2022 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Batches: All 3 Ranked and Explained

With respect to Billie Joe Armstrong, you’ll always want to wake a bourbon lover when September begins. Heritage month and limited release season: they’re reason enough to embrace an early bird bourbon lifestyle. But the release of the final Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Bourbon batch of the year is the everyman’s cue to get searching—and […]

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With respect to Billie Joe Armstrong, you’ll always want to wake a bourbon lover when September begins. Heritage month and limited release season: they’re reason enough to embrace an early bird bourbon lifestyle. But the release of the final Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Bourbon batch of the year is the everyman’s cue to get searching—and for me to get reviewing. 

Barrel Proof is a three-bottle release that sticks with its strict calendar with a reliability not seen from many distilleries these days. Their releases hit shelves in January, May and September each year as close to clockwork as is permitted in the sleepy world of whiskey maturation and packaging. 

People love the stuff. Frankly, I believe it’s largely tied to the high proof points this collection is known for. It’s not unusual for ECBP as it’s sometimes abbreviated to range from the high one-teens into the one-thirties, and at an age-stated 12 years, there’s plenty to be said for its maturity as well. 

Prices vary—while Heaven Hill still claims a suggested retail price of $60, regular drinkers aren’t likely to find that, even before taxes. But ECBP is still a relatively affordable bottle in 2022 numbers even with after market. That’s especially true if you get the right one.

A Few Words on Elijah Craig Barrel Proof…Proof & Decoding

There are a lot of reasons to love ECBP, but truth be told, the best and worst part of this collection is the variety. The large proof swings can be just one of the ways these whiskeys vary batch to batch, year to year. 

This was an unusual year for proof (as many of the last few have been). Heaven Hill trended their proof lower this year in general, with the first two releases kept at or below a respectable 121 proof. It wasn’t until September’s batch C-922 that the numbers spiked up to a still comparably modest 124.8. That’s more than 10 points down from the 136.6-proof bottle released in 2020 (and nowhere near the one released half a decade ago that topped out at over 139. 

Proof shouldn’t be a factor in quality in and of itself, but even the best critic will have to acknowledge that a high-test whiskey that drinks like syrup deserves a special star. 

CODE BREAKING

Want to know what the code means on your bottle? The letters A, B, or C always start it which signal 1st, 2nd, or 3rd release of the year. Following is a number (1,5, or 9) which represent the release month, and the last 2 digits are the year of release.

For example, “A122” means 1st release, January, 2022.

The 2022 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Rankings

So could the highest proof bottle be the best this year? In the past, that’s been the case on more than one occasion. In 2022, it’s another story.

3. B-522 (121.0 Proof; 60.52 ABV)

A fragrant nose of vanilla and orange leads to a thin and spicy bourbon. Dry notes of rye spice are decorated with coffee and hazelnut, but the peppery grain and alcohol notes dominate. 

Texture is another story—sweet corn and creamy tendrils of vanilla move around the palate. It would be delicious, save for the proof buzzing in your head the entire time, like a headache. Water is sorely needed with this one, and it brings some lightness to the party and amplifies elements of sweetness and those hints of orange.

2. C-922 (124.8 Proof; 62.43 ABV)

This surprisingly grain forward bourbon smacks of orange and lemon peels, but hints of state fair lemonade and creamsicle leave some balance to be desired. Also to be desired: some depth to the nose, which is relatively subdued. 

But back to the palate: it’s a sweet and bright whiskey over all, and time has been gentle with it in terms of oak influence. Caramel is present and accounted for as things evolve, with some lovely baking spices, before an effervescent finish. Water messes with the balance, highlights the baking spices, and elongates the oak.

1. A-122 (120.8 Proof; 60.42 ABV)

A big, bountiful nose of rye and vanilla tea doesn’t quit surprising until you discover the hint of peanut butter. It leads to a big day of Sunday baking flavors. Chocolate, nutmeg, cinnamon—they all linger as the palate is loaded with fudgy oak sweetness.

The finish is well-balanced, buttery, abundantly sweet and subtly spicy, with earthy hints of cola popping off throughout an oily, well-coated palate. Water makes the whole experience slightly more syrupy, but to be honest, there wasn’t much need in the way of alterations. But I had to convince myself to add water in the first place—who in their right mind tries to “touch up” Starry Night?

Elijah Craig Barrel proof 2022: Final Thoughts

A great ECBP only needs to do a few things to be great: drink well at proof, hint at cocoa, and acknowledge its 12-year age. If you’re doing all of that, you’re a great batch. 

This is the second year in a row that the “A” batch has taken the top spot. What these two bottles have had in common with previous releases and award-winners is those central flavors that makeup the DNA of Elijah Craig: coffee, cocoa, baking spices.

Personally, I’m glad to have had a couple of years of more modest proof points. While the 130s are a fun range, it’s nice for Heaven Hill to remind us that they can do great things without pushing the limits of comfort. Don’t get me wrong: if I see 139 proof in January, I’ll be just excited as everyone else.

For now, though, I’m comfortable nursing batch A-122. Get your hands on it if you can. Happy hunting.

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Exclusive: Jackie Zykan Starting New Brand

Jackie Zykan Hidden Barn Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, Sage Delaney

After her departure from Brown-Forman in June, former Old Forester Master Taster Jackie Zykan has announced her next product: Hidden Barn. Hidden Barn Whiskey will be an ongoing series of limited releases from small stocks of liquid, each blended by Zykan under collaboration with three other partners. The self-proclaimed “black sheep” is now a co-owner […]

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Jackie Zykan Hidden Barn Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, Sage Delaney

After her departure from Brown-Forman in June, former Old Forester Master Taster Jackie Zykan has announced her next product: Hidden Barn.

Hidden Barn Whiskey will be an ongoing series of limited releases from small stocks of liquid, each blended by Zykan under collaboration with three other partners.

The self-proclaimed “black sheep” is now a co-owner with three other business partners. Hidden Barn is “smaller, so much smaller,” Zykan points out. “I mean, I’m going from a global giant multi-billion dollar company to a team of four people.”

It’s an unconventional group of people for someone who’s been in “corporate” distilling for many years. Along with Matt Winegar and Matt Danker from Denver’s 5280 Whiskey Society, Zykan is joining forces with Royce Neeley of Neeley Family Distillery in Sparta, Kentucky.

Matt Winegar, Jackie Zykan, Royce Neeley, and Matt Danker. Courtesy Hidden Barn Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, Sage Delaney

Zykan’s new partnership with Neeley doesn’t just represent a massive shift in terms of scale (the Neeley family has been distilling for nearly a dozen generations, but the legal entity is just a few years old) but it also represents a doubling down on Zkyan’s commitment to the still-underappreciated art of blending. “I don’t wanna be a master distiller,” Zykan explained in an interview with The Bourbon Review. “I don’t distill, and I don’t want to be a master distiller that doesn’t distill. I like to play with it post-maturation. I like to take the pieces and tell a story with them. I like to paint a picture with them.”

The art will come as the artist finishes her compositions; Zykan said that the market will be seeing the product as she readies great whiskeys, not on a timetable. That’s especially important when you’re batching with smaller stocks of whiskey.

Zykan is excited to be working with smaller supplies—and says going from 200 barrels per batch to half a dozen or so makes for more interesting products, with more distinct flavors.

A couple of blends are already in the pipeline, but Zykan is quick to caution that the scale of these releases will be on the smaller side. Hidden Barn will initially release in just Colorado and Kentucky, with plans to scale up in the near future.

Aside from the smaller volume, though, Hidden Barn has no limitations. For the time being, Zykan is working with Neeley liquid but says that inter-distillery blends aren’t off the table. What we won’t be seeing anytime soon, however, are any “core” products—Zykan has no plans to make a regularly-occurring Hidden Barn Bourbon.

Above all, Zykan’s new brand (and the liquid in its bottles) will be about the exploration of flavor, the quirks of a sizeable stable of diverse barrels, and seeing what comes from diving into experimentation, head first and unrestrained. It’s a necessary next step for a talent that has already brought incredible bottles to market but has plenty more room to rise.

“I am a person that needs space to grow,” Zykan says. “I don’t do so well in a greenhouse, right? Like I need like a giant pasture. And if there’s a fence, I’ll find a way to climb it.”

