10 Great Getaways for the Traveling Whisky Lover

Our picks of the best places for your next whisky-themed escape.

The post 10 Great Getaways for the Traveling Whisky Lover appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

A great vacation doesn’t have to be all about whisky, but a wee dram or artisanal cocktail along the way certainly enhances the experience. The best getaways for whisky lovers combine cozy lodging with fun activities, delicious food, warm hospitality, and of course an excellent selection of whiskies. Such great escapes can be found all over the country and around the world—you can squeeze in a bit of fun on a long weekend or fly across the Atlantic to sojourn in the British Isles. Whether you a choose trip focused on skiing, fishing, hiking, golfing, or just relaxation with cooking classes and spa treatments, fabulous whisky-fueled adventures await. We’ve chosen 10 of the best such getaway options.

golf course with lake and lodge on site

Sea Island Resort has not one, but two separate hotels, including The Lodge (pictured), where the main bar serves several hundred Old Fashioned cocktails a day.

Sea Island—Sea Island, Georgia

For nearly a century, Sea Island Resort has been one of America’s most venerable vacation venues. The resort features endless choices, with two separate hotels—The Lodge and The Cloister—as well as golf cottages and a wide variety of rental-home accommodations, an acclaimed spa, and over a dozen dining and drinking spots spread across this huge coastal property. 

Sea Island is a legendary golf destination, with a new state-of-the-art performance teaching center, grass putting course, and three 18-hole layouts that host the annual PGA Tour RSM Classic. But non-golfers will never feel excluded here. The place has five miles of pristine private beach, biking, boating, inshore and offshore fishing, falconry, a formidable tennis center with 16 clay courts, horseback riding, shooting sports, scenic and cocktail cruises, pools, and an array of watersports including kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding, bodyboarding, kiteboarding, and numerous guided paddling tours. The schedule of daily events offers tours, excursions, and guided activities, while the beach club, spa, and fitness center are all world class. There is even bowling and an evening bagpiper! 

All of these activities can leave guests thirsty, which is probably why the main bar at The Lodge, the Oak Room, serves several hundred bourbon Old Fashioned cocktails each day, and offers numerous private label single cask pours including Woodford Reserve, Weller Single Barrel Reserve, and Buffalo Trace. This is the South, so bourbon is king, but the resort typically offers 60 to 70 whiskies, including rye, scotch, and Japanese labels. 

The Lodge also barrel-ages house cocktails, and the signature is an Old Fashioned served at the resort’s high-end steakhouse, Colt & Alison. Aged in a five-liter oak barrel to bring out more vanilla and spice notes, it is made using Resurgent rye from Atlanta’s ASW Distillery. 

Off-season hotel rates start around $650 per night per couple, $1,000 in prime summer. 

man stands on ladder in front of whisky shelves holding bottle

Bertie’s Whisky Bar at The Fife Arms offers over 350 whiskies from around the world.

The Fife Arms—Braemar, Scotland

Old meets new at this boutique property that opened three years ago in the Scottish village of Braemar, birthplace of the country’s famed Highland Games. The former coaching inn and hunting lodge is a local landmark built in 1856. Its owners are Iwan and Manuela Wirth, founders of the renowned international art gallery Hauser & Wirth, who oversaw a meticulous restoration, showcasing more than 14,000 historic objects and artifacts. The result is modern luxury with 19th-century Highlands flair, including plenty of tartan and museum-quality Scottish artwork. All 46 rooms at this escapist, romantic hotel are unique, and the gardens were designed by the same landscape architect used by Prince Charles. A vast slate of outdoor activities is on offer, including guided hiking, E-biking, and horseback riding. Try fly-fishing on the River Dee, one of the world’s most famous salmon spots, with sea and rainbow trout as well. A five-minute walk connects to the trails of stunning Cairngorms National Park, with hikes for all abilities. The welcoming 18-hole Braemar Golf Club is nearby, and other options include off-road 4×4 safaris via Range Rover, tours of Balmoral Castle (the royal residence in Scotland), and the nearby Royal Lochnagar Distillery.

But you don’t have to leave The Fife Arms to dive deep into Scotland’s most famous product. The hotel’s Bertie’s Whisky Bar features 365 labels from around the world, overseen by whisky ambassador Katy Fennema. She offers several themed four-dram flights, guided tastings, a food and whisky pairing workshop, and a combined contemporary architecture/fine whisky tour at Macallan Distillery’s new visitor center. The signature at Bertie’s is Fife Arms Braemar whisky, a proprietary blended malt from Adelphi Distillery created to commemorate the opening of Bertie’s in 2021. The whisky aims to imitate the style and flavor of those from the late Victorian and Edwardian eras when the hotel was built, mixing sherry-cask finished Highland malts with smokier variations from Ardnamurchan Distillery on Scotland’s remote west coast. 

Packages including one 3-course dinner and one 4-dram tasting per stay start at around $650 per night per couple.

sprawling lodge in front of alpine forest

At the open bar within the lodge at Steamboat Bay Fishing Club, top-shelf whiskies are always being poured.

Steamboat Bay Fishing Club—Noyes Island, Alaska

Alaska is the gold standard for salmon fishing and home to numerous angling lodges, and Steamboat Bay Fishing Club—situated on an island off the coast of Alaska about halfway between Seattle and Anchorage—is the finest. Steamboat Bay runs on the same all-inclusive model as the best African wildlife safari lodges, but instead of offering a private ranger and Land Cruiser, each room here comes with its own fishing guide and a 27-foot heated cabin cruiser equipped with a bathroom and tackle. This coastal spot on the edge of the Pacific offers exceptional fishing, especially for prized Chinook (King) and Coho (Silver) salmon, as well as halibut. Rates include on-site processing of all catch into steaks or filets, which are flash frozen and packed in custom freezer boxes to take home. 

Non-fishing activity options range from sea kayaking, whale watching, and nature walks to cigar smoking and hot tubbing. Seaplane transfers into this remote island lodge are included in rates, as are all gourmet meals and the top-shelf open bar. The list changes but always includes many bourbons, like Maker’s Mark, Knob Creek, and Woodford Reserve; scotch, including Macallan 12 year old, Lagavulin 16 year old, and Johnnie Walker Gold; as well as rye, Canadian, and Irish options. But the local favorite is Alaska’s own Port Chilkoot Boatwright bourbon, by itself or in local takes on the classic Old Fashioned or Manhattan. A special Drink of the Day often features it. One example is the Grapefruit Ginger Beer Bourbon, made with Boatwright bourbon, grapefruit juice, and ginger beer. There are just six rooms in the lodge and a single eight-bedroom residence. 

Steamboat Bay is open seasonally from June to August and rates for two, three, and four-day all-inclusive stays begin at about $2,600 per night per person.

lodge tucked among autumnal mountains

The Lodge at Blue Sky’s 3,500-acre property offers access to endless outdoor activities, a spa, cooking and art classes, and more. (Photo by High West Distillery)

The Lodge at Blue Sky—Wanship, Utah

Born in the Napa Valley, Auberge Resorts is famously associated with wine, but at this ranch-style property outside Park City, the focus is squarely on whiskey. That’s because The Lodge at Blue Sky, a 3,500-acre resort community, includes both the Auberge Lodge at Blue Sky and High West’s distillery just down the road. High West began with a tiny facility whose claim to fame is being the world’s first “ski-in gastro-distillery,” at the base of one of the runs at Park City Resort, the nation’s largest ski area. The newer location at Blue Sky is far larger and features organized tours and tastings, a full retail store with distillery-only limited editions, and a standout restaurant focused on locally sourced ingredients. 

While ownership is separate, The Lodge works closely with the distillery, and guests can be driven, bike, or make the 15-minute walk there. The Lodge has just 46 spacious rooms and suites, featuring deluxe bathrooms and outdoor living spaces. In keeping with the Auberge brand, The Lodge has a gourmet restaurant and high-end spa, The Edge, where one of the most popular treatments is the High West Whisky Rubdown—featuring a foot soak combining salts from Utah’s Great Salt Lake with High West whiskey, followed by a body massage, warm and cold moist towel compresses, a foot scrub, and scalp invigorator. 

The Lodge also has a wide variety of other activities, ranging from cooking classes, art classes, and fondue dinners in private mountaintop yurts to summer horseback riding, hiking, mountain biking, and fly-fishing. In winter, there is skiing and snowboarding, and the hotel has its own private clubhouse at the mountain for changing and storage, with a full bar, gourmet snacks, and complimentary shuttles. Other nearby activities include cross-country skiing, snowmobiling, and heli-skiing. On the property, there’s snowshoeing, year-round sporting clays, yoga, and more. The Lodge conducts its own tastings, and in addition to an extensive High West lineup carries other Utah whiskeys from Alpine Distillery and Clear Water Distillery, while the signature tasting is a side-by-side comparison of Kentucky Owl 10 year old bourbon and the brand’s rarer Confiscated expression. 

Off-season rates begin around $1,450 per night per couple, summer rates at $2,100.

hobbit-looking house with string lights and fire pit in front

One of two Maker’s Mark Hobbit Houses on The Preserve Sporting Club property.

The Preserve Sporting Club—Richmond, R.I.

A hidden gem of the Northeast, this 3,500-acre wonderland is a perfect weekend getaway, just half an hour from Providence, under 90 minutes from Boston, and less than three hours from New York City. It is also very dog friendly. Activities feature a top-rated 18-hole par-3 golf course, stocked fly-fishing ponds, miles of mountain biking and hiking trails, ziplining, canoeing, kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding, archery, tennis and equestrian centers, plus a wellness facility with a gym and daily yoga classes, several bars and restaurants, and a spa. The Preserve focuses on shooting sports, including a 10-station 5-stand range, a large and varied 19-stand sporting clays course, and the longest automated indoor shooting range in the U.S. Winter activities add cross-country skiing, snowmobiling, and snowshoeing. For those not used to the sporting lifestyle, the well-stocked Borrowing Closet comes in handy, in partnership with famed British boot and outdoor clothing brand Hunter, lending guests all-weather footwear and outerwear. 

The residential community has options from condos to tiny houses to luxury residences, with most offered as nightly rentals, along with the hotel-style Hilltop Lodge, featuring apartment suites with kitchens. Just down the hill from the lodge is a wooden platform with outdoor furniture, fire pits, and two luxury African safari-themed tents—one for cigars, the other for whisky. The Preserve has partnered with Cohiba cigars and Laphroaig whisky to create a private tasting experience that includes Laphroaig 10 year old, 25 year old, Select, Lore, and Quarter Cask single malts along with Cohiba cigars like Royale and Black Gigante. A private tasting experience can be booked almost anytime, but on Thursdays and Sundays the tents operate like a bar, so anyone can stop by for a drink. 

The property also includes two Maker’s Mark Hobbit Houses that offer a storybook setting for a four-course lunch or dinner that includes a Maker’s Mark flight. The seasonal menu is paired with standard Maker’s Mark, 46, Cask Strength, and Private Selection Preserve Reserve. Elsewhere on the property, there are nearly five dozen whisky choices, including Hakushu and Yamazaki Japanese single malts, Bowmore 50 year old, Talisker 25 year old, and Little Book, among others. The most unique offering, thanks to the Laphroaig association, is the very rare 30 year old Ian Hunter Chapter 1. 

Activity packages include two sporting options daily and start around $500 per night per couple in winter and $750 in summer.

lit up lodge in front of mountain

The Lodge at Spruce Peak is a four-season resort that showcases many Vermont producers.

The Lodge at Spruce Peak—Stowe, Vt.

The Lodge is the best hotel at Vermont’s most famous ski resort, but Stowe is one of the rare ski towns that is busier in summer, thanks to endless festivals, farmers markets, great hiking and biking, plus many other outdoor pursuits. The Lodge is a dog-friendly four-season hotspot: In winter it’s Stowe’s only ski-in option, and from spring to fall it offers guests access to the otherwise private Mountain Course, ranked No. 1 in Vermont by Golf Advisor. There is an ice rink, guided and self-guided snowshoeing and hiking, fat tire winter biking, and cross-country skiing, all on-site. A year-round performing arts center gets national touring acts like Little Feat, and The Lodge has one of the nicest spas in the state. 

A recent renovation added the new Alpine Hall restaurant, which showcases a broad array of Vermont producers, from cheesemakers to farmers, and, most notably, debuted the WhistlePig Pavilion. This venue features WhistlePig’s 10, 12, 15, and 18 year old ryes, Farmstock, Piggyback, The Boss Hog VII Magellan’s Atlantic, and VIII Lapulapu’s Pacific, plus a slate of rye cocktails. In summer the tasting bar is a barbecue joint, while in winter it morphs into an alpine fondue-and-raclette shack with private heated pergolas. The Pavilion hosts live music every Saturday, and its barrel-aged Old Fashioned features WhistlePig 10 year old and the distillery’s own farmstead Vermont maple syrup and maple bitters.

Ski season rates begin at around $360 per night, summer rates at around $280, with additional discounts for members of Hyatt’s rewards program.

Park Hotel Kenmore offers outdoor pursuits aplenty alongside 4,000 whisky selections at the Cocktail Bar, home to one of Europe’s most expansive whisky collections.

Park Hotel Kenmare—Kenmare, Ireland

Built in 1897, Park Hotel Kenmare is a hidden gem in County Kerry, one of the most beautiful parts of Ireland. Situated on 12 acres overlooking Kenmare Bay, Park Hotel Kenmare offers another surprise—the Cocktail Bar—home to one of Europe’s largest whisky collections. Resident whisky expert John Moriarty, who is also a specialist instructor at the Dublin Bar Academy, can steer guests through a stunning list of about 4,000 selections from around the world. When he’s holding court in the bar, he offers private tasting sessions. When he’s not, he’s often leading guests on the hotel’s daily guided hikes. 

The Park Hotel sits along the famed Kerry Way hiking path, and also offers nearly every other outdoor pursuit you might expect to find in Ireland: horseback riding, biking, fishing, falconry, tennis, and croquet—as well as complimentary yoga, chi flow, and meditation classes daily. The hotel even has its own 18-hole golf course. Want to try something different? Go scuba diving or wakeboarding, or kayak out to view the seals on Kenmare Bay. And unlike at many top Irish country resorts, it is an easy walk from The Park into the charming town of Kenmare, where you can visit pubs, shops, and restaurants

The Park is owned by Francis and John Brennan, Irish brothers who’ve become local celebrities thanks to their hit TV series “At Your Service”—a show in which they help other hospitality owners make over their hotels and restaurants. The Park’s own assortment of dining options is impressive, with a focus on fine dining offered in the Dining Room, while the Outdoor Terrace is a less formal spot to enjoy breakfast or afternoon tea. At the Cocktail Bar, Moriarty’s favorite is the Spot range of single pot still Irish whiskeys—notably Green Spot Chateau Léoville Barton, matured in sherry and bourbon barrels and finished in wine casks from Bordeaux’s renowned Chateau Léoville Barton. The hotel’s Champagne Bar offers dozens of options including Krug, Salon, and Taittinger Comtes de Champagne. 

Off-season nightly rates begin around $350 for two, and in summer from $600.

man fly fishes in river

In addition to housing a brewery and a distillery, Brush Creek Ranch encourages guests toward a wide variety of outdoor activities, including fly fishing.

Brush Creek Ranch—Saratoga, Wyoming

Brush Creek is one of the most extensively equipped guest ranches in the U.S. This 30,000-acre site includes two lodging options: the Magee Homestead, a luxury, adults-only experience, and the Lodge & Spa, which welcomes families. The Farm at Brush Creek, meanwhile, offers a deep dive into the food and drink scene. Its amenities include a seed-to-table restaurant featuring produce grown on-site, a creamery, a bakery, a cavernous wine cellar, and The Spirit Vault, a speakeasy-style space with a secret entrance, which offers more than 100 whiskies focused on rare and small batch expressions. The Farm even has its own brewery and distillery, the latter producing whiskey, vodka, and gin. The distillery offers an in-depth sensory experience on how spirits are created at The Farm—encompassing a distillery tour, the historical background of its spirits, their connection to the land and environment, and an elevated tasting ($300) of Brush Creek’s whiskeys—which include a bourbon and rye—as well as its vodka and gin. This experience can be upgraded to add a barrel tasting, which offers a sneak peek of the distillery’s spirits at their various stages of maturation ($450). 

When guests are not eating or imbibing, the resort offers a broad assortment of outdoor activities. Most are included in the nightly rates, which also cover all meals and many adult beverages. In winter there is cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, snowmobiling, skating, and ice fishing, while summer features fly-fishing, hiking, rock climbing, ATV adventures, mountain biking, archery, hiking, and golf at the private Old Baldy Club nearby. Horseback riding, shooting sports, yoga, and cooking classes are offered year-round. Several culinary experiences tie into the distillery, like the spent mash from the whiskey-making process being used to create The Bakery’s spent-grain bread, and char from the distillery’s barrels is used to make cheese at The Creamery.

The rustic chic accommodations at The Lodge include 19 rooms and 25 private cabins. Signature pours available at the property’s bars include two proprietary wine cask-finished blends of straight bourbons in partnership with prestigious Napa Valley wineries: Brush Creek Honig, using Honig Vineyard cabernet casks, and Brush Creek Chimney Rock finished in French oak cabernet casks. 

All-inclusive rates start around $2,000 per couple per night in winter and $3,100 in summer.

stage with instruments and microphone

The stage at Analog is one of two performance venues within the Hutton Hotel.

Hutton Hotel—Nashville, Tenn.

In recent years Music City has become one of the country’s most popular weekend getaway destinations, and among Nashville’s many boutique hotels, the recently renovated Hutton stands out for both whisky and music lovers (and for dog owners, as it is pet friendly). The extensive art collection throughout the property is music-themed, and the Hutton has in-room turntables for listening to a large selection of original albums from its Vinyl Library. The hotel also boasts a full recording studio, where visiting professional acts hole up to work on new material. There are two live music spaces: one in the lobby, while the other is the city’s best hotel performance venue, Analog, a 300-seat acoustically superior theater that has hosted Grammy Award-winning acts. Thanks to partnerships with Nashville-based instrument company Fender, the Hutton also offers activities you won’t find anyplace else, like the Fender Stay & Play Experiences, two-night packages for novices who want to learn to play or for musicians to improve their skills with in-room private instruction and loaner guitars, basses, and ukuleles. 

Analog has partnerships with local whiskey makers Nelson’s Green Brier and Jack Daniel. The bar carries rare offerings from both, including single barrel bottlings of Jack Daniel’s and allocated labels of Nelson Green Brier’s Belle Meade. That is just part of the bourbon-centric list, which includes options from Willett, WhistlePig, and Old Rip Van Winkle. The Hutton’s featured cocktail is the Bourbon Belle Old Fashioned, with Belle Meade Reserve, maple syrup, and Angostura and Peychaud’s bitters, garnished with an orange peel. 

Rooms are often available for under $300 a night, and at peak times begin around $450.

two bikers along path, barn up ahead

Biking tours of the Kentucky Bourbon Trail from travel specialist Backroads feature dinners and distillery visits.

Backroads Kentucky Bourbon Trail Bike Trip—Louisville, Ky.

Several years ago, Kentucky’s tourism authority mapped out a cycling route through the state’s prime bourbon-producing area between Louisville and Lexington. Backroads, the nation’s oldest and largest active travel specialist, was the first company to offer turnkey guided cycling tours of the Kentucky Bourbon Trail. By providing high-quality bikes, GPS computers with turn-by-turn navigation, expert guides, luggage shuttling from one accommodation to the next, and van support with the option to cut rides short or avoid bad weather, this is by far the easiest way to undertake this unique active vacation. 

The trips (the main offering is a 5 day/4 night package) start and end at the Omni Louisville Hotel on the city’s downtown Whiskey Row, giving guests the option of extending their stay before or after. Several distilleries and visitor centers are within walking distance of the hotel, including Angel’s Envy, Evan Williams, Rabbit Hole, and Old Forester. Each day includes multiple riding route options of different lengths and challenges, visits to attractions such as 18th-century Fort Harrod, Shaker Village, thoroughbred horse farms, the must-see cities of Frankfort and Georgetown, and an evening of fireside bluegrass music. Four of the days include VIP distillery visits or tastings at Four Roses, Woodford Reserve, Castle and Key, and a private barrel tasting and blending experience at craft distillery Bourbon 30. 

Each night includes access to a restaurant or hotel with an extensive bourbon selection, with luxe lodging at the Versailles-inspired Kentucky Castle and Lexington’s 21c Museum Hotel. The 5 day/4-night package is offered multiple times from April to June and September to October. Custom private tours are available at other times. With varied daily options, routes are rated at difficulty levels 2 to 4 on Backroads’s 5-point scale. Choices of bikes include performance road, tandem, touring, or E-bikes. To start things off with a bang, at the end of day one, a guide awaits riding guests in the hotel parking lot with a welcome cocktail—the Backroads Kentucky Mule, made with Four Roses bourbon, Kentucky-made ginger soda Ale-8-1, a dash of lime, and a fresh mint sprig. 

Most dates are $3,300-$3,650 per person and are nearly all-inclusive.

The post 10 Great Getaways for the Traveling Whisky Lover appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

7 Whiskeys That Capture California’s Wine Country

Pick up any one of these seven selections by a diverse lineup of craft distillers from across the region.

The post 7 Whiskeys That Capture California’s Wine Country appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

These days, famed California counties Napa and Sonoma aren’t just for wine—they’re brimming with fantastic whiskeys, too. When heading north of San Francisco, it’s well worth your time to visit a distillery, especially if it grants you the opportunity to taste any one of the whiskeys listed below.

Explore California Wine Country Through These Whiskeys

Sonoma Distilling Co. Cherrywood Rye
92 points, 47.8%, $50
A rich, lively palate loaded with red fruit, cinnamon spice, melted brown sugar, chocolate, and white pepper.

Savage & Cooke Second Glance American
91 points, 44%, $40
Finished in wine barrels from winemaker (and distillery owner) Dave Phinney, this offers clove-studded orange, rye spice, and lemon.

Redwood Empire Lost Monarch Blend of Straights
90 points, 45%, $43
Orange blossom, iced tea, dark berries, and leather on the nose, followed by fruit and spice on the palate—orange, cherry, cedar, and cinnamon.

Alley 6 Rye
89 points, 43%, $50
Spice, fresh rye grain, fresh red apple, raspberry jam, dark chocolate, white pepper; generous spice but no burn.

Charbay R5 Hop Flavored (Lot No. 5)
88 points, 49.5%, $60
Distilled from Racer 5 IPA; citrusy at first, but gives way to sugary oak, maple syrup, burnt brown sugar, and roasted malt.

Spirit Works Distillery Rye
88 points, 45%, $50
Sweet orange slices, red fruits, vanilla maltiness, melted caramel, grain, root beer, and marzipan. A great balance of fruit and spice.

Prohibition Spirits Hooker’s House Bourbon
86 points, 50%, $49
Finished in pinot noir barrels; new leather, aromatic oak, red berries, and pepper.

The post 7 Whiskeys That Capture California’s Wine Country appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

California Wine Country Gets a Taste For Whiskey

Vineyards may be the main attraction in the rolling hills north of San Francisco, but whiskey lovers have plenty of reasons to visit too.

The post California Wine Country Gets a Taste For Whiskey appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

When touring northern California, it’s not grain that comes to mind, but grapes. A mere hour north of San Francisco lie Sonoma and Napa Counties—home to over 1,700 wineries and the crown jewel of American wine, Napa Valley. While picturesque wineries and verdant vineyards are the main draw, craft distillers have staked their claim in wine country too, and are offering up something different for the wine-loving masses. 

Making your way to Sonoma, Napa, or beyond from San Francisco, the closest major transportation hub, is not too difficult—just hop in a car and hit Highway 101, wine country’s main artery. In an hour’s time, you’ll find yourself surrounded by lush expanses of vineyards, and quick trips off the highway will also take you to a number of distilleries. One of the first is Sonoma Distilling Co. in Rohnert Park, a small city with redwoods, creeks, and distant mountain views located on the doorstep of Sonoma County. The distillery is housed in a modern hangar-like building that looks almost industrial, but the whiskeys are entirely grain-to-glass. Most of the grain is sourced from California (Canadian and Midwestern grain is included to fill out needs), but all distillation, aging, and bottling takes place on-site.

map of northern California coast with distillery names pinpointed

Sonoma Distilling was founded in 2010. Rye was once at the forefront, but these days the distillery’s Sonoma County bourbon is the star. It’s not the only popular bourbon made here: Sonoma also offers a cherrywood-smoked bourbon, made using an on-site smoker. Rye still plays a prominent role, but in smaller, more experimental ways, including an annual release that’s infused with Perigord truffles from France. Additionally, there’s a cherrywood-smoked rye on the roster.

In nearby Sonoma proper, Prohibition Spirits has distilled whiskey in the city’s industrial area since 2012. Here, wine country played a direct influence on owners Fred and Amy Groth’s desire to make whiskey. “We were trying to figure out how to make a wine country-influenced whiskey, considering that all whiskeys, to me, start out the same,” says Fred. “Eighty percent of the flavor is really coming from the barrel. So if we can influence that barrel, and aging, then we can come up with something that’s unique and representative of Sonoma and wine country—a true crossover hybrid.” While Prohibition Spirits does distill a portion of its whiskey, Fred notes that he considers the distillery more of a negociant, working with local distilleries and buying their whiskeys to round out their own brand: Hooker’s House whiskeys. 

Named after General Joseph Hooker (a Civil War-era Sonoma legend), the core lineup includes a straight bourbon finished in pinot noir barrels from Schug Winery, straight rye finished in zinfandel barrels from Gundlach-Bundshu Winery, and a sour mash whiskey finished in wine barrels. Amy notes that there are other occasional one-off releases, as the distillery is constantly experimenting. This year, for instance, they’ve been working with smoke—using vacuum extraction to pull smoke through whiskey and brandy, and bringing peat in from Scotland.

Continue north on Highway 101 and you’ll find more distilleries, some surrounded—quite literally—by vineyards and winery tasting rooms on all sides. Not far outside Santa Rosa is Sebastopol, home to many wineries, among them Kosta Browne, Clifton Family, Dunah, and Pax Wines—and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Nestled among them is Spirit Works, located in an upscale shopping center that was once an apple cannery. This distiller revels in its status as an outlier in wine country, noting that most people who seek them out are true whiskey aficionados rather than casual wine tourists. Spirit Works’s grain is mainly sourced from California, specifically the Sacramento Valley. A small percentage of its rye is grown right down the road, and used for the annual release of its Gazelle rye label. While locally sourced grain contributes to the overall profile of the whiskeys, the distillery’s proximity to the Pacific coastline—about 15 miles away—and its temperate climate are key influencers. The absence of major temperature swings, as seen in places like Kentucky or Texas, lends a mellow aspect to the whiskey, and the sea air contributes a subtle effect, ultimately creating smooth, soft, and sippable whiskeys. Spirit Works’s star performer is its Four Grain straight bourbon, which routinely sells out, though its wheat whiskey and cask strength variants of its core range also drum up plenty of interest.

A man and a woman stand by a whiskey still

Husband and wife team Timo and Ashby Marshall of Sebastopol-based Spirit Works, whose star performer is its Four Grain straight bourbon. (Photo by David Fenton)

Several miles up the road from Sebastopol is the town of Graton, where winery tasting rooms and grapevines abound. In the thick of it all is Redwood Empire Distilling, which is located within a winery. “We utilize a lot of the same resources, people, materials, barrels, aging regimens, all of that, as…we have countless ties to the wine world,” says head distiller Lauren Patz. Redwood Empire Distilling currently uses sourced liquid, but the brand is ramping up production of its own-make distillate, made from 100% California-grown grain. In recent years, the Redwood Empire label has also experimented with locally coopered barrels. “There are a lot of great cooperages on the wine side building beautiful barrels for wineries, and they’re starting to adapt for the whiskey business,” says master distiller Jeff Duckhorn. (Both the Patz and Duckhorn names will be recognizable to wine lovers—Lauren is part of the renowned family that co-founded Sonoma-based Patz & Hall, while Jeff is part of Napa Valley’s Duckhorn family.)

Out of around 5,000 barrels currently aging on-site at Redwood Empire, 4,000 contain house-made whiskey, though Duckhorn continues to purchase whiskey from MGP and Bardstown Bourbon Co. to meet demand. Of the nearly 35,000 cases Redwood Empire sells annually, 20,000 are house-made whiskey—the remainder are sourced. A second still has been purchased to boost production, and the team is looking for a new facility nearby to support further growth.

Among Redwood Empire’s whiskeys are two newly released bottled in bond expressions, Grizzly Beast bourbon and Rocket Top rye, which will be released annually. These join a core lineup that includes Pipe Dream bourbon, Emerald Giant rye, and Lost Monarch blended whiskey. For both Patz and Duckhorn, the unique proposition of California whiskey is its gentle flavor profile, as well as each distiller’s dedication to following their own path. “California whiskey embraces this ‘go your own way’ approach, and we see each distillery crafting their own spirit in their own special way,” says Patz. “We do that here, through the addition of purchased whiskey into our blend, and we put a lot of effort into balancing the flavor profiles. The general aging process in California, too, lends itself to a softer, mellower flavor profile, as we age for longer and under less drastic temperature changes.”

A woman checks a whiskey still

At Prohibition Spirits in Sonoma, Amy Groth (pictured) and her husband Fred have been distilling whiskey since 2012.

Further north and slightly more inland, in Healdsburg, Alley 6 Craft Distillery experiences more dramatic temperature changes from night to day and season to season, which ultimately means the whiskeys are bolder and take less time to develop. “We don’t have hibernating alcohol that’s going to take four to five years to evolve,” says Alley 6 distiller Jason Jorgenson. “This means we can pretty consistently have fun with weird stuff we’re experimenting with.” Such experimental releases include a series of whiskeys finished in seven different wine casks, a single malt, and a rum-cask finished whiskey. While Jorgenson takes pride in the distillery’s experimental nature, rye is at the heart of its production, and was the first whiskey he ever made. “The rye is our flagship product, and it was the one whiskey we had created in our garage before we actually started the distillery,” he says. Alley 6 rye accounts for the majority of production, and is one of the only whiskeys available outside the distillery, in addition to the Alley 6 single malt.

One of the northernmost distilleries in California wine country—and also the veteran of the group— is Charbay, located in Ukiah, in Mendocino County and founded in 1983. As with its fellow wine country distilleries, Charbay’s locale is known less for distilling than winemaking, with some large-production wineries—like Frey, Bonterra, and Fife—within city limits. That makes Charbay’s calling card even more contrary, as the distillery specializes in distilling beer. One of its primary releases, R5, is double-distilled from Sonoma County-based Bear Republic Brewery’s Racer 5 IPA, and is chock full of intense hop flavor. A more recent release is Doubled & Twisted, a blend of three whiskeys: a 4 year old from straight malt, an 8 year old from stout, and a 4 year old from pilsner. Master distiller Marko Karakasevic is keen on getting ultra-aged whiskeys out the door in the near future. “The next small run we have is a whiskey from 2011, and that’ll come out later this year,” he says. “It’s a freak of nature, and I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to duplicate it again—we’ll only have 200 bottles for sale.” Due to its size (it’s the largest distillery in Mendocino County, and one of the larger distilleries in California wine country overall), Charbay cannot yet have a tasting room, as California law doesn’t permit retail sales from distillers producing over 100,000 gallons of spirit each year, thus making a visit to the distillery somewhat moot. This is in contrast to many other California distillers (at least those mentioned in this story, all of which have tasting rooms open to the public).

