Distillery Review: A. Smith Bowman

This is Virginia’s oldest and most award-winning distillery. Anyone who has spent any time in the bourbon aisle of a good liquor store knows the Bowman name. They make some excellent bourbons at a very reasonable price.

I have had many inquires as to what happened to Bourbon Bill. Bourbon Bill is back although I never went anywhere in this past Pandemic Year. Life and work got in the way of my writing and blogging. I have missed my readers, and hope to spend a lot of time communicating with you in 2021.

On a recent trip to Virginia, we visited our first distillery of 2021. In January, we took a tour of the A. Smith Bowman Distillery in Fredericksburg, Virginia. This was time well spend and very serendipitous. This is Virginia’s oldest and most award-winning distillery. Anyone who has spent any time in the bourbon aisle of a good liquor store knows the Bowman name. They make some excellent bourbons at a very reasonable price. I could spend the rest of this article detailing all the top awards they have won in competitions the last few years. Don’t take my word for the quality and taste. This bourbon is available at many liquor retailers.

The distillery offers a complimentary tour every day of the week. A great activity when there is not much you can do right now. We were fortunate while on our tour to have the pleasure of getting to meet and ask questions of Master Distiller Brian Prewitt. Brian was game for all our questions and talked about why they stand their barrels on end. They believe it gives more to the bourbon and they are easier to handle being on pallets. Brian talked most about all the experimental barrels they have in their barrelhouses.

The distillery also makes some very nice gins, which you can only buy at the distillery. We took several home we were so impressed with them. The gift shop has many fun items, and you can buy all their products at the distillery. Virginia has created a Spirits Trail like the Kentucky Bourbon Trail. We have made it to six of their distilleries. I highly suggest you do the same.

Pike Creek 15 Year Old Cabernet Sauvignon Finish – A Foreign Affair (that’s not foreign at all, or very affair-ish), but it is delicious!

Due to COVID times and its affect on premium whisky sales, we will not be
seeing a 2020 release of the Northern Border Collection. As unfortunate as
this is, I’m glad to see Dr. Don Livermore and team come in with a few new
whisky releases for the year. Pike Creek 15 Year Old is one of these new
limited releases.

Due to COVID times and its affect on premium whisky sales, we will not be seeing a 2020 release of the Northern Border Collection. As unfortunate as this is, I’m glad to see Dr. Don Livermore and team come in with a few new whisky releases for the year. Pike Creek 15 Year Old is one of these new limited releases (LCBO only).

Wine cask finishes are no longer scandalous, but let’s pretend this one is a little more salacious than most. The story goes something like this—Corby owns Hiram-Walker distillery, and has purchased Foreign Affair Winery (Niagara-on-The-Lake). They took a whisky distilled in 2004, the first vintage the winery released, and finished this Canadian whisky with Cabernet Sauvignon barrels. Maybe not a risqué move in 2020, but it’s certainly serendipitous. 

The result is a Canadian whisky that’s been tempered and challenged by a ridiculously fun wine barrel influence. I have fond memories of Foreign Affair Winery. My dogs have made themselves at home running around between rows of grapes (with the owner’s permission), while I enjoyed some of their delicious wines on their patio. Their wines were always a little weird, funky, and sometimes otherworldly.

There are only going to be 2058 bottles sold, and so this is quite literally a limited release, but don’t discount future 15 year old Pike Creek variations (Sidenote: I have no information one way or another on this, just a guess on my end). Don Livermore and his team at Corby keep turning out terrific Canadian whisky. 

For other reviews, have a look at the Toronto Whisky Society and In Search of Elegance

Pike Creek 15 Year Old Cabernet Sauvignon Finish
Distillery: Hiram-Walker
Category: 15 Year Old Canadian Whisky, Wine Cask Finish. 
Score:
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Nose: Granny apple, caramel, barrel char, dark chocolate, black tea, a steak dry rub (pepper, touches of paprika, oregano, cumin, maybe a toss of brown sugar), ginger, and a lingering of a flat cola-like smell. There’s a ton going on here. A complex knows doesn't always mean a great whisky, so let’s have a taste. 

Palate: Dark chocolate, buttery, paprika spice, herbal notes (along with what’s on the nose, with some oregano and cumin), and a caramel sweetness. The acidity is there, likely blood orange, but it’s mostly masked by the richness of a dark chocolate note. The sweetness is that boozy cherry sweetness, but not your typical cherries; these are the artisanal sweet syrupy cherries you use for your most fav manhattan cocktail recipe. It’s great. One of the things that I enjoy about many Hiram-Walker products from Corby’s is that mouth-watering drinkability to them. This one has it in spades. The finish is buttery, spicy, sweet, and tangy. 

Conclusion: This is a whisky critic’s drink. It’s a war in a glass. The battle is between a well-aged Canadian whisky and these huge funky barrel influences. It’s a fun match to taste. The flavours will change slightly depending on the temperature in the room; colder, and you’ll get more rye and acidic notes. Warmer; you’ll get more red apple and sweeter notes. The wonderful orange citrus is in a constant battle with the sweetness, but it never gets syrupy. There’s so much going on in a glass, that you’ll get something a little different each time. If you choose to. If you don’t, and you just want to enjoy a drink casually, Pike Creek 15 Year Old deliver that too. The cask influences are certainly there, but they’re not overpowering, and there are lots of flavours to keep going back to. I have little doubt this will be one of the top new releases from Canada in 2020. It’s that good. 

Disclaimer: Corby provided me with a bottle for this review. I have since purchased my own.