Q&A with Carey Bringle, Peg Leg Porker Tennessee Bourbon

Personally, I like 8-year-old whiskey, which I think is kind of a sweet spot for bourbon. But we’ve got older stuff, including a barrel from the first lot that I ever bought. It’s 16 years old and it’s 148 proof.

Q&A with Carey Bringle, Peg Leg Porker Tennessee Bourbon

During Carey Bringle’s corporate sales and marketing career, his side hustle was barbecue caterer. Leveraging his talent and passion for smoking meats, he dove into barbecue full-time in 2013 with Peg Leg Porker BBQ, an expansive restaurant and bar he co-owns with his wife, Delaniah, in Nashville’s trendy Gulch neighborhood.

And as if the big and busy restaurant didn’t burden him enough, that same year he created Peg Leg Porker Spirits and its flagship liquid, Peg Leg Porker Tennessee Bourbon. That’s right, not Tennessee whiskey—even though he uses hickory charcoal to create just a whiff of smoke in his spirits.

Like his barbecue business (one of four total restaurant concepts), he’s built his spirits brand slowly and sustainably, growing market share within the reach of the brand, adding markets cautiously, and collecting numerous spirits awards along the way (including "World's Best Bourbon,” Tasting Alliance World Championship, 2023).

I met Bringle in 2019 to write a story on pairing barbecue and bourbon. Knowing next to nothing about his bourbon, I wondered about the quality of a barbecue man’s whiskey. As we ate a mountain of barbecue and sipped from the numerous bottles shown on the table in the photo above, it was clear that his was not only delicious, but well suited for my favorite food and drink pairing.

A man of firm opinions, Bringle is also hilarious. The face in the photo below belies his easy laugh and friendly grin, and it shows his growing line of PLB whiskeys. 


Q&A with Carey Bringle, Peg Leg Porker Tennessee Bourbon
Photo courtesy of Robert Jacob.

In his words …

I’m a bourbon drinker. Always have been. I’ve worked with Jim Beam Black for years since they became the sponsor of my barbecue team, The Peg Leg Porkers. They still sponsor my BBQ team even though I have my whiskey brand.

I got into the whiskey business at about the worst possible time—right after the restaurant had just opened. I’d always wanted to do my own whiskey brand but never dreamed it would happen. I had a friend from Beam whose son wanted to buy a batch of (barreled) bourbon. He wanted to sell some of it off to lower his risk, and he offered that portion to me. We put together $50,000 and bought it.

As my brand was coming out and I started talking about it, some people would say, “Oh, so you took somebody else’s bourbon and slapped your label on it.” Well, that probably got under my skin a bit, so I started thinking about how to differentiate it. Eventually I developed my own process to finish this bourbon.

A lot of people expected me to have a smoked bourbon because of my barbecue background. But one thing I know a lot about is smoke and fire, and smoke is bitter and acrid. If you merely smoked the bourbon, you’ve captured those pollutants in the liquid, and that’s not what I wanted to do. What I needed was something that would capture the flavor of barbecue in the bourbon. 

So, I loaded up our pit up with charcoal, shoveled some (burned) coals out of the firebox and put them into a bucket of water. In very small batches I’d pour my whiskey through those coals. The effect was extremely subtle, but it changed flavor enough to be different. It had the flavor I was after.

I still use some coals from our pit to do that, but as we got bigger, I found a commercial source of byproduct, which is fine, like sand. It gives me more surface area and saturation with the bourbon. We do that after we de-barrel the bourbon, which I think gives it a little cleaner taste and makes it a little smoother. It also imparts the smoke flavor.

Personally, I like 8-year-old whiskey, which I think is kind of a sweet spot for bourbon. But we’ve got older stuff, including a barrel from the first lot that I ever bought. It’s 16 years old and it’s 148 proof. I was asking a chemist if I should bottle it at 148. All I know is when I try it, I feel like I’m being stabbed in neck!

We started small, and in the past several years we did 3,000 to 4,000 cases. Now we have our own botting facility, and this year we’ll do 10,000 cases. Next year we’ll ramp up to 25,000 cases. We’re in 11 states now, and the next are Texas and Florida, which are behemoth markets.

In 2019, we started contract distilling with Tennessee Distilling in Columbia, and laying down our own barrels. We still buy mature product if it’s good and available. But now we have our own supply in addition to that, which means we control our own destiny a lot more than we have in the past.

I’m a rarity in the whiskey industry since I’m 100 percent independent. No partners, backers or outside investors. Just me and the bank. You need some deep pockets and big balls to do it that way. If you don’t have that, you ought not get in this business. 

We want to grow the business for sure, but we want our bottles to be more allocated. We don’t want to be a commodity bourbon, but our PLP white label is a $40 daily drinker. Too many of our (craft) peers come into the market with $60 and $100 bottles that people aren’t buying. I don’t think that’s a sustainable brand.

So, what’s harder: A whiskey business or a restaurant business? They’re very different, but both are fun. I’m lucky that I’m doing two the things I absolutely love. You’re dealing with a lot of people in the restaurant industry: customers, of course, and employees you have to train to keep the product consistent every day. But bourbon … you get it right on the front end or you don’t. I can also run the bourbon operation with far fewer employees and produce similar revenue with a bigger margin—sometimes, anyway.

We’ve taken the approach that turtle wins the race, so we’re trying to build a lasting and sustainable brand. Still, we might sell the brand someday—if we get the right offer. This business is not for the faint of heart. It’s capital intensive and comes with risks, so again, if we get the right offer. But if we don’t sell, we have a viable and profitable business that’s built for the long haul. We can operate that and enjoy it.

A few Brora to celebrate the Distillery’s first whisky in 38 years

Ainslie’s Royal Edinburgh (no ABV, OB, blend, Choice Scotch Whisky, twist cap, brown glass, UK, 1960s)
Brora 25 yo 1977/2002 (56.5%, Scotch Malt Whisky Society, #61.12, ‘Honey porridge peat and iodine’, 258 bottles)
Brora 14 yo 1982/1997 (58%, Preiss I…

Ainslie’s Royal Edinburgh (no ABV, OB, blend, Choice Scotch Whisky, twist cap, brown glass, UK, 1960s) Brora 25 yo 1977/2002 (56.5%, Scotch Malt Whisky Society, #61.12, ‘Honey porridge peat and iodine’, 258 bottles) Brora 14 yo 1982/1997 (58%, Preiss Imports for D&M Wine and Liquor San Francisco, USA) Brora 3 yo 2021/2024 (cask sample, refill wood, cask #6) Brora May/June 2024 ‘Medium Peaty’ (3 weeks old unaged new make) Brora 39 yo 1982 ‘Hidden Beneath’ (49.8%, OB, Distillery Collection, American oak hogshead, cask #582, 2021) Brora 44 yo 1977 ‘Untold Depths’ (49.1%, OB, Distillery Collection, refill hogshead, cask #2637, 150 bottles, 2024)

468 – Updates On KY Tourism and How The Game Has Been Elevated on Bourbon Community Roundtable #95

On this roundtable we talk about the updates to the Kentucky Bourbon Trail with a rebrand and what updates are happening. We […]

The post 468 – Updates On KY Tourism and How The Game Has Been Elevated on Bourbon Community Roundtable #95 appeared first on BOURBON PURSUIT.



On this roundtable we talk about the updates to the Kentucky Bourbon Trail with a rebrand and what updates are happening. We discuss how everyone has to change from the standard distillery tour to something more immersive. Then we wrap up the show talking about our hidden gems when you visit Kentucky.

Show Notes:

  • Above the Char with Fred Minnick (@fredminnick) talks about Evan Williams Single Barrel leaving and coming back.
  • What has changed with tourism in KY?
  • What are your favorite hidden gems?
  • Support this podcast on Patreon

The post 468 – Updates On KY Tourism and How The Game Has Been Elevated on Bourbon Community Roundtable #95 appeared first on BOURBON PURSUIT.

I. W. Harper Deserves Better

 I. W. Harper Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, 41% alc/volIn 2015, Diageo relaunched I. W. Harper bourbon, a 19th century brand created by the Bernheim Brothers. The relaunch did not set the world on fire. Some old brands have been suc…

 

I. W. Harper Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, 41% alc/vol

In 2015, Diageo relaunched I. W. Harper bourbon, a 19th century brand created by the Bernheim Brothers. 