People gather outside a whiskey distillery and listen to live music

While Healdsburg’s Alley 6 Craft Distillery is more experimental than some of its peers, a flagship rye remains its primary focus. (Photo by Cynthia Glassell)

If you’re leaving wine country the same way you entered—from San Francisco—a quick detour on the way back down will take you to Mare Island, a small peninsula in Vallejo, 23 miles northeast of San Francisco. Mare Island is home to Savage & Cooke, the brainchild of famed California winemaker Dave Phinney, who’s behind household names like Orin Swift and The Prisoner. Since Savage & Cooke opened its doors in 2018, it has relied exclusively on sourced whiskey—mainly aged bourbons from Kentucky, Indiana, and Tennessee. By next year, however, its own-make distillate will make its way into bottles, especially as it creeps up in age (the distillery’s oldest barrels are now between 3 and 4 years old). Among the first bottlings to feature Savage & Cooke’s own distillate will be Second Glance American whiskey and The Burning Chair bourbon. 

The whiskey now aging at Savage & Cooke is made primarily from grain grown less than 30 minutes from Mare Island. For Phinney, California’s agricultural prowess is precisely what makes his whiskey so special. “The fact that we’re able to get our grains from so close to the distillery, and that our water is sourced from an amazing spring in Alexander Valley, is what makes this area so great for whiskey,” he says. “Eventually, we’ll have a product that’s grown, made, and bottled at the source. Even the barrels are made here.” All Savage & Cooke’s whiskeys are finished in wine barrels from Phinney’s Napa Valley Cabernet projects. Phinney has created a multidimensional experience for his guests, offering tours, specialized tastings, and a restaurant.

So, while wine may top the agenda for most travelers visiting California’s wine country, consider stopping at a distillery on your next trip. You’ll discover that the creative California mindset extends far beyond wine, to exceptional whiskeys as well.

Seven Whiskeys Straight Out of Wine Country

The post California Wine Country Gets a Taste For Whiskey appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

The Whisky Lover’s Guide to Shochu

Shochu is massively popular in Japan, but barely known on American shores.

The post The Whisky Lover’s Guide to Shochu appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

“Although it’s been around for more than 500 years and is popular in Japan, shochu is still breaking into American drinking culture,” says Tetsuro Miyazaki, general manager of Iichiko Shochu USA. “It’s known as the native spirit of Japan, and it offers an incredibly rich umami flavor while also remaining very light with a smooth finish.”

Shochu can be made from any number of ingredients, but the most common types available in the U.S. are barley (mugi), sweet potato (imo), rice (kome), and unrefined cane sugar, also called black sugar (kokuto). The base ingredient is fermented using koji mold—just like in sake production—but unlike sake, which is brewed, shochu is distilled like whisky. Most traditional shochu is single-distilled in pot stills (honkaku) but it can also be made by continuous distillation (ko-rui). After distillation, water is usually added to bring the alcohol content to between 20% and 43% before the spirit rests in stainless steel tanks or clay pots, or is aged in wood barrels.

“Shochu has quite a few flavor profiles and characteristics that depend on the base ingredient used as well as the variety of koji used—and while I’m a firm believer that there’s no right or wrong way to enjoy a dram, there are different serving options that can greatly enhance this special spirit,” says Victoria Vera, general manager and shochu buyer at Tsunami Panhandle in San Francisco, which carries the largest shochu selection in the country. “Kokuto shochu is the most friendly style—one I almost always recommend to a first timer or novice—and is refreshing on the rocks; kome shochu tends to be light and smooth, working well in a cocktail, neat, or on the rocks; mugi shochu can be either light and fruity or grainy and oaky depending on the aging vessel and tastes amazing on the rocks; imo shochu is not for the faint of heart—it is big, bold, and funky in the best way possible and I love to enjoy it in a ceramic mug that’s filled halfway up with hot water.”

Whisky enthusiasts—particularly fans of Japanese and scotch—will find similar characteristics in mugi shochu. Non-wood aged mugi shochu will have familiar flavors from the cereal grain, while cask-aged mugi brings in those lovely toasty notes. “Introducing whisky drinkers to shochu with an oak-aged mugi shochu is the smoothest transition,” Vera says. “From there you can often entice them to explore shochus distilled from other grains that also spent time aging in different vessels such as sherry or cognac barrels.” Other types of shochu will also have flavors whisky drinkers love, from clean, fruity, and floral kome shochu to smooth and lightly sweet kokuto shochu to earthy and umami imo shochu. 

In addition to the hundreds of Japanese shochu distillers, there are several U.S. producers aiming to make shochu a household spirit among American drinkers, including American Shochu Company in Frederick, Maryland, Hawaiian Shochu Company in Oahu, Horyzon Spirits in Atlanta, and St. George Spirits in Alameda, California. “I believe every shochu is worth exploring,” Vera says.

Six Shochus to Try

Hyakunen no Kodoku—40%, $85
This single-distilled shochu contains 100% estate-grown organic barley. A bourbon fan will appreciate its aging in new American oak for 3 to 5 years, which imparts a soft, mellow sweetness as well as oak and cigar notes, with layers of coconut and fragrant barley flavors. This shochu’s sweetness becomes more pronounced when mixed with water.

Iichiko Saiten—43%, $33
Made for mixing in cocktails, this is a single-distilled, non-wood aged barley shochu, with aromas of honeydew, white grapes, kabosu citrus, soy, white pepper, and barley notes. On the palate it exudes rich umami flavors of jasmine tea, white peach, and hints of citrus, with a maltiness similar to single malt whiskies, especially those from the Lowlands.

Nankai Gold—43%, $74
A blend of 80% single-distilled black sugar and 20% rice shochus, each aged up to 5 years in American white oak and French limousin casks before blending. It has qualities similar to Japanese whisky, with fruity, floral, and malty aromas and gentle notes of fruit, raisins, chocolate, and honey.

Satsuma Kuradashi Genshu—37%, $45
This non-wood aged sweet potato shochu is single-distilled and undiluted (genshu), resulting in a silky-smooth palate—similar in character to bourbon—with shy herbal and floral notes, and the enticing flavor and aroma of sweet potato pie. When poured over ice, it becomes lighter and more lively—its umami flavors make it an excellent accompaniment to a meal and in cocktails.

St. George California Shochu—40%, $50
Single-distilled from Calrose rice sake lees—the solid mash byproduct left over from sake production—from Takara Sake Brewery in Berkley, California. It offers cashew, pistachio, sweet mushroom, and dried cocoa on the nose, with the cocoa further developing on the palate as bittersweet chocolate. Enjoy in a Highball or in a Japanese whisky cocktail.

Tenshi no Yuwaku Imo—40%, $80
Aged 10 years in sherry casks, this undiluted sweet potato shochu is one of the longest-aged shochus available in the U.S. It has a thick, creamy texture, with bold and lush flavors of vanilla bean, dried fruits, sweet potato, and a whisper of dried orange peel on the long finish. This shochu will appeal to fans of sherry cask-finished single malts.

The post The Whisky Lover’s Guide to Shochu appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

Six 100 Proof American Whiskeys To Try Now

These 100 proof whiskeys deliver high quality at a higher, yet approachable, ABV.

The post Six 100 Proof American Whiskeys To Try Now appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

As whiskeys rise in proof, they often pack additional complexity and flavor. Thus 100 proof whiskeys are a great start for getting into those whiskeys with higher alcohol by volume (ABV); they usually reveal greater depth when a splash of water or an ice cube is added, but can also be comfortably enjoyed neat.

An ABV of 50% can also be indicative of another distinction: bottled in bond whiskey. First established by the Bottled in Bond Act of 1897, bottled in bond whiskeys have skyrocketed in popularity in recent years, and are set apart from the pack due to specific guidelines. By rule, these whiskeys must be distilled by a single distiller in a single season, aged for a minimum of 4 years in a federally bonded warehouse, and, of course, bottled at 50% ABV. Our Summer 2022 Buying Guide offers up a number of high-ranking 100 proof whiskeys—explore them all below.

