick, Wheated, WhiskeyTagged Kentucky, Loretto, Maker's Mark, Maker's Mark Private Selection, OHLQ PickLeave a Comment on Maker’s Mark: Crumble Coffee Cake – OHLQ Exclusive 2022

Maker’s Mark: Marshmallow Krispy Treat – OHLQ Exclusive 2022

Posted on February 8, 2023January 25, 2023 by Nick
Maker’s Mark: Marshmallow Krispy Treat – OHLQ Exclusive 2022

Maker's Mark Marshmallow Krispy Treat Bottle

In addition to Maker’s Mark’s annual wood finishing series bottles (FAE-01 / FAE-02), they also have a fairly substantial presence on the shelves as private selections (or store picks).  The picks are made up of combinations of finishing staves to impart different flavors on 5 – 7 year old Maker’s Mark Cask Strength.  The finished Maker’s Mark Cask Strength then aged for an additional 9 weeks in temperature controlled conditions.  For this selection, the Ohio Liquor team has named the combination Maker’s Mark: Marshmallow Krispy Treat.

Be aware, these combinations get reused by other private selections with different names, so double check your stave profiles to avoid duplicates or find your favorites.

Maker’s Mark Marshmallow Krispy Treat

OHLQ described Maker’s Mark Marshmallow Krispy Treat as follows:

Aromas of vanilla and oak, with a confectionary profile of marshmallow, freshly-baked bread, candy, and hints of pear.

  • Stave Profile:
    • 5 Baked American Pure
    • 3 Seared French Cuvee
    • 2 Maker’s Mark 46
  • Proof: 111.3 (ABV 55.65%)
  • Age: NAS

Sight:  Chestnut Oloroso Sherry

Smell:  Beautiful notes of a roasting campfire and vanilla start things off.  The vanilla laces with a pleasant icing sugar / marshmallow interior.  There’s a nice baked pie crust element, and a hint of bittersweet chocolate.    There is a slight amount of poached pear.

Sip:  The start is slightly hot, but picks up with plenty of roasted oak, vanilla, and toasted marshmallow notes.  The heat has a little bit more of that pear note, and a bit of yeastiness.  There’s a hint of red hot spice.   That vanilla really is slightly drier but picks up a good amount of toasted marshmallow exterior and even more oak.

Savor:  The ending has a yeasty, graham cracker like note laced with toasted marshmallow and roasted oak.  The finish has a bit more heat and then carries forward with more icing sugar and hints of spice.

Maker’s Mark Marshmallow Krispy Treat is full of luxurious vanilla-marshmallow flavors and a touch of heat.  This doesn’t quite ever break out of this lane from the smell through the body.  Depending on how you interpret very consistent, clear flavors this is either really great, or really boring.  As a sipper goes, it’s tasty, maybe better for after dinner or by the fire, and not overwhelmingly complex.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan Maker’s Mark Marshmallow Krispy Treat is a decidedly dry despite the sweet aromas.   The pear that showed up around the edges comes forward with a touch of the wine notes from the vermouth with plenty of spice from the bitters and oak.  There are pleasant aromatic vanilla elements that come into play as well, with a bit of caramel.  The finish is roasted marshmallow exterior mixed with vanilla extract.  It’s an interesting, if slightly dry Manhattan.

In Review – Maker’s Mark Marshmallow Krispy Treat

In my experience Maker’s Mark picks have a very high floor and a generally low ceiling when it comes to impressiveness.  This pick falls closer to that high floor than the low ceiling, showing a solid and enjoyable pick that delivers more in branding than complexity.  That doesn’t make this a bad bottle of whiskey by any means, but it is sitting at $70, which is a fair amount of money.  Like most picks, you won’t know unless you buy, and while I wouldn’t necessarily seek out this exact pick, Maker’s Mark picks remain a good buy for a dependable store pick for a unique taste of their product.

If you just want the power of the pick, than consider Maker’s Mark Cask Strength at less than half the cost, or their Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength for around the same price.