The relaunch did not set the world on fire. 

Some old brands have been successfully reintroduced or rebooted. Brown-Forman revived its flagship, Old Forester, even gave it its own distillery. Sazerac acquired Old Taylor from Suntory and has gone great guns with it. Beam even had mild success with its pre-Pro Old Tub bourbon. The Limestone Branch Beams have revived Yellowstone.

But I. W. Harper not so much. It made some noise in 2015, when they put money behind it. It is still, ostensibly, available. The website has a 2024 copyright. But Binny's in Chicago doesn't carry it, and as they're fond of saying, "If you can't find it at Binny's it's probably not worth drinking."

Historically, I. W. Harper is an important brand. It was launched in 1879 by the Bernheim Brothers, Issac and Bernard. Issac was company president and "I. W." were his first two initials (Issac Wolfe), but he hesitated about using his own last name and went with the safely Anglo-Saxon "Harper" instead.

During WWI, many families with German-sounding names changed them, the most famous example being the British royals. One of Bernheim's sons changed the spelling to "Burnham." His son, Issac Wolfe Burham, founded in 1931 the investment firm that became Drexel Burnham Lambert (using some money from grandpa).

The brothers had two distilleries in Louisville, the first one in Shively, the second in west Louisville where Heaven Hill's Bernheim Production Facility is today. The brothers sold the company when they retired. After Prohibition it became part of Schenley, which became part of the Guinness roll-up that created what we know as Diageo today. They tore down the old distillery and built a new one in 1992, then sold it to Heaven Hill in 1999.

In retirement, Issac Bernheim became a major philanthropist. Probably his greatest gift was the vast nature preserve in Bullitt County known as Bernheim Forest. He and his wife, and one of his sons, are buried there. Although open to the public it is privately owned by the Bernheim Foundation. It just happens to be right across the street from the Jim Beam Distillery, just off I-65 at exit 112 (KY-245 toward Bardstown / Clermont).

In about 1990, I. W. Harper Bourbon was withdrawn from the U.S. market. By then it was a forgotten, cheap, bottom shelf brand in the U.S., but had, remarkably, become the best-selling bourbon in Japan, where bourbon sales were booming, and where it sold for a premium price. So great was the price differential that clever entrepreneurs began gray market exporting it, buying it at U.S. prices and shipping it to Japan outside of sanctioned distribution channels. The only way to stop them was to kill the brand in the U.S., which they did.

It returned briefly a few years later in the Bourbon Heritage Collection, as a super-premium called I. W. Harper Gold Medal, a 15-year-old. When Diageo bailed out of bourbon in 1999, that product was one of the first casualties. 

In 2012, I. W. Bernheim was inducted into the Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame. Several of his descendants were at the induction ceremony. He was the only 2012 inductee.

One clue to the brand's future may be in the address shown on the website, which says it is a product of the I.W. Harper Distilling Company, Tullahoma, TN. 

J P Wiser’s Rolls Out New Whisky Series

JP Wiser's

A renowned Canadian whisky brand, J P Wiser’s, has released a new series called The Decades Series. The collection features one of the oldest expressions yet from the distillery – a 42-year-old spirit. According to a press release from the distillery, the series highlights the brand’s 165-year history of whisky-making. The post proclaimed its ‘unwavering […]

The post J P Wiser’s Rolls Out New Whisky Series first appeared on Whisky Critic – Whisky Reviews & Articles – Style. Attitude. Whisky..

JP Wiser's

A renowned Canadian whisky brand, J P Wiser’s, has released a new series called The Decades Series. The collection features one of the oldest expressions yet from the distillery – a 42-year-old spirit.

According to a press release from the distillery, the series highlights the brand’s 165-year history of whisky-making. The post proclaimed its ‘unwavering commitment to heritage, innovation, and excellence’

Through its Decades Series, J.P. Wiser’s is expanding into the premium spirits sector with its 42-Year-Old Rye Whisky. The clock stopped on this expression which has been aged for decades in special barrels in Lakeshore.

The 42-year-old expression was distilled in 1982 when the Canadian whisky industry was suffering from a depression. During that time, the distillery’s founder was moving the distillery to its present location in Windsor.

J P Wiser’s The Decades Collection

lClan Campbell

“This extraordinary whisky is a celebration of craftsmanship and the pursuit of perfection,” said Dr Don Livermore, master blender. “We are thrilled to introduce the 42-Year-Old as the inaugural release of The Decades Series. Every aspect of this creation embodies the artistry and tradition that defines J P Wiser’s.”

It has aromas of ‘green apple, crème brûlée, vintage oak, orange tea, sourdough, and dried fruits’, while the palate offers ‘dark cherry, English toffee, oakwood, roasted nuts, marble rye, nutmeg, and subtle leather’.

The whiskey matured in Speyside single malt casks, Canadian oak barrels, and ex-Bourbon barrels. Bottled at 52% ABV, the limited edition whisky will be available in Canada and the US.

“With the brands we have, J.P. Wiser has the right to play in this space as we have the aged stock and inventory,” Livermore told the Windsor Star.

“We know we have an award-winning style of whisky. This is a good time as we know people are collecting whiskies. J.P. Wiser’s has the quality products to deliver in this space.”

J P Wiser’s was acquired by Pernod Ricard in 2005.

The post J P Wiser’s Rolls Out New Whisky Series first appeared on Whisky Critic - Whisky Reviews & Articles - Style. Attitude. Whisky..

Michter’s Coming Soon With New Bomberger’s And Shenk’s

Just in time for America’s 248th Birthday, Michter’s Distillery will be releasing its Legacy Series this July. Comprised of Shenk’s Homestead Kentucky Sour Mash Whiskey and Bomberger’s Declaration Kentucky Straight Bourbon, this special release is vintage-dated with the year of the bottling, in this case 2024. Each release of Shenk’s and each release of Bomberger’s …

Just in time for America’s 248th Birthday, Michter’s Distillery will be releasing its Legacy Series this July. Comprised of Shenk’s Homestead Kentucky Sour Mash Whiskey and Bomberger’s Declaration Kentucky Straight Bourbon, this special release is vintage-dated with the year of the bottling, in this case 2024.
Each release of Shenk’s and each release of Bomberger’s has differed from those of previous years. “While there is some continuity from year to year, our production team makes creative adjustments to each edition of these whiskeys,” observed Michter’s President Joseph J. Magliocco.
In 1753, Swiss Mennonite farmer John Shenk founded Shenk’s distillery in Pennsylvania. This distillery was later renamed Bomberger’s Distillery in the 1800s before its name changed again to Michter’s Distillery in the mid-20th Century. It is this heritage that the Michter’s Legacy Series honors.
Michter’s Master Distiller Dan McKee said, “In the 2024 Shenk’s release, we used rye, malted rye, and for the first time caramel malt, which offers a nice creaminess to complement the whiskey’s herbaceous qualities and notes of spice.” Some of the barrels used in the production of Shenk’s include oak sourced from the Vosges region of France, which is air dried and seasoned for 24 months before being toasted to Michter’s exacting specifications.
Like Shenk’s, the 2024 release of Bomberger’s has some malted rye in its recipe. “This year’s release of Shenk’s and Bomberger’s is a reflection of the passion the team has for making exciting whiskeys with a thoughtful touch of exploration,” commented Michter’s Master of Maturation Andrea Wilson. “The 2024 edition of Bomberger’s continues the use of some Chinquapin (Quercus muehlenbergii) oak to accentuate the dark chocolate and stewed fruit notes in this big whiskey that are then complemented by the spice notes offering a bold, rich, balanced complexity and a long lingering warm finish for your drinking indulgence.” This year’s Chinquapin oak was air dried and seasoned outdoors for 36 months before toasting and charring.
Shenk’s is 91.2 proof (45.6% ABV) and has a U.S. suggested retail price of $110. Bomberger’s is 108 proof (54% ABV) and has a U.S. suggested retail price of $120.
In late October 2023, whiskey history was made when the UK-based publication Drinks International announced the results of a poll of an Academy of independent global whisky experts, journalists, bartenders, and drinks buyers from more than 20 countries. An American whiskey (Michter’s) was finally voted the World’s Most Admired Whiskey. Michter’s has a rich and long legacy of offering traditional American whiskeys of uncompromising quality. With each of its limited production offerings aged to its peak maturity, Michter’s highly acclaimed portfolio includes bourbon, rye, sour mash whiskey, and American whiskey. For more information about Michter’s, please visit michters.com, and follow us on InstagramFacebook, and X.

A Private Barrel Pick at Four Roses Bourbon Is One of a Kind

“Oh, we’ve had people argue about it for sure,” Mandy Vance, manager of the Private Barrel Selection process at Four Roses, told me a few years ago about a pick. They generally work it out, though, because they’re having fun.”

A Private Barrel Pick at Four Roses Bourbon Is One of a Kind

Ever get your family in the car for dinner and throw out a few restaurant options? About 15 seconds pass before an argument starts because nobody likes anyone’s choices. Soon, you’re side-eying drive-thru options and threatening to feed them all microwave popcorn and water.

Given the ever-risky context of choice, it's nearly miraculous that a Four Roses Bourbon Private Barrel pick doesn’t result in fisticuffs. Like the slogan says, the brand creates “Mellow Moments,” I guess. At the distillery’s bottling plant in Cox’s Creek, Ky., pickers get 10 recipes (in separate barrels) from which to choose just one. 

“Oh, we’ve had people argue about it for sure,” Mandy Vance, manager of the Private Barrel Selection process at Four Roses, told me a few years ago about a pick. They generally work it out, though, because they’re having fun.”

It is a lot of fun. Several Four Roses picks I’ve been on included hilarious debates between opinionated drinkers angling for their favorite choices. Faux shaming your friends’ choices is just part of the experience, and with 10 options, there’s no shortage of “Really? You like that one!?!” remarks.

If you’re unfamiliar with Four Roses’ 10 recipes, click here to read the nerdy deets, or just know that there are five mash bills and two unique yeasts, which, when multiplied gives you 10 recipes. All are distinct bourbon recipes and all bear Four Roses’ house style while remaining incredibly unique.

A Private Barrel Pick at Four Roses Bourbon Is One of a Kind
Four Roses' master distiller, Brent Elliot, thieves whiskey for barrel pickers. Photo by Steve Coomes

Pickers sniff and sip 10 amazing bourbons without knowledge of age, recipe or proof. Ten samples to choose from is 3x +1 the number of options offered at some barrel picks, but four samples are also common. If you’re with experienced pickers, halving four options to two happens quickly, and any debate over finalists is generally short.

But it’s never that simple or quick with 10 choices. On a pick for the Kentucky Bourbon Festival that I and five friends did in late June, just thieving whiskey from 10 barrels into 70 glasses took at least 15 minutes. It didn’t take too long to knock out four recipes, but a struggle set in over cutting the remaining six to two. Amusingly, when we announced our first cuts, Brent Elliott, Four Roses’ master distiller, said we’d already kicked out two of his favorites. How ‘bout that? Sometimes, even the most knowledgeable palate in the room gets voted down.

My favorite immediately was recipe 10, a 10-year-old OBSO others liked. As the jabbing and shaming began, we bumped out two more, including my second favorite. Eventually, it was down to barrels 2, 4 and 10 before the numb-tongue haters nixed 10. Four, a 9-year-old barrel of OBSV, won a blind tasting, which saw at least two people defect from their preferred recipe 2. Personally, I think defections are humbling and fun. You learn that blind tasting allows a crucial few minutes’ break from sipping one you like and can open your palate to something else.

A Private Barrel Pick at Four Roses Bourbon Is One of a Kind
You also get the coolest thank-you swag after you complete the pick. Photo courtesy of Stacy Pritchard.

According to Vance, Four Roses does 1,300 private barrel picks a year, two-thirds of which happen at Cox’s Creek (an average of three per day), and one-third happen remotely with couriered samples.

“Sometimes to work it into someone’s schedule we start really early—7:30 a.m. one time,” Vance said. “But mostly it’s closer to 10, which some people still think is early for bourbon drinking.”

If you ever get a chance to do a Four Roses Private Barrel pick, don’t miss it. There’s no other pick quite like it.

👥
Join the Bourbon & Banter community as a paid member for a chance to attend a Four Roses Barrel pick later this year, in Fall 2024.

