This Year’s Crop of Bourbons

Today is the first day of autumn and that means cooler weather is either here or right around the corner. The kids have been in school for weeks already, plaid is back, football season is in full swing, and distilleries are shipping their fall releases.

Some enthusiasts will be looking for a bottle of Elijah Craig 21-Year-Old, the latest extra-aged bourbon from Heaven Hill Distillery, offered at $140. Heaven Hill’s Parker’s Heritage Collection is the one I look forward to and have never been disappointed when I actually find a bottle, usually for around $90. This year is the eighth release and features a 13-year-old cask strength wheat whiskey. Heaven Hill Master Distiller Emeritus Parker Beam, for whom the series is named, was diagnosed with ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease several years ago. Last year’s edition of Parker’s raised over $300,000 for the ALS Association’s Parker Beam Promise of Hope Fund through a $20-per-bottle contribution made by Heaven Hill. The distillery continues this tradition with a contribution of $5 from each bottle sold this year. Neither buckets of ice nor videos required.

Four Roses has a 125th Anniversary bottle coming out, barrel proof and non-chill filtered, also $90. The Buffalo Trace Antique Collection starts shipping today, five limited-release whiskeys of various ages, recipes and proofs, each going for about $80. There will be a special George T. Stagg called Stagg Jr., a cask-strength offering from Maker’s Mark and the usual deluded souls looking for a bottle of this year’s Pappy.

If there is a  downside to these special bourbons it might be the price tag. The fall edition of Whisky Advocate gave whiskey writer Chuck Cowdery a hundred bucks to show us how we can still drink very well even without the fall releases. His choices are Old Forester Signature ($24.99), Very Old Barton ($13.99), Old Grand-Dad Bonded ($19.99) Old Fitzgerald Bonded ($17.99), and Old Charter 101 ($22.99). So stand closer to the bonfire to warm your hands and choose a little sip of something to warm your heart, for fall is in the air.

A Statement of Age

Whiskey is no different than people when it comes to aging — some do it better than others. And sometimes there’s no apparent reason for the difference. Oh, there’s the usual: happy marriages, unhappy marriages, too long in the wrong job or warehouse hot spots, not enough variation in habits or weather, that sort of thing. One of the smartest and wittiest men I know has morphed into a reincarnation of Eeyore in his mid-sixties. Nobