Kentucky Owl Wiseman Rye, Basil Hayden Subtle Smoke, & More [New Releases]

This week also includes new releases from Yellowstone, Buzzard’s Roost, Royal Salute, Compass Box, WhistlePig, Chattanooga, Penelope & Four Gate.

The post Kentucky Owl Wiseman Rye, Basil Hayden Subtle Smoke, & More [New Releases] appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

It’s a big weekend on the American whiskey auction scene, as Chicago-based Hart Davis Hart (HDH) has commenced live bidding on its Finest & Rarest Spirits sale, which started earlier this morning and ends tomorrow. Of the 2,800 lots available, 2,189 are American whiskeys. HDH expects the total value of the American lots to reach between $1.9 million and $3 million, which would bring the highest value yet for an American whiskey sale. See the big-ticket items here.

Of course, there are plenty of new whiskies to try—ones that are valued at quite a bit less than those! Kentucky Owl has added a new rye under The Wiseman label, Basil Hayden debuts a subtly smoky bourbon, and Compass Box introduces a new blended whisky that’s evocative of old books. Read on for full details.

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NEW RELEASE: Kentucky Owl’s “The Wiseman” Straight Rye Whiskey is Hitting Soon

Kentucky Owl The Wiseman Straight Rye WhiskeyKentucky Owl, HQ’d in Bardstown, KY, has announced the second release in “The Wiseman” series, a new straight rye whiskey available in April across the U.S. The new whiskey joins The Wiseman Bourbon released by Kentucky Owl® in September 2021 and named one of Whisky Advocate’s Top 20 and Bourbon Review’s Top 10 whiskies of the year. The […]

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Kentucky Owl The Wiseman Straight Rye Whiskey

Kentucky Owl, HQ’d in Bardstown, KY, has announced the second release in “The Wiseman” series, a new straight rye whiskey available in April across the U.S.

The new whiskey joins The Wiseman Bourbon released by Kentucky Owl® in September 2021 and named one of Whisky Advocate’s Top 20 and Bourbon Review’s Top 10 whiskies of the year.

The Wiseman Straight Rye is a 95% rye mash bill selected by Kentucky Owl Master Blender John Rhea. Bottled at 100.8 proof, The Wiseman Straight Rye has a rich and spicy nose with hints of fresh rye bread and slight hints of sweet caramel and cinnamon (notes provided by KO). The spicy character instantly fills the mouth with rich rye flavor with a long finish that starts as fresh rye bread and slowly moves towards buttered cinnamon toast and ends with a hint of English walnut. 

“Following the successful launch and customer response to our Kentucky Owl The Wiseman Straight Bourbon, we’re delighted to quickly follow this with the launch of Kentucky Owl The Wiseman Rye. We’re confident our customers will also love this product — it is exciting times ahead with Kentucky Owl.”

NIK KEANE, GLOBAL CATEGORY LEADER at Stoli

This is the third Kentucky Owl release under Rhea, who previously served as Four Roses Distillery’s chief operating officer, where his responsibilities included quality control, maturation, evaluation and product blending. He was inducted into the Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame in 2016 and served as chair of the Kentucky Distillers’ Association board of directors.

Stoli Group purchased Kentucky Owl in 2017. Originally founded by C.M. Dedman in 1879, the Kentucky Owl Bardstown distillery went dark during the Prohibition era and remained dormant until a descendant revived the brand in 2014. Since then, the company’s small batch releases have sold out quickly and received rave reviews. 

The Kentucky Owl The Wiseman Straight Rye (100.8 proof/50.4% ABV, $60 MSRP/750mL), is the latest addition to the Kentucky Owl portfolio. The Kentucky Owl The Wiseman Straight Rye will soon be available starting in April at a limited number of retailers across the brand’s national distribution footprint.

More info available at www.kentuckyowlbourbon.com.

The post NEW RELEASE: Kentucky Owl’s “The Wiseman” Straight Rye Whiskey is Hitting Soon appeared first on The Bourbon Review.

Inbox / The Week’s Whisky News (March 25, 2022)

Welcome to Inbox, our weekly round up of whisky news and PR material that has found its way in to our WFE email. It was created as we cannot write full articles or do justice to every piece received. It features items from around the world of whisky an…



Welcome to Inbox, our weekly round up of whisky news and PR material that has found its way in to our WFE email. It was created as we cannot write full articles or do justice to every piece received. It features items from around the world of whisky and is published by us each Friday. Within Inbox we aim to write a few lines detailing each press release/piece of news/PR event that we have received and provide links, where possible, for you to find out further information. 
 
Here is the round-up of the news from this last week ...
 
________
 
 

Bladnoch
The Lowland distillery of Bladnoch has announced the latest addition to its Classic Collection core range - the Bladnoch Alinta. It is the first known peated expression in the distillery's history. The spirit was distilled from peated malt and is produced for just a short period each year. This was matured in first-fill ex-bourbon barrels and first-fill ex-Pedro Ximenez casks. The casks were hand selected and married together by Dr. Nick Savage, the Master Distiller at Bladnoch. The word 'alinta' translates as 'fire' or 'smoke' from indigenous languages found in southeast Australia and references David Prior, Blanoch's Australian owner. 
 
Bladnoch Alinta is bottled at 47% ABV and is both non chill-filtered and of natural colour. It will initially be available on at the distillery shop in Wigtown and www.bladnoch.com. Distribution to selected world markets will follow later in 2022. A bottle will cost £80/ $105 US.
 
 
Glenallachie
 


The Speyside distillery of Glenallachie has announced three new whiskies that will form part of their expanded Virgin Oak Series. Each of the three bottlings has undergone a finishing period in a different style of oak and the series is designed to explore how different oak species from around the world influence the single malt. The three bottlings are the Glenallachie 10 years old Chinquapin Virgin Oak Finish, 10 years old French Virgin Oak Finish and 15 years old Scottish Oak Finish.

In each case the whisky has initially been matured in American oak ex-bourbon barrels before being transferred to its finishing cask - these have been hand selected by Billy Walker, Master Distiller at Glenallachie. The 10 years old Chinquapin Virgin Oak Finish features casks made from chinquapin oak, a sub species of American oak found in the Ozark Mountains of Missouri. The 10 years old French Virgin Oak Finish uses oak from the Haute-Garonne region of France, close to the Pyrenees. 

The 15 years old Scottish Virgin Oak Finish uses Sessile oak sourced from the west coast of Scotland. It is rarely used for whisky barrels due its slow growing nature and tendency to produce knots in the wood. This is one of the first ever releases by any distillery to feature Scottish oak. All three new whiskies are bottled at 48% ABV and are non chill-filtered and of natural colour. The two 10 year olds will retail for £62/ $82 US each, and the 15 years old will cost £175/ $230 US.


 
Kentucky Owl
 
The premium American bourbon brand of Kentucky Owl has launched The Wiseman expression into the UK for the first time. The whiskey has been created by John Rhea, the Master Blender of Kentucky Owl. It is a blend of four Kentucky-sourced bourbons - two four year olds (one with high wheat content and one with high rye), a 5.5 year old and an 8.5 year old. The Wiseman forms part of a larger range that is currently available in the USA. It is bottled at 45.4% ABV and will be available in selected spirits retailers and via Amazon in the UK. A bottle will cost £60. Plans for the Kentucky Owl distillery in Bardstown, Kentucky are also being drawn up. 



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Kentucky Owl St. Patrick’s Limited Edition Bourbon Review

This bourbon is truly delightful to drink. Too many multi-whiskey blends lack the synergy and symmetry that this bottle presents in spades. Its sibling, Kentucky Owl: The Wiseman Bourbon, released last September, was one of those. On the palate, it fel…

This bourbon is truly delightful to drink. Too many multi-whiskey blends lack the synergy and symmetry that this bottle presents in spades. Its sibling, Kentucky Owl: The Wiseman Bourbon, released last September, was one of those. On the palate, it felt like every whiskey competed for attention rather than working as a unit. (It makes a good old fashioned, though.) Lastly, I recommend reading the press release below just to get an idea of how this came together. Full disclosure: When I first read it, I thought, “Here we go again. Another history story made modern and a mess in the same effort.” I happily admit that I was wrong. I’m now intrigued.

Stoli Group Announces Kentucky Owl St. Patrick’s Bourbon

Alcohol conglomerate Stoli Group has announced the limited release of Kentucky Owl St. Patrick’s Limited Edition Bourbon Whiskey. This new release celebrates the long-standing ties that connect Irish and Kentucky whiskey making. For this rele…

Alcohol conglomerate Stoli Group has announced the limited release of Kentucky Owl St. Patrick's Limited Edition Bourbon Whiskey. This new release celebrates the long-standing ties that connect Irish and Kentucky whiskey making. For this release, Kentucky Owl Master Blender John Rhea partnered with Louise McGuane, Ireland's first modern whiskey bonder and founder of J.J. Corry Irish Whiskey.

Louise McGuane says:
We tasted through the lens of bringing fruit-forward profiles that are desirable to us as Irish whiskey makers, but we also wanted something still representative of the Kentucky Owl style. This blend tastes like the Kentucky Owl products whiskey drinkers love, with an echo of big and bold juicy fruit flavors so familiar in Irish whiskey.

This release is made up of blends of various bourbons aged 4 to 11 years and contains only 6,500 cases. It comes in at 100 proof (50% alcohol) and contains an MSRP of $135. The tasting notes are:

Nose: Notes of sweet caramel and honey, with just enough spice married in to tease the palate. 

Taste: Long notes of caramel, butterscotch and frosted cinnamon roll, with hints of chocolate, orange, candy floss and some citrus peel. There's bright forest fruit on the mid-palate and a longer lingering finish with vanilla pod and balanced wood influence. 

My Take

I just learned that St. Patrick's day always falls on March 17th so it'll be here before we know it. I think this is a really interesting concept and a wonderful marketing tactic by Kentucky Owl and Stoli Group and I'm not sure why other brands don't do similar releases for specific holidays. The closest is Woodford coming out with Kentucky Derby and December Holiday bottles. 

In terms of this specific release, the $135 MSRP is a steep price, but this is a unique release so if you're a Kentucky Owl fan, this could be for you. Additionally, this isn't showing up on the State site as being available in Ohio, so if this is something you're interested in, it may mean a trip out of state. 

What do you think? Drop a note in the comments below. 

Source: Stoli Group

Kentucky Owl St. Patrick’s Day Limited Edition, Octomore Ten Aged Years, & More [New Releases]

Plus, Penelope Bourbon debuts a light whiskey and Woodford Reserve offers a sweepstakes for its annual limited release of Double Double Oaked.

The post Kentucky Owl St. Patrick’s Day Limited Edition, Octomore Ten Aged Years, & More [New Releases] appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

We first covered news of Limavady Irish whiskey last August with its U.S. debut, and recently caught up with Limavady owner Darryl McNally to talk about what separates this Irish expression from others on the shelf. Though new and without a distillery (yet), Limavady has made an impressive debut, with its Single Barrel whiskey scoring 91 points in our Winter 2021 Buying Guide.

Among this week’s new whiskies, Kentucky Owl is back with a special St. Patrick’s Day bourbon, Octomore has a new, decade-old release, and Penelope pivots away from bourbon in favor of an aged, light whiskey. Read on for full details.

The post Kentucky Owl St. Patrick’s Day Limited Edition, Octomore Ten Aged Years, & More [New Releases] appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

LIMITED EDITION: KY Owl’s St. Patrick’s Bourbon Whiskey

KY Owl St. Patrick's BourbonQUICK NOTES Hitting shelves nationwide now and throughout the month Blending collaboration between KY Owl’s John Rhea and J.J. Cory Irish Whiskey’s Louise McGuane Used barrels of this limited ed Bourbon will later age J.J. Cory Irish Whiskey 6,500 cases 100 Proof/750ml $135 MSRP It’s never too early to prepare for everyone’s favorite boozy holiday […]

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KY Owl St. Patrick's Bourbon

QUICK NOTES

  • Hitting shelves nationwide now and throughout the month
  • Blending collaboration between KY Owl’s John Rhea and J.J. Cory Irish Whiskey’s Louise McGuane
  • Used barrels of this limited ed Bourbon will later age J.J. Cory Irish Whiskey
  • 6,500 cases
  • 100 Proof/750ml
  • $135 MSRP

It’s never too early to prepare for everyone’s favorite boozy holiday – St. Patrick’s Day! And we ain’t talking finding that “Kiss Me I’m Irish” shirt that somehow never gets lost. We’re talking whisk(e)y here lads.

With this in mind, Stoli Group Kentucky Owl® in Bardstown, KY, has just announced the upcoming release of St. Patrick’s Limited Edition Bourbon Whiskey in celebration of the long-standing ties that connect Irish and Kentucky whiskey making. Kentucky Owl® Master Blender John Rhea teamed up with Louise McGuane, Ireland’s first modern whiskey bonder and founder of J.J. Corry Irish Whiskey.

Joh Rhea and Louise McGuane
KY Owl Master Blender John Rhea and J.J. Cory Irish Whiskey Bonder Louise McGuane

Not be confused with Bottled-in-Bond, Irish whiskey bonding is a way of blending that was commonplace during the 19th and 20th centuries, when most Irish distilleries produced whiskeys for bonders to age, blend and bottle.

Per the provided press release (meaning we didn’t dig on this much), when the Irish whiskey industry collapsed in the 1930s, bonding faded away — until McGuane began resurrecting the tradition again in 2015.

To get to the final amber at the end of the rainbow, Rhea and McGuane blind tasted individual cask samples, then again through multiple blending variations. The result features Kentucky straight bourbons aged 4 to 11 years, with some rich caramel notes and vanilla from rare older bourbons; spice and fruit from higher rye bourbons; and sweetness and citrus from wheated bourbons.

“We tasted through the lens of bringing fruit-forward profiles that are desirable to us as Irish whiskey makers, but we also wanted something still representative of the Kentucky Owl® style,” McGuane said. “This blend tastes like the Kentucky Owl products whiskey drinkers love, with an echo of big and bold juicy fruit flavors so familiar in Irish whiskey.”

TASTING NOTES (Provided by Press Release)

The nose features notes of sweet caramel and honey, with just enough spice married in to tease the palate. Once sipped, the Kentucky Owl® St. Patrick’s Limited Edition offers long notes of caramel, butterscotch and frosted cinnamon roll, with hints of chocolate, orange, candy floss and some citrus peel. There’s bright forest fruit on the mid-palate and a longer lingering finish with vanilla pod and balanced wood influence. All carefully mingled to bring out a robust, well-balanced bourbon experience.

The project extends beyond this release, as these chosen Kentucky Owl® barrels will be transported to Ireland for McGuane to fill with future releases of Irish whiskey.

“Bringing together Rhea and McGuane, bourbon and whiskey, Kentucky and Ireland has been an absolute honor,” commented Damian McKinney, Global CEO of Stoli Group. “Through the release of St. Patrick’s Bourbon Whiskey, Stoli is pleased to present a rare new blend that marries the best of two amazing worlds.”       

This is the second Kentucky Owl® release under Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Famer Rhea, who previously served as Four Roses Distillery’s chief operating officer, where his responsibilities included quality control, maturation, evaluation and product blending.

Stoli Group purchased Kentucky Owl® in 2017. Originally founded by C.M. Dedman in 1879, the Kentucky Owl® Bardstown distillery went dark during the Prohibition era and remained dormant until a descendant revived the brand in 2014. Since then, the company’s small batch releases have sold out quickly and received rave reviews. 

Pricing & Availability

The Kentucky Owl® St. Patrick’s Limited Edition Bourbon Whiskey (100 proof/50% ABV, $135 MSRP/750mL), is the latest addition to the Kentucky Owl® portfolio, following the release of The Wiseman Bourbon in 2021. The Kentucky Owl® St. Patrick’s Limited Edition will soon be available through a limited number of fine retailers across the brand’s national distribution footprint.

More on Irish Whiskey Bonding

As noted in Whiskey Advocate:

Irish whiskey bonding is technically a way of blending which was commonplace in previous centuries and operated similar to the way Scotland’s blending tradition evolved. Independent merchants would purchase spirit from different distilleries to age, finish, and blend themselves. “You source whiskey from other sources and you custom-blend it to make your own house style,” McGuane defined it. The practice disappeared when the Irish whiskey industry as a whole declined in the early 20th century, but McGuane brought bonding back a few years ago with the J.J. Corry brand, making her Ireland’s first modern whiskey bonder.

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Kentucky Owl Park: A Sneak Preview

Kentucky Owl Park is planned to be constructed on the site of a former quarry with a distillery, rickhouses, and amenities galore.

The post Kentucky Owl Park: A Sneak Preview appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

Cedar Creek Quarry is a 420-acre parcel of land located at 2095 E. John Rowan Blvd. in Bardstown, Kentucky, just a few minutes drive from the town’s most famous distilleries—Heaven Hill, Lux Row, Barton, Willett, and Bardstown Bourbon Co. The former quarry site has become a peaceful set of small lakes, all surrounded by wildlife. But springtime is expected to bring the sound of groundbreaking on a long-awaited new project—Kentucky Owl Park, which will feature a new distillery, rickhouses, and a variety of visitor amenities.

The story began in 2014, when entrepreneur Dixon Dedman resurrected an old family recipe to create a luxury, limited quantity bourbon and rye under the Kentucky Owl name. The whiskeys won raves from critics, and Kentucky Owl became an overnight sensation. Enter Stoli Group—the distribution and marketing arm for Luxembourg-based drinks giant SPI Group—which acquired Kentucky Owl in 2017 and unveiled plans for this ambitious $150-million project in the heart of Bourbon Country. Construction was slated to start in early 2018 and be completed by 2020, and the delays have people wondering what’s taking so long.

David Mandell, president of Stoli-owned Kentucky Owl Real Estate Company LLC and former CEO of Bardstown Bourbon Co., blamed the hold-up on the pandemic and a series of leadership changes at Stoli, but stresses that the push is on to get operations up and running as quickly as possible. “Distilling and warehousing will be the primary focus—and bringing visitors to the site during the construction process,” Mandell adds.

The fact that the future Kentucky Owl Park comprises 420 acres that are predominantly water is a big advantage, Mandell maintains. “We’ll be using that water not only to make our products, but also in the cooling and production process of the distillery,” he says. The distillery buildings’ design will be pyramidal, conceived by Japanese architect Shigeru Ban, whose body of work also includes the Aspen Art Museum in Colorado and Swatch Group’s Biel, Switzerland headquarters, among numerous other notable projects. “The pyramid is a natural shape to house a large still [and was] an inspiration for Shigeru Ban,” Mandell says. It’s still too early to say how many stills the distillery will have once construction is complete, but they’ll be versatile. “We’re developing a system that allows for tremendous flexibility and innovation in production, allowing us to produce multiple different styles of bourbon and whiskey,” Mandell adds.

Central to building the new distillery is a concept known as biophilic design, “where the idea that being surrounded by natural materials, particularly wood, has a positive effect on human beings in their workspace,” Mandell says. “What’s beautiful about this [new distillery] is connecting the heavy timber elements with artisanal, high-end distilling equipment, surrounded by massive pools of fresh limestone water. You have all the natural elements that go into making whiskey in a sustainable fashion.”

Plans for Kentucky Owl Park’s amenities—including a visitor center, bar and restaurant, event center, a hotel, and even a train station along a route shuttling passengers among the area’s various distilleries—are still taking shape. “With me coming on board, and because of demand for our Wiseman bourbon and [other] Kentucky Owl products, we’re looking at the prioritization of the buildings and reevaluating the timeline,” Mandell says. But a fully operating train station “is our goal … because that train line connects Jim Beam, Four Roses—it runs all the way down to Kentucky Owl and beyond,” he adds, noting that R.J. Corman Railroad Group, LLC owns the rail lot. “Part of the vision would be to have that train, at some point, bringing passengers along the distilleries from Jim Beam into Bardstown.”

In addition to pandemic-related delays and leadership changes, there’s also been “a lot of work behind the scenes—a good amount of design and development on a number of buildings, [but] also site studies,” Mandell says. But with those hurdles out of the way, “this project is now prepared to move forward rapidly. We’ll certainly be making our own whiskeys, but there’s such a rich history in blending—not only in America but in Scotland, Ireland, and other places—so that leaves a lot of room for innovation. All of that is part of the future.”

Mandell says it’s still too soon to dive into details of future whiskey projects at Kentucky Owl Park. Kentucky Owl’s former master blender, Dedman—whose great-great-grandfather founded the brand in 1879—left the company earlier this year to join Nashville, Tennessee-based bulk spirits supplier Brindiamo Group as a consultant. Replacing Dedman at Kentucky Owl is former Four Roses chief operating officer John Rhea.

Rhea has his work cut out for him—not only because Kentucky Owl’s whiskeys are highly sought-after among whiskey enthusiasts, but also because the ultimate goal of this project is to open a distillery that can make a number of other whiskeys. “Kentucky Owl, given its size, will be a small part of what we’ll produce here,” Dmitry Efimov, former head of Stoli Group’s American Whiskey Division, told Shanken News Daily in 2017 after the company mapped out plans for the new distillery. (Efimov, who previously helmed SPI North America, is no longer with the company, according to his LinkedIn profile.) “We plan to create a few brands, and if we come across a good opportunity, we’ll also acquire a brand or two,” Efimov said at the time. “So, there will be much more than Kentucky Owl.”

Notably, Kentucky Owl’s latest release, The Wiseman—a blend of 4 year old Kentucky Owl wheat and high-rye bourbons, as well as older, sourced Kentucky bourbons—is the brand’s first bourbon produced and distilled in collaboration with Bardstown Bourbon Co., as well as its first whiskey created by Rhea. “Seventy percent of the liquid that’s in The Wiseman is Kentucky Owl’s product that was made in collaboration with Bardstown Bourbon Co.,” Mandell says. “What you’re going to see coming forward is a whole suite of products and collaborations with other great distillers and blenders,” although it’s too early to name specific partners or even a master distiller for the new distillery.

“Those determinations have not been made yet,” Mandell says, adding he’s nevertheless thrilled to tackle the next steps of bringing the project to life—even if they’re not quite carved in stone. “It is a beautiful, exciting project,” he says. “It has great vision for Kentucky Owl, for the whiskey industry, and for this entire community. That’s certainly what excites me the most about it.”

The post Kentucky Owl Park: A Sneak Preview appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

Kentucky Owl Wiseman Bourbon Review

Please enjoy my Kentucky Owl Wiseman Bourbon Review! Have you heard of The Wiseman Bourbon from Kentucky Owl? This bourbon is unique for the brand because it is produced and distilled by Kentucky Owl in collaboration with the Bardstown Bourbon Company. It’s a blend of Kentucky Owl 4 year old wheat and high rye bourbons, combined with 5 1/2 and 8 1/2 year old Kentucky sourced bourbons. It is also the first release under Master Blender John Rhea.

The post Kentucky Owl Wiseman Bourbon Review appeared first on Bourbon Obsessed℠ .

The Wiseman
American Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
90.8 proof
Kentucky Owl
$60 SRP

Please enjoy my Kentucky Owl Wiseman Bourbon Review!

Have you heard of The Wiseman Bourbon from Kentucky Owl? This bourbon is unique for the brand because it is produced and distilled by Kentucky Owl in collaboration with the Bardstown Bourbon Company. It’s a blend of Kentucky Owl 4 year old wheat and high rye bourbons, combined with 5 1/2 and 8 1/2 year old Kentucky sourced bourbons. It is also the first release under Master Blender John Rhea. The prior Kentucky Owl bourbons and ryes were produced by Dixon Dedman, who is no longer with the brand. Kentucky Owl is owned by the Stoli Group.

Tasting Notes

Let’s taste it:

🛏 Rested for 15 minutes in a Glencairn

👉🏻Nose: Caramel, dark stone fruits, but also cherry Kool-Aid; baking spices, cinnamon, mild oak, light cocoa. Mild alcohol
👉🏻Taste: Caramel, tea, apple juice, light sugar sweetness but also some barrel char later on
👉🏻Finish: Black tea, some cinnamon; black pepper builds with oak and some dryness; moderate burn. Moderately long finish.

Wiseman Bourbon doesn’t taste and finish quite like it noses. It starts off with a fair amount of fruit and caramel, yet when returning to the nose after taking a sip, cinnamon becomes more evident. The taste is initially also a little sweet and fruity, but fairly rapidly develops stronger tea, black pepper, oak and dryness.

Summary

So what’s my final verdict? It’s a decent bourbon but the younger flavors seem to dominate. I am not sure of the percentages, but I would guess the lion’s share is the 4 years old bourbons with the 8 1/2 year old being in the minority. It will be interesting to see how it may change as it opens up. Needless to say, it’s quite a different bourbon than the prior Kentucky Owl releases, even Confiscated, although that’s not so far away in proof.

Are you a Kentucky Owl fan? Have you tried the Wiseman Bourbon? What did you think? Cheers!

I hope you enjoyed my Kentucky Owl Wiseman Bourbon Review! Would you like to learn about another bourbon from the Bardstown Bourbon Company? Read my Bardstown Bourbon Company Discovery Series #4 Review!

The post Kentucky Owl Wiseman Bourbon Review appeared first on Bourbon Obsessed℠ .

Wise Women Taste “The Wiseman” Bourbon

The other day, two of my favorite people in the world came over to have some time on the porch – Maggie Kimberl and Sara Havens. I always enjoy talking with them and we always have some good whiskey when… Continue Reading →

The other day, two of my favorite people in the world came over to have some time on the porch – Maggie Kimberl and Sara Havens. I always enjoy talking with them and we always have some good whiskey when... Continue Reading →