These 100 Proof Whiskeys Are Foolproof

Old Fitzgerald 17 year old Bottled in Bond Bourbon (Spring 2022 Edition)
91 points, 50% ABV, $185

Slow to rise on the nose, offering cedar and dried herbs, but then brightening to aromas of lemon honey, lemon tea, and vanilla as it blossoms into fresh floral beauty. The palate is rich, honeyed, and dessert-like with flavors of caramel, milk chocolate-covered cherries, and a hint of coconut. Excellent length on a finish that melds chocolate with raspberry coulis, balanced against mature oak, espresso, and lingering herbs and spice.—David Fleming

Abraham Bowman Virginia Limited Edition Rum Finished Bourbon
90 points, 50% ABV, $70

Somewhat aggressive on the nose at first, throwing off aromas of bitter citrus, dried strawberries, and a touch of old leather. The palate offers lemon, strawberry jam, and dark chocolate spiced with black pepper, while water brings out balanced sweetness and more jammy strawberry and raspberry notes, along with hints of vanilla cream and cinnamon spice. The finish is slightly taut, but offers hints of vanilla sweetness and spice. Well-textured and well-balanced overall.—David Fleming

Sagamore Spirit 4 year old Bottled in Bond Rye
89 points, 50% ABV, $60

Sweet vanilla and rye grain aromas that have mellowed with age, along with grape jam, tea, and licorice root. The palate has depth and is artfully spiced, offering dark chocolate, baked red fruits, and black pepper. Water brings out vanilla bean, black licorice, root beer, mince pie, and lots of balanced spice. The finish is lively and has excellent length, ending with bright red fruit, rye grain, chocolate, and a delicious peppery bang.—David Fleming

Kentucky Owl The Wiseman Bourbon (St. Patrick’s Edition)
89 points, 50% ABV, $135

Straight bourbons aged 4 to 11 years, blended together with fruit-forward Irish whiskey flavors in mind. Golden Grahams, brown sugar, oatmeal, and grape jelly on an English muffin: a complete breakfast on the nose. A nice fruitiness carries over to the palate, where a creamy texture showcases caramel and blueberries. The finish shows good length and sweet wheat flavors. Water brings some simplicity and a corn-forward profile.—Ted Simmons

Cascade Moon 13 year old Rye
88 points, 50% ABV, $300

Butterscotch hard candies, Bit-O-Honey, and sweet marshmallow appear on the nose, which is surprisingly delicate despite showing obvious alcohol. The palate offers warm cereal sprinkled with brown sugar, plus vanilla, toffee, and spice, before a finish of earthy and leathery oak with notes of dark cocoa and peanut skins. Distilled at MGP in Indiana and released by Tennessee’s Cascade Hollow Distilling Co.—Jeffery Lindenmuth

High Bank Whiskey War Double Oaked Blend of Straight Whiskeys
87 points, 50% ABV, $65

Rich chocolate and (mostly) red fruit are all rolled up here, as a dollop of cocoa powder greets the nose and is swiftly overtaken by nearly ripe raspberries, raspberry cobbler, raspberry coulis, and the faintest hint of licorice. On the palate, more berries—raspberry jam, strawberry buttercream—along with a zip of lemon juice, vanilla extract, and hot cinnamon spice. More cocoa and dark chocolate on the finish, with a slight tang of tart red berries in tow.—Julia Higgins

The post Six 100 Proof American Whiskeys To Try Now appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

6 Cask Strength Whiskies to Try Now

Ranging in style and age, these high proof whiskies scored favorably in the Summer 2022 Buying Guide.

The post 6 Cask Strength Whiskies to Try Now appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

Your natural impulse come summertime may be to grab a low-proof whisky and you wouldn’t be alone. The typically low ABV of blended scotch in particular makes for great summertime sipping, approachable on its own, or in a cold, refreshing cocktail like the Penicillin. If you are imbibing in the summer sun, it is always wise to pace yourself, and low ABV whiskies will help you do just that.

But there is something appealing about a cask strength pour in the summer months as well—letting the heat in your glass match the heat outside. High-proof whiskies can handle a nice large ice cube, as the whisky slowly dilutes and flavors begin to change. If you are the type to grab something high proof no matter the season, these cask strength whiskies all scored between 88 and 92 points in our Summer 2022 Buying Guide. Some underwent inventive cask finishes, while others are age stated single barrels. They all pack a serious punch though, ranging from 55.4% to 65.41% ABV.

Embrace the Summer Heat With These High Proof Whiskies

MacNair’s Lum Reek 10 year old Cask Strength (Batch 1)
92 points, 55.4%, $100

No half measures from the Islay whisky components on this one. Toffee, brownies, vanilla essence, and chocolate-dipped orange slices infused with aromas of heathery peat smoke and antiseptic bandages, plus plum, pencil shavings, and cinnamon. Dark chocolate, baked orange, and damsons followed by a peak of clove, pepper, and gentle smoke, backed by ginger loaf, sticky toffee pudding, and licorice. Could be the best hundred bucks you’ll ever spend. (600 bottles for the U.S.)—Jonny McCormick

Lucky Seven 6 year old The Proprietor Single Barrel
91 points, 60.4%, $85

Nutty and spiced on the nose, with salted peanuts, apple cider, tart pears, and lemon juice. Water brings out caramel-covered pralines, peanut-butter crackers, and Apple Jacks. The palate is fiery, with more cider notes and baking spice. Water makes it more palatable but less dynamic; flavors turning to wax and wood. A big flash of spice highlights the finish along with lemon zest. Brace for heat or add water sparingly.—Ted Simmons

Uncle Nearest Master Blend Edition
91 points, 59.2%, $150

Made from a special selection of barrels chosen by master blender Victoria Eady Butler. The nose is fruity and sweet with candy apples, raspberry danish, and iced lemon pound cake. Water brings out dried leaves and chocolate brownies. There’s more sweetness on the palate in the form of raspberry lemonade as well as a subtle tartness. Those qualities carry over to the finish. Well-made, with tasty concentrated flavors throughout.—Ted Simmons

Catoctin Creek Roundstone Cask Strength Hickory Syrup Barrel Finished
90 points, 60%, $90

The nose up front conveys a certain austerity, like dusty antique furniture, with notes of grape Kool-Aid, honey cake, and vanilla icing emerging over time. With water, Golden Grahams and citronella candles emerge. The palate is honeyed and hot, with honey-roasted peanuts overtop a chewy and viscous texture. The finish shows great length and viscosity; a lip-smacking finale. There’s a lot of wood and heat here, but a warming honeyed sweetness as well. (240 bottles)—Ted Simmons

Hard Truth Sweet Mash Barrel Strength
89 points, 57.6%, $70

An ode to dessert, this is a deluge of decadent flavors: pie crust, apple pie, baked apples, cinnamon sugar, and banana bread waft up from the glass, all joined by the faintest hint of pickle juice. Such indulgence carries on to the palate, where there’s French toast dusted with powdered sugar, balanced by a nice kick of cinnamon spice. The finish, led by pickles and pumpernickel, sizzles at first, but subsides sweetly into softer flavors. (66,000 bottles)—Julia Higgins

Barrell 16 year old Grey Label Seagrass
88 points, 65.41%, $250

Several countries play a role in this whisky, which is distilled in Canada, finished in a mix of Martinique rum, madeira, and apricot brandy casks, and bottled in Kentucky after aging in both Canada and the U.S. It’s pale in color, with a mild fruity aroma. It’s spicy and a bit hot on the palate, with an herbaceous bitterness and a rooty character that is overly earthy, with a persistent tangy citrus note.—David Savona

The post 6 Cask Strength Whiskies to Try Now appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

6 World Whiskies To Try Now

Take a whisky journey around the globe.

The post 6 World Whiskies To Try Now appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

There’s plenty to explore when it comes to world whiskies. Japan has certainly carved out a distinguished place in whisky lovers’ hearts, but smaller players are also proving their whisky chops. Our Summer 2022 Buying Guide highlights a handful of creations from around the world, each of which tells a story in the glass about where it’s from—places that include Australia, Japan, Iceland, India, and Wales. Take a walk on the worldly side with any one of these top-tier options.

Explore The World With These Whiskies

Amrut Spectrum 004 (India)
92 points, 50%, $195

Licensed to thrill, Amrut finished this single malt in ingenious custom four-wood barrels. It has a deep ruby color with a nose of pomegranate, damson, sloes, black grape, baked apple, and mild spices suggestive of PX influence. It’s time to taste: More rounded than the inaugural Spectrum, this boasts bramble with chocolate, fruit skins, and an intense surge of slightly burnt spices, then semi-sweet chocolate, black currant, and oak.—Jonny McCormick

Penderyn Icons of Wales No. 7 Rhiannon (Wales)
92 points, 46%, $95

This smooth after-dinner dram has a nose that promises black currant mousse, red cherry, malt loaf, bread-and-butter pudding, and marzipan fruits, with just a frisson of baking spices. Executing a fine balance between fruitiness and spice, the palate negotiates a rollercoaster of red berries, fig, clove, cinnamon, black coffee, dark toffee, and milk chocolate, sliding to a halt with pepper-dusted chocolate-dipped berries.—Jonny McCormick

Apogee Pure Malt 12 year (Japan)
90 points, 46.3%, $100

Bimber combines the art of blending with further maturation in their single malt casks for this ongoing batched release. The nose has Kit Kat, maltiness, pecan pie, rich gingerbread, and baked apple, with the ginger complemented by roasted spices. The flavors of baked orange, ginger, pepper, red apple, and red chile build to a climax, ebbing away to a sweet finish of vanilla, apple peel, and residual spiciness.—Jonny McCormick

Myrká 12 year old (Iceland)
90 points, 40%, $50

This delicious blended malt is composed of sourced whiskies blended and bottled in Reykjavik and cut with Icelandic water. The nose is distinctive, with aromas of toffee, malt, chocolate, dried vine fruit, toasted oak, roasted chestnuts, treacle, fig, leather, cinnamon sticks, and peppercorn. Flavors match the nose, with milk chocolate, Nutella, pain au chocolat, chewed leather, treacle loaf, licorice, and chocolate muffin, leading to a lengthy chocolaty finish.—Jonny McCormick

Hye-Land 15 year (Armenia)
87 points, 43%, $50

Fresh-baked bread rises from the glass, warm and inviting, with dried apricots, orange scone, and toasted almonds following closely behind. Tobacco and sun-dappled leather can eventually be coaxed out, making for a softly complex nose. On the palate, vanilla frosting, Honey Nut Cheerios, and cinnamon stick are up first, accompanied by soft oak. The lengthy finish brings back more warm leathery notes, which are welcome.—Jonny McCormick

The Gospel Straight Rye (Australia)
85 points, 45%, $50

Made using 100% Australian-grown unmalted rye. Play-Doh, burlap sack, orange slices, vanilla pudding, seaweed salad, and wax paper on a very grain-forward nose. There is a green quality to the palate, which while well-proofed suggests some youthfulness. Good length on the finish with notes of Andes mints. A new addition to the growing world rye movement that is certainly of a style and place.—Ted Simmons

The post 6 World Whiskies To Try Now appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

6 American Single Malt Whiskeys to Try Now

These bottles, all reviewed in the Summer 2022 issue, highlight the diversity within American single malts.

The post 6 American Single Malt Whiskeys to Try Now appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

American single malt can sometimes be difficult to describe, taste-wise, even if the rules are clear—made in the U.S., like bourbon and rye, but from a mashbill of malted barley, like scotch and other single malts from around the globe. With no regulations regarding the type of barrel used, some distillers turn to charred new oak, making a whiskey more in line with bourbon and rye, while others rely on used oak, in the style of most scotch producers.

No matter your preference, American single malts appeal to most whisky lovers. Our Summer 2022 issue looks at the current state of American single malt, which has come a long way since we first examined the efforts to define it two years ago. Whiskey makers across the country are offering their unique takes on this burgeoning style, with some choosing to use peat or other smoke types, others focusing on cask finishing, and a separate group exploring barley varietals. These whiskeys all scored 88 points or more, with McCarthy’s among the highest-scoring entries in this issue’s Buying Guide. Pick one up and find the American single malt that best suits you.

Discover the Variety Within American Single Malt

McCarthy’s 6 year old (Batch MC6-21-01)
92 points, 50%, $100

With a smoky nose reminiscent of a campfire, this velvety whiskey opens up in the glass and presents like a sumptuous barbecue, complete with charcoal smoke and long-cooked meats. It’s extremely flavorful, a 6 year old Oregon single malt from a distiller whose main release is a 3 year old. It is lively and fun, chewy, spicy, and smoky with a touch of mint; water brings in some sweetness that only makes it better.—David Savona

Stranahan’s 10 year old Mountain Angel
90 points, 47.3%, $130

Hints of fragrant mountain pine, sweet lemon, vanilla cream, and spiced toasty oak on an exhilarating nose. Boldly inviting on the palate, with a mouth-coating mélange of vanilla, hints of cherry sorbet, candied raspberries, and coconut shavings, set against bitter chocolate and licorice, all spiced with jalapeño pepper. A finish perhaps not as bold as the palate, but offering tasty notes of coconut, red fruit, and spice. Elegant rusticity in this superbly balanced, individualistic dram. (600 bottles)—David Fleming

Golden Moon Triple Irish-Style
89 points, 46%, $69

Triple distilled from 100% malted barley and aged in new American oak. The nose shows clear malt and wood influence, notes of malted milk balls, Popsicle stick, green banana, and vanilla ice cream in a sugar cone. There’s more wood on the palate, which shows a zippier sense of spice, a creamy texture, and a palatable amount of heat. A mouth-coating finish rounds it out nicely. An unusual style but highly sippable. (1,000 bottles)—Ted Simmons

Downslope
89 points, 40%, $65

An expressive nose delivers bosc pears, melon rind, banana taffy, vanilla extract, and, with water added, Milano cookies: mint and dark chocolate. The palate is silky and light with chocolate cookie, subtle spice, Chewy chocolate-chip granola bar, and more minty dark chocolate. The finish brings back the green melon and spice. There’s dynamic and nuanced flavor here, but the low proof means adding water stretches an already thin palate.—Ted Simmons

Hillrock Estate 5 year old Sherry Cask Finished (High Meadow No. 4)
89 points, 48.2%, $110

Caramel corn, caramel apple, apple crisp, Honey Nut Cheerios, cinnamon babka, and brown sugar cinnamon Pop Tart fill the nose. Rich and velvety, the palate is redolent with hot chocolate, toasted almonds, slightly burnt toast, and ripe raspberries. There’s quite a bit of heat, too; Red Hots and red chiles create a mouth-watering experience. More of that heat and a playful rush of orange zest take center stage on the finish.—Julia Higgins

Greenbar Slow Hand
88 points, 42%, $55

Matured on white oak, hickory, maple, mulberry, red oak, and grape wood. Iced lemon pound cake, raspberry and cheese danish, strawberry shortcake, and cherry pie filling on the nose. Those fruity notes turn herbal when water is added. There’s a nice creamy texture on the palate but a slightly soapy note in addition to bitter oak and dried herbs. The finish showcases more herbal qualities and moderate length. (5,000 bottles)—Ted Simmons

The post 6 American Single Malt Whiskeys to Try Now appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

Ten Highest Scoring Whiskies From the Summer 2022 Buying Guide

High marks for Amrut, Midleton, Penderyn, McCarthy’s and more represent the very best from the Summer 22 issue.

The post Ten Highest Scoring Whiskies From the Summer 2022 Buying Guide appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

The Summer 2022 issue of Whisky Advocate is all about transporting you to the whisky destination of your dreams. Our cover story provides 10 great escapes for whisky lovers from the mountains of Utah to the Scottish countryside, each pairing gorgeous scenery with vacation-worthy whisky and cocktails. Elsewhere in the issue, we take you to historic St Andrews for a round of golf; to Colorado, where distillers are harnessing the Rocky Mountain water and elevation to produce a new class of craft spirits; and to California’s wine country, where innovation and a commitment to terrior have created a whisky destination unto itself.

Of course, a great whisky can transport you as well, and we have over 100 new reviews in the Summer 2022 Buying Guide. Compass Box Vellichor, for example, is meant to evoke the feeling of nostalgia one gets from reading an old book, and, at 94 points, it was named one of the issue’s most collectible whiskies. That whisky isn’t included in this list of high scorers, but you’ll find great tasting blends from Ireland and Scotland; single malts from India, Wales, and the U.S., and whiskies ranging in age from 6 to 47 years old, with quite a few in between.

TOP SCORES FROM WHISKY ADVOCATE’S Summer 2022 ISSUE

The Last Drop 20 year old Blended Malt
96 points, 60%, $5,700

The nose is perfumed and ethereal, with flower blooms, light honey, vanilla, unpeeled clemen- tine, nectarine, and the first pour of oolong tea. Golden, sweet, and juicy on the palate, with golden sultana, vanilla essence, apricot, firm peach, and robust spices, becoming slightly jammy. Blending malts from Hanyu Distillery distilled 1980–2000 with other Japanese malt whiskies, this is a contender for standout Japanese whisky of the decade. (177 bottles)—Jonny McCormick

Midleton Silent Distillery Chapter 3 47 year old
95 points, 55.7%, $46,000

The nose is beautifully honeyed, with crisp spices, cinnamon, nutmeg, and coriander seed, supplanted by grated chocolate, seasoned oak, and peppercorn. Thick and unctuous, with honey, citrus, and clove-led spices, the velvety palate glides toward flavors of fruity dark chocolate. Spices are a constant throughout, the final flavors darting between black currant, oak, ginger loaf, and milk chocolate. This proves to be much more than just history in a bottle.—Jonny McCormick

Amrut Greedy Angels 12 year old Chairman’s Reserve
94 points, 60%, $2,000

Aromas of concentrated bramble, plum, sweet baked tarts, and aromatic spices, this bourbon cask-finished version pulls off decadence and effortless balance with aplomb. Sipped neat, it tastes like what you would imagine it feels like to bite into the color indigo. Given all the intensity and power, water helps to unlock notes of milk chocolate, latte, purple fruit skins, plum flesh, Brazil nut, and bitter plain chocolate. Rather special. (36 bottles for the U.S.)—Jonny McCormick

Valentine Distilling Co. 15 year old Mayor Pingree “Black Label”
93 points, 57%, $160

Upon first smell, rich milk chocolate fills the nose, alongside peanuts, peanut brittle, and raspberry jam. The palate balances bright red fruit alongside darker, deeper flavors—think dark-chocolate raspberry squares, chocolate- covered Bing cherries, and dark-roast coffee. There are richer flavors here, too, with butterscotch and an oaky component emerg- ing at the back end. A long-lasting finish that highlights more wood influence, some cocoa, and espresso luxuriously ties up this satisfying sipper. (684 bottles)—Julia Higgins

World Whiskey Society Japanese Mizunara Shochu Finished
93 points, 60%, $80

Super fruity up front with notes of mixed berries and raspberry sorbet. Water brings out lemon wafers, vanilla frosting, and raspberry danish on the nose. The palate is likewise fruity, with added notes of caramel and Red Hots. Sticky buns and grape jelly emerge with water, of which this can take plenty. The finish has more spicy cinnamon. A well-rounded bourbon with intricate flavor and enough proof to withstand water or ice. (20,000 bottles)—Ted Simmons

Bushmills 29 year old The Rare Casks 002 Pedro Ximénez Cask Finished
92 points, 53%, $750

After 17 years in the PX cask, the influence on flavor is irrefutable. Dates, figs, dried vine fruit, mixed peel, and rich sherry notes on the nose followed by black cherry, prune juice, licorice, and baking spices. A surprisingly sweet palate begins with cherry chocolate and raspberry backed by peppercorn and clove, with a syrupy mid-palate of stewed rhubarb and plum and a greater oak presence as the sweetness fades. (500 bottles)—Jonny McCormick

McCarthy’s 6 year old (Batch MC6-21-01)
92 points, 50%, $100

With a smoky nose reminiscent of a campfire, this velvety whiskey opens up in the glass and presents like a sumptuous barbecue, complete with charcoal smoke and long-cooked meats. It’s extremely flavorful, a 6 year old Oregon single malt from a distiller whose main release is a 3 year old. It is lively and fun, chewy, spicy, and smoky with a touch of mint; water brings in some sweetness that only makes it better.—David Savona

Penderyn Icons of Wales No. 7 Rhiannon
92 points, 46%, $95

This smooth after-dinner dram has a nose that promises black currant mousse, red cherry, malt loaf, bread-and-butter pudding, and marzipan fruits, with just a frisson of baking spices. Executing a fine balance between fruitiness and spice, the palate negotiates a rollercoaster of red berries, fig, clove, cinna- mon, black coffee, dark toffee, and milk chocolate, sliding to a halt with pepper-dusted chocolate-dipped berries. (3,000 bottles)—Jonny McCormick

Royal Salute Kingdom Edition 26 year old Scottish Oak Cask Finish
92 points, 40%, $380

Master blender Sandy Hyslop expertly handles the coltish behavior of the heavy-char virgin Scottish oak casks to serve up the first in this new collection for Royal Salute. Aromas of
toffee, baked fruits, cinnamon, chocolate, dried orange peel, Brazil nut, and a whiff of woodsmoke. It’s a rich, decadent drinking experience with flavors of dark chocolate, apricot jam, ginger-nut biscuits, oak, spices, and a wisp of smoke.—Jonny McCormick

Bimber Oloroso Finish USA Edition
92 points, 58.2%, $165

The nose is nutty, with marzipan, crystalized sugar, floral notes, dry spices, fallen leaves, malt, potpourri, and fresh oak. It’s thick, syrupy, and sweet on the palate, with straw- berry, golden syrup, baked apricot, almond, clove, pepper, and flambéed banana, with buttery toffee and Quaker oats developing later. This whisky is all about the mouthfeel, with the oloroso finish adding sherry-kissed finesse to an otherwise impressive distillery character. (342 bottles)—Jonny McCormick

The post Ten Highest Scoring Whiskies From the Summer 2022 Buying Guide appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

Filey Bay Puts Yorkshire, England on the Whisky Map

We reviewed the Flagship single malt, STR Finish, and Fino Single Cask in the Summer 2022 issue Buying Guide.

The post Filey Bay Puts Yorkshire, England on the Whisky Map appeared first on Whisky Advocate.

Yorkshire is one of the most popular locations in the UK to visit, due to its people, scenery, culture, and historic landmarks. The Spirit of Yorkshire Distillery opened in 2016—the county’s first whisky distillery—and the team prides itself on grain-to-bottle distilling using only barley grown on the family farm at Hunmanby. Their stillhouse is equipped with two large Forsyths copper pot stills and a four-plate copper column, and the distillery has excelled at producing a wide variety of flavors and finishes since it started bottling its whiskies. Imported by ImpEx Beverages and widely distributed, it joins ImpEx’s roster of distilleries that were under the wing of the late Dr. Jim Swan in their early days, including Penderyn and Milk & Honey.

Filey Bay Fino Single Cask, STR Finish, and Flagship Reviewed

Filey Bay Fino Single Cask (No. 674)
93 points, 61%, $110

An intense wave of exotic spices and concentrated fruits: red apple, vanilla essence, citrus peel, dried fruits, golden sultana, and Thai curry spices. Impeccably balanced and composed, it has a thick chewy texture of dense fruitiness that you could scoop out with a spoon, displaying flavors of red apple, sweet tropical fruits, muscovado sugar, citrus peel, and a robust spiciness. Trust me, this is a phenomenal single cask whisky. (300 bottles)—Jonny McCormick

Filey Bay STR Finish
90 points, 48%, $80

The late Dr. Jim Swan favored the shaved, toasted, and re-charred red wine cask, and here it imparts an explosion of pan-roasted spices and peppercorns accompanied by aromas of blueberry, strawberry jam, and rowan jelly. The palate gets a little hot, with flavors of licorice, ginger-nut biscuits, pepper, and clove adding to the red apple and rowan notes. Rather than neat pours, this makes pretty special Highballs. (468 bottles)—Jonny McCormick

Filey Bay Flagship
89 points, 46%, $70

Single malt made in Yorkshire from 100% homegrown barley, the nose offers a combination of butter toffee, vanilla, ripe barley, banana peel, toasted oak, and dry wood spices, with fresh fruit and herbal notes as it opens up. Displaying pleasing first-fill bourbon cask characteristics, it begins with vanilla, honey, apple, and orange flavors before taking it up a gear with toffee, hints of chocolate, clove, and ginger. (768 bottles)—Jonny McCormick

The post Filey Bay Puts Yorkshire, England on the Whisky Map appeared first on Whisky Advocate.