January 2025

A bag of Longmorn, randomly, Part Dos

Longmorn 15 yo (54.2%, Morisco Spirits, first fill bourbon, 2022)
Longmorn 13 yo 2011/2024 (58.2%, Lady of the Glen, PX finish, cask #1721, 297 bottles)
Longmorn 22 yo 1997/2020 (58.7%, The Single Malts of Scotland, hogshead, cask #163301, 240 bott…

Bob Dylan’s Heaven’s Door Adds Sixth Whiskey To Bootleg Series

Coming on the heels of the release of “A Complete Unknown” – a feature film starring Timothee Chalamet about the rise of 1960s-era folk singer, Bob Dylan – comes an addition to the Bootleg Series from Dylan’s Heaven’s Door whiskey company. Heaven’s Door Bootleg Series Volume VI is the sixth release in the Bootleg series […]

The post Bob Dylan’s Heaven’s Door Adds Sixth Whiskey To Bootleg Series first appeared on Whisky Critic – Whisky Reviews & Articles – Style. Attitude. Whisky..

10 Tips for Visiting the Christmas Markets in Prague

Would you completely rearrange your travel itinerary and take a grueling, multi-leg flight home just to experience a city’s Christmas markets? Apparently for Michael and me, that answer was yes. Initially, it seemed logical to book our late November/early December trip to Prague and Vienna by flying to Prague first then moving on to Vienna. …

The post 10 Tips for Visiting the Christmas Markets in Prague first appeared on wayward.

Distilleries as “Wizard of Oz” Denslow Saw ‘Em

William Wallace Denslow (1856-1915) , usually cited as W.W. Denslow, was the American artist who achieved fame and fortune as the illustrator of the book, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.” As shown here, Denslow was as a large man with a walrus mustache with eccentric view of life and a foghorn for a voice. Born in Philadelphia, Denslow was largely self-taught as an artist. When he was barely twenty-one, in 1877 he agreed to illustrate a book called Historical Sketch of Franklin County, PA. Denslow traveled the length and breadth of the county, making sketches of the most important landmarks.

Two drawings, shown here deserve special attention because they depict in detail the farm distilleries that characterized the whiskey industry of the East in that era. As Denslow’s pictures vividly portray, these were substantial facilities, ones that combined farming with the production of whiskey from local grains.



Spring Grove Distillery, in Franklin County, Pennsylvania, was the property of Robert Johnston (1825-1902) whose father before him was a distiller. He work for other local whiskey-makers until 1844 when he rented a facility. He worked at it until 1866 when he bought the farm distillery shown here. He ran it very successfully until he died. Then his son George took over and made Spring Grove brand into a regional favorite.



John Downin, whose distillery Denslow also sketched, came from less fortunate circumstance than Johnston. A memorial after his death declared he was “…A poor boy when he started out in life, but through hard work, industry and thrift, became a man of substance.” Downin had been dead two years and his distillery in the hands of O.W. Good when the artist made the picture. (See my post on Oscar Good on April 16, 2012.)


Denslow, ever a wanderer, gravitated to Chicago about 1893 where he met L. Frank Baum, a journalist and author. Together they collaborated on writing and illustrating The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and the myriad Oz books that followed. Shown here is a Denslow drawing of Dorothy, the Scarecrow and the Tin Man. The stories brought riches to both men. Quarreling with Baum over royalty shares in 1902, the artist struck out on his own, creating an 18-volume Denslow Picture Book series (1903-1904) and a syndicated newspaper comic strip.


His revenues were sufficient to allow him to purchase an island off the coast of Bermuda. He moved there and crowned himself King Denslow I. It was an unhappy head that wore the crown, however. He ultimately drank his money away and died in obscurity of pneumonia in 1915. Denslow’s legacy lives on in the Oz books. In addition, his 1877 drawings for “Historical Sketch of Franklin County,” including the Spring Grove and Downin distilleries, are currently for sale online.



   

Kavalan Reveals 2025 Gift Sets

Taiwan-based whisky producer, Kavalan, has announced the release of their 2025 limited edition gift sets. The 2025 Kavalan gift sets collection features three of the distillery’s single malts – the Kavalan Triple Sherry Cask, Solist Vinho Barrique Single Cask Strength and Concertmaster Vinho Barrique Cask Finish – with each set’s packaging inspired by the theme […]

The post Kavalan Reveals 2025 Gift Sets first appeared on Whisky Critic – Whisky Reviews & Articles – Style. Attitude. Whisky..

Double Ledaig

Ledaig 20 yo (43%, OB, late 1990s)
Ledaig 32 yo 1972/2005 (48.9%, Alambic Classique, cask #8721, oloroso sherry butt, 396 bottles)

First Rum Session of the Year, from 1876 to 2021

Romero ‘Amber Rum’ (40%, OB, Canada, sherry cask finish, +/-2024)
Nicaragua 19 yo 2004/2024 (60%, Rum Sponge, for LMDW Foundations, refill barrel, 230 bottles)
Fine Old Medford Rum 1876 (M.E. Bellows’ & Son, USA, 15 Years of Wealth Solutio…

Woodford Reserve Unveils Batch Proof Bourbon

Woodford Reserve has released their annual limited-edition, high-proof bourbon – Woodford Reserve Batch Proof. Woodford Reserve Batch Proof is the result of batching together more than 100 different Woodford Reserve barrels together, with those barrels being drawn from many dates of production and matured in various warehouses and different floors within those warehouses. Woodford Reserve […]

The post Woodford Reserve Unveils Batch Proof Bourbon first appeared on Whisky Critic – Whisky Reviews & Articles – Style. Attitude. Whisky..

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