Two well-aged Cragganmore and a surprise

Cragganmore 38 yo 1985/2023 (45.3%, OB, Cask of Distinction for Wu Dram Clan and Hong Kong Whisky Fellows, refill American oak, cask #601269, 174 bottles)
Cragganmore 37 yo 1986/2024 (52.9%, Whisky Sponge, Special Edition, 72 bottles)
Ballindalloch 201…

Cragganmore 38 yo 1985/2023 (45.3%, OB, Cask of Distinction for Wu Dram Clan and Hong Kong Whisky Fellows, refill American oak, cask #601269, 174 bottles) Cragganmore 37 yo 1986/2024 (52.9%, Whisky Sponge, Special Edition, 72 bottles) Ballindalloch 2015/2024 (46%, OB, UK exclusive, 3,600 bottles)

La Pulga Tequila Blanco Review

Despite lacking complexity, this is an easy-sipping tequila that’s ideal for newcomers who are finally convinced to go slowly with tequila rather than shoot it.

La Pulga Tequila Blanco Review

BOTTLE DETAILS


  • DISTILLER: Produced by La Pulga. Distilled by Agroindustria Guadalajara, NOM 1068
  • MASH BILL: 100% Weber Blue Agave
  • AGE: None
  • YEAR: 2023
  • PROOF: 80
  • MSRP: $48.99
  • BUY ONLINE: Seelbach's Online Store

STEVE'S NOTES


SHARE WITH: Any tequila fan and anyone hoping to get into this spirit.

WORTH THE PRICE: Sure. It's a bit high at nearly $50, but not outrageous.

BOTTLE, BAR OR BUST: Bottle since it's good tequila. You'll not regret it.

OVERALL: La Pulga is the name of an open-air flea market in Fort Worth, Texas, where founders Sarah Castillo (a restaurateur), Andrew De La Torre (a club owner) and Stephen Slaughter (a real estate developer) live. According to the brand's story, "La Pulga has served as a gathering place and a gateway to the Northside of Fort Worth since the 1940s. Beloved for generations, it is one of the oldest flea markets in the United States and the perfect place for our brand to call home."

Yeah, they're industry outsiders who saw the chance to create a tequila brand. It's not a big, deep story or heritage play, just an entrepreneurial story. So, let's talk about the tequila.

The nose is rich with cooked agave and pleasant back notes of sour orange peel, tamarind, eucalyptus, wild honey, spring flowers and some minerality. It's bright and lively on the palate, spiced with pink peppercorn, citrus peel and roasted agave. The finish is brief and lingers barely with some floral, honey and mineral notes. With each successive sip, spice and brightness increase appreciably, showing this blanco is no quitter.

Despite lacking complexity, this is an easy-sipping tequila that's ideal for newcomers who are finally convinced to go slowly with tequila rather than shoot it. Its spice and citrus brightness make it an ideal cocktail tequila, so go with those bolstered by citrus. Spicy and bitter amendments (Ancho Reyes and Campari among them) common to modern cocktail menus would wholly obscure this delicate spirit. Its soft presentation, however, piques my interest in La Pulga's reposado since wood may well contribute to that missing complexity and provide some beneficial oxygenation.

BRAND NOTES


Our Blanco starts with an irresistible nose of cooked agave and with a smooth sip you'll enjoy touches of pure agave, citrus, anise, honey, and floral. Experience it neat for its fullest flavor, or in any of your favorite cocktails.

Each bottle of La Pulga is adorned in the style of alebrije, a beloved Mexican folk art, and the animal spirit of our Blanco is the bronco: symbol of a soul that cannot be tamed.


Disclaimer: Bourbon & Banter received a sample of this product from the brand for review. We appreciate their willingness to allow us to review their products with no strings attached. Thank you.


Mike And Matt Taste Lythgoe Single Barrel Bourbon

The other day, Steffani Scheurich stopped by and had a drink on the porch. She brought a couple of bottles with her of her latest project – Lythgoe Bourbon. Steffani is the Master Blender for this brand. Steffani comes by… Continue Reading →

The other day, Steffani Scheurich stopped by and had a drink on the porch. She brought a couple of bottles with her of her latest project – Lythgoe Bourbon. Steffani is the Master Blender for this brand. Steffani comes by... Continue Reading →