Posted in Bourbon, Spirits, Store Pick, Wheated, WhiskeyTagged Kentucky, Loretto, Maker's Mark, Maker's Mark Private Selection, OHLQ PickLeave a Comment on Maker’s Mark: Marshmallow Krispy Treat – OHLQ Exclusive 2022

Maker’s Mark FAE-02 – Wood Finishing Series

Posted on October 26, 2022October 27, 2022 by Nick
Maker’s Mark FAE-02 – Wood Finishing Series

Maker's Mark FAE-02 Bottle

While Maker’s Mark FAE-01 was all about the flavors involved in barrel extraction, Maker’s Mark FAE-02 focuses instead on texture.  To do this, Maker’s Mark instead used French Oak (leading to more vanilla that is typically associated with French oak, compared to the banana and spice from American).  Using new techniques, Maker’s double heat treated the staves with both infrared (to make caramel notes) and flame (aiming at making vanilla elements).  This is markedly different than Maker’s Mark FAE-01 where only one side of the American oak stave was seared.  So how does it compare?

Maker’s Mark FAE-02 – Wood Finishing Series

Maker’s Mark FAE-02 is produced starting from fully matured Maker’s Mark Cask Strength.  Once fully matured, 10 virgin toasted French Oak Staves were added.

  • Age: NAS
  • Proof: 109.1 (54.55% ABV)
  • Finishing:  10 Virgin Toasted French Oak Staves

Sight:  Between Olosoro Sherry and Russet Muscat

Smell:  The nose has a bit of heat to start things out, but presents with a healthy touch of vanilla and mocha out of the gate.  The nose has a richness to it, and leans into a freshly roasted coffee beans and jammy cherry notes.   The vanilla here is heavy, with a bean like aromatic quality and a pastry cream style richness.    A light spicing and plum / roasted fig note join with some dried currants.   Overall, the nose has a lot going on once you can pass the heat.

Sip:  The body is smooth with heavy notes of oak, vanilla, cigar box, and touches of spice.   The spices give a slight dryness to the body, and then opens up with a creaminess.  The cherry and plum notes here are present, but well behind the vanilla cream notes that run throughout.  The creaminess of the body really is the star here, with it being full, smooth, rich, and loaded with vanilla notes.  A hint of coffee with cream and creme brulee can be found.

Savor:  The vanilla and aromatics carry over onto the finish, and pull in a good amount of spices that linger.   The finish gets more oaky with a bit of fire roasted marshmallows and charry sugar.

Maker’s Mark FAE-02 is richly textured and heavily vanilla laden.  Those expecting caramel and fruit will find more oak forward flavors that are well balanced and textured.  While there are layers, they’re variations on vanilla and coffee shop kind of notes.  Overall, this is an enjoyable, easy going sipper that has a pleasing texture that’s worth exploring.

In Cocktails

Just like it’s sibling Maker’s Mark FAE-01, you’re unlikely to be reaching for Maker’s Mark FAE-02 to make a cocktail.  Let’s say you were to make a Manhattan though.  It turns out it’s rich, surprisingly spice forward, and has a nice French vanilla coffee undercurrent.   The subtle sweetness of the vermouth comes out as well, with a good amount of cherry and plum.  As it warms up, it becomes a complete vanilla bomb, ranging from extract to bean. While this is amazing and it is a good Manhattan, it might not be worth the price of admission if you’re trying to make drinks.

In Review – Maker’s Mark FAE-02 – Wood Finishing Series

Maker’s Mark FAE-02 is tasty on it’s own, and makes a reasonable cocktail.   While this bottle is enjoyable, it doesn’t break a lot of new ground, and instead highlights the texture that Maker’s can achieve.  If you happen to be a diehard Maker’s Mark fan, this might be worth $60 to you, but for most individuals, you’re going to want to find a pour of this in a bar or from a friend.    Preferably next to FAE-01 so you can see what Maker’s was trying to show off (and would have been better selling me a 375ml twin pack).

Posted in Bourbon, Finished Bourbon, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged Kentucky, Loretto, Maker's Mark, Maker's Mark Wood Finishing SeriesLeave a Comment on Maker’s Mark FAE-02 – Wood Finishing Series

Maker’s Mark FAE-01 – Wood Finishing Series

Posted on October 19, 2022October 18, 2022 by Nick
Maker’s Mark FAE-01 – Wood Finishing Series

Maker's Mark FAE-01 Bottle

A part of Maker’s Mark’s Wood Finishing series, Maker’s Mark FAE-01 is their spring expression for 2021, and the latest in a line of annual releases focused on unique aspects about Maker’s Mark.  Sometimes affectionately referred to as the “license plate” series due to their name, the 2021 releases chose to focus on unique elements that make Maker’s – Maker’s.