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The 2021 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Batches: Ranked and Explained

2021 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof BatchesWelcome to another year of putting the three batches of Elijah Craig Barrel Proof into a steel cage, three-way wrestling match and seeing who emerges victorious. When I wrote my 2020 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Collection review, I was sweating. It had nothing to do with criticism over my opinions—all of those were correct. I […]

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2021 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Batches

Welcome to another year of putting the three batches of Elijah Craig Barrel Proof into a steel cage, three-way wrestling match and seeing who emerges victorious.

When I wrote my 2020 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Collection review, I was sweating. It had nothing to do with criticism over my opinions—all of those were correct.

I was sweating because of the heat coming 2020’s 136-proof monster release. 

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof has been called a lot of things over the years, including a full proof monster by me in 2020 when the folks at Heaven Hill tried to melt our faces with two 130-proof point releases in the same year. 

As with 2020, this is a 12-year, unfiltered, batch strength release, and they can be pretty intense. I can still feel that one burning a bit (I might have some more tonight). 

According to Heaven Hill, the Elijah Craig Barrel Proof batches are characterized by three things: a high proof point, a 12-year age statement at minimum, and flavors including leather, tobacco, chocolate and spices.

What You Should Know about the 2021 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Batches:

You already know the accolades for Elijah Craig Barrel Proof. Whisky Advocate named batch B517 the best whiskey of 2017. It picks up other awards all the time, as if people needed a reason to snatch most of it up before it touches a shelf. 

The 2021 batches were all a $60 deal (MSRP) if you can find it these days, with enough batch variety to make the search interesting. 

But Elijah Craig Barrel Proof is also showing off some year-to-year variety in 2021. After the palate firestorm that was 2020, this year is comparably calm—like the eye of a storm. The highest proof point, for instance, is almost five points below last year’s low end. 2021’s top is 123.7 as 2020 started at 127.

Before we get into batch numbers, it would probably be a good idea to go over how the Elijah Craig Barrel Proof system works. 

It’s actually pretty straight forward. The letter at the beginning of the code is the batch number for the given year, so in A120, it’s the first batch. The first numeral of the code is the release month, and then the last two digits mark the year. So Batch A120, then, is the January batch of 2020, and the first of that year. 

Heaven Hill has often said that the plan is to always have them in January, May, and September—three a year for the foreseeable future. 

Alright, let’s get to the results. Here’s my ranking:

The 2021 Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Batches Ranked:

#3 B521 – 118.2 proof

The third best batch of 2021 was batch B. The lowest proof point for the range, Batch B made up for the lack of alcoholic power with its donation—it’s an absolute baking spice bomb, with a dry, lip-smacking texture and structured sugars on the finish. 

But then the spices. The rye spice on the palate delivers an extra punch in this batch, which sort of double bounces cinnamon note over everything. It just gets a bit messy, like the last minute or so of “1812 Overture.” And that’s a beautiful piece of music, but not every song calls for a cannon.

#2 C921 – 120.2 proof

In the middle of this year’s field, we had Batch C. Batch C was Elijah Craig Barrel Proof spaghetti western in a bottle. Re-read that. 

An inky leather chewer of a whiskey, Batch C clings to your teeth with oak spices, wood sugars, and a smacking dryness. Everything—the whole of this whiskey—is filtered through those dark, antiqued layers of age flavor—like a tea made from a bag of leather and oak chips. 

Deep, nutty cola flavors resonate darkly though this whiskey—and save it from causing you to pucker your mouth like it’s full of Warhead-infused sour beer. 

Thankfully, this one knew when to stop, and did so on a dime. 

#1 A121 – 123.6 proof

Call me a sweet tooth drinker, but the best batch of 2021 was Batch A, which happened to be dessert in a glass. 

Gorgeous, sweet vanilla pops on the palate, before they throw malted milk chocolate notes at us.  This is followed by a caramel-corn taffy pull of a finish, highlighted by the softest, steaming-fresh yellow cake note. 

It’s decadent. It’s delicious. It’s unquestionably the best of the year. It accomplishes everything by doing the opposite of what we expect from Elijah Craig—it’s not the spiciest or the oldest. 

Ironically, though, Batch A is what you want to find every year, in every collection—and it’s a good sign of the work going on at Heaven Hill right now. Let’s hope for more like these in 2022’s ECBP crop.

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