  • FAE-01 aims to highlight the barrel extraction flavors found in Maker’s Cask Strength
  • FAE-02 aims to highlight the textural notes and smooth mouthfeel elements of Maker’s Mark.

Maker’s Mark FAE-01

Maker’s Mark FAE-01 is produced starting from fully matured Maker’s Mark Cask Strength.  Once fully matured, 10 virgin toasted American Oak Staves were added.  Maker’s notes that these staves were only toasted on one side to help emphasize the smell of the barrel warehouse.   They do not specify the additional aging time with these staves.

  • Age: NAS
  • Proof: 110.3 (55.15% ABV)
  • Finishing:  10 Virgin Toasted American Oak Staves

This is the third expression in their Wood Finishing series, which starts in 2019 with a single release (RC6), and was followed in 2020 with a second release (SE4xPR5).  2021 marked the first year with a spring and fall offering.

It also has the hardest cork to reinsert of any bottle I’ve ever owned.   However, it definitely seals well.

Sight:  A happy tawny.

Smell:  Big bursts of cherries erupt, ranging the gamut from fresh and juicy to candied to dried.   Elements of vanilla, caramel, and light oak charred wrap around them.  Other notes of stone fruit, candied berries, and tobacco come through.   There’s hints of heat and random pops of spice.  The nose feels rich and thick despite the bursts of ethanol.

Sip:  The mouthfeel is instantly thick and rich.  The start has a nice sweetness and the preserved cherry notes, coffee, espresso, and caramels come out immediately.  It evolves somewhat rapidly, building in levels of heat, but also extracting more roasted oak, tobacco, plenty of spice, and more stone fruit.  There’s even a little hint of orange zest,  banana, and clove.    As it build, it maintains it’s richness, but gets aggressively heavy and hot.

Savor:  The finish is oaky with a slight creaminess and plenty of cherries and fruit.  One of the impressive things is the length.  As it lingers, it brings in more roasted oak notes, plum skins, and cigar box.  There’s even a bit of dark roast going on.

Maker’s Mark FAE-01 is rich, smooth, and more than a little high strung.    The flavor profile is really delightful and Maker’s hits there goal of delivering additional mouthfeel.    The richness on the palate is really unparalleled by their standard offering.  The flavors really delight the fruitiness of the whiskey while giving a lot of room to the American oak.   The only down side is the proof of 110.3 here really comes across in every last point of proof.  Don’t take too big a sip or hold it too long, and this shouldn’t be a huge issue.

In Cocktails

In all likelihood, you aren’t using Maker’s Mark FAE-01 to make drinks.  If you end up finding yourself so compelled though, you’ll find that FAE-01 works well enough, adding caramel and cherry bursts between notes of spice and oak.  There’s a bit of char that pervades on the finish.  While the flavors are pleasant, and the Manhattan is good, with a bit of a honeyed note, this clearly doesn’t feel like the best use of this whiskey.

In Review – Maker’s Mark FAE-01

Maker’s Mark FAE-01 is really quite good, and priced fairly at $60.  The mouth feel is really the highlight here, and the value is in savoring on it’s own.  While it doesn’t make a bad drink, you could make an equally good drink with a cheaper bottle – like their Maker’s Mark Cask Strength.  Based on this, and the fact that this was a one time allocated release, we recommend this bottle for bourbon enthusiasts, but doesn’t need a place on your home shelf.

Posted in Bourbon, Finished Bourbon, Spirits, Wheated, WhiskeyTagged Kentucky, Loretto, Maker's Mark2 Comments on Maker’s Mark FAE-01 – Wood Finishing Series

Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength

Posted on May 27, 2022May 25, 2022 by Nick
Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength

Maker's Mark 46 Cask Strength

Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength originally started its life as a distillery only release back in 2015.  This release was designed to celebrate the 5th anniversary of Maker’s Mark 46.  The limited release proved success, and for the 10th Anniversary, Maker’s decided to release it again in 2020 in a slight broader release.  In 2021, they expanded the release even further, and I knew based on the solid offerings of their standard Maker’s, Maker’s 46, and their limited releases, this would be a must try.  So was it worth the hunt?

Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength

Sight:  A robust tawny.

Smell:  Spiced honey and baklava lead.  Stewed cherries and a perfumed vanilla note express themselves.  Fresh cherries mix with spicy oak notes and there’s a bit of heat.  A milk chocolate element joins in toward the end.

Sip:  There’s a sizable amount of weight to start things off, but it’s still smooth despite a hint of heat.  An immediate explosion of baking spices come forward and are toned down by the appearance of vanilla sugar and dried cherries.  Caramel drizzles out, but is reigned in by brandied Bing cherries.  A slight nuttiness and preserved figs show up with a little stone fruit.

Savor:  The nuts and spices are accompanied by a tingly finish and lots of lingering tannins.

Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength is packed with flavor, almost to the point of being super saturated.   The flavor complexity is delicious, but almost overwhelms at moments.   The flavors kind of supersize the normal Maker’s Mark Cask Strength / Maker’s Mark.  Where it gets a little lost is the French Oak finish.  Somehow it loses some of the smoothness and finesse of it’s proofed down relative.   Water teases this smoothness out, but it’s much more layered – almost like two different whiskey’s.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength continues it’s single handed push for every spice it can grab out of the pantry.  It only reaches for these after it runs through a quick wall of vanilla and a series of preserved cherries.  The weight is incredible, and it kind of gets into syrupy territory.  The finish grabs more oak and wood notes, and the whole experience lingers dramatically.  As it warms up, it picks up more warm vanilla notes, and hints of brown sugar.

In Review – Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength

Maker's Mark 46 Cask Strength - Indoor

Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength is an enjoyable offering, but the extra horsepower of cask strength doesn’t necessarily add to the fun.  This offering is a bit of a mystery to me, as it seems to combine the strength of Maker’s Mark Cask Strength without the finesse of the finishing for Maker’s Mark 46.  The result is like pushing a V8 engine into a Miata.  Sure, it’s bonkers and entertaining, but it doesn’t necessarily make it any better for daily driving or track use.   The biggest issue is at $60, this puts it at almost $20 more than Maker’s Mark Cask Strength and $25 dollars more than Maker’s Mark 46.  For a sipper, this might make sense, but as a cocktail whiskey, this is a hard pass.

Posted in Bourbon, Cask Strength / Barrel Proof, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged Kentucky, Loretto, Maker's Mark, Maker's Mark 46Leave a Comment on Maker’s Mark 46 Cask Strength

Maker’s Mark

Posted on May 6, 2022May 6, 2022 by Nick
Maker’s Mark

Maker's Mark

Among bourbon’s featuring wheat, there are few as readily available and recognized as Maker’s Mark.  Made with soft red wheat, the intention of Maker’s is to be easy to drink without the bite of rye.    This recipe is rumored to have at one point in its history share roots with Pappy Van Winkle’s Old Fitzgerald recipe.  Factor in a couple of Beam boys and their yeast, and you have a recipe with more than a couple twists and turns.  Figure that distilleries have sold, distillers have been replaced, and that recipes have been tweaked for modern palates; and you basically have the wax on the bottle as the best guess as to what to think.

So let’s throw all the history and tater baiting out the window, and start with a much more basic question.  Is Maker’s Mark good bourbon?

Maker’s Mark

Sight:  Between deep copper and burnished.

Smell:  Chocolate, almonds, and cherries lead things off.  Cocoa powder and touch of spice join in.  Oak and a hint of ethanol finish things off.

Sip:  Smooth and mild to start, with a medium body, Maker’s Mark is invitingly easy.  Cherry, tobacco, oak lead, and  hints of chocolate, spice, red licorice, and a brown sugars come into give a layer of complexity.

Savor:  On the finish, oak leads and has touches of bing cherries with a slightly tannic nature and a bit of heat

Maker’s Mark is simple, well rounded, and built upon smooth, inviting flavors.   While the body and the flavor profile isn’t the most complex, the texture makes up for it, and the wheat influence and fruity character makes it enjoyable and reasonably priced.   As a result, it’s managed to find its way into most bars and is widely available.  As a sipper, it’s perfectly fine on ice, but nothing to make you write home.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan Maker’s Mark opens with maraschino cherries and touches of orange marmalade.    Notes of almond and pecan come in, and there’s a good amount of clove and spice.  Just prior to the finish, there’s a pop of dark brown sugar and caramelized stone fruit that then gets connected to an oaky finish.

In Review – Maker’s Mark

Maker’s Mark is a widely available wheated bourbon.  The flavors are clear, clean, and strong.  It provides good hints of nuts, spice, chocolate, and cherries, while not requiring a wait in line or bartering your left kidney.  It’s well made and enjoyable, as well as well rounded.  From this perspective, and around the mid $20 price point, there’s nothing here that’s not worth the time to experience.  Maker’s is a foundation whiskey with good reason, and reportedly can trace it’s origins to Weller-Stitzel.   We recommend you try it to see if you enjoy it, and potentially even keep it around your bar.

Posted in Bourbon, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged Kentucky, Loretto, Maker's Mark1 Comment on Maker’s Mark

Maker’s Mark 46

Posted on January 28, 2022February 7, 2022 by Nick
Maker’s Mark 46

Maker's Mark 46 Bottle

To the unfamiliar observer Maker’s Mark 46 appears to just be the next step up the line in Maker’s line up of bourbons.  While it does represent an increased cost to purchase, Maker’s 46 should be considered an extension of the standard Maker’s Mark line up, and their entry point into their wood finishing series.  Instead of changing their base recipe, 46 takes fully matured Maker’s Mark and then continues to age it with 10 virgin French Oak staves added to the barrel.  The result is Maker’s Mark, but with a French oak twist.  So is it worth the extra price?

Maker’s Mark 46

Sight:  A burnished chestnut color.

Smell:  French vanilla coffee and fresh baked pastry leads off, followed by jammy cherries.  There’s a certain amount of creaminess here that gets paired with caramelized brown sugar and notes of crème brulee. Hints of banana, leather, cigar box, and spicy oak play background.

Sip:  The sip leads of smooth and silk, but quickly becomes firm and slightly warm.  There’s a pop of smoked vanilla and latte that explodes out.  The French vanilla combines with oak and baking spice.  A lazy caramel drizzles its way through, lavishly coating things, while a slightly smoky preserved cherry hides in the background.

Savor:  The ending preserves that smoked vanilla cherry note, while adding in some toasted oak and caramelized sugar (with just a hint of charred marshmallow)

Maker’s Mark 46 is beautifully French oak polished Maker’s Mark.  There’s a lot going on here beyond the normal cherry, tobacco, and oak of ordinary Maker’s.  Specifically, it pops with French vanilla, coffee notes, and other toasted wood elements.  The addition of caramelized sugar notes bring a subtle sweetness.  Maker’s 46 is lovely on it’s own, and reasonably priced for the additional complexity.

In Cocktails

In a Manhattan Maker’s Mark 46 adds a variety of vanilla and caramel notes immediately out of the gate.  The vanilla almost becomes floral, like a vanilla bean.  It then balances back out, allowing touches of cherries and baking spice to join in.  Brown sugar and almond notes accentuate and have a hint of bitterness.   Texturally it’s still rich, but more balanced throughout and the ending avoids being tannic.

In Review – Maker’s Mark 46

Maker’s Mark 46 is a clearly step up and departure from its sibling.   While it does deliver additional flavor, the flavor is much more focused on the traditional vanilla notes associated with French oak influence than creating deeper version of the original Maker’s Mark.  In doing so, they’ve created a separate but related product that maintains its quality and is both a very good bourbon and great finished bourbon.  Its amazing flavor also plays well in classic cocktails and adds another dimension for crafting new items.  While it isn’t a must have for a bar, it is a must try for any fan of French oak aged wines, vanilla fans, or Maker’s Mark fans.  For only $8-10 more, it’s certainly worth a try.

Posted in Bourbon, Finished Bourbon, Spirits, WhiskeyTagged Kentucky, Loretto, Maker's Mark, Maker's Mark 461 Comment on Maker’s Mark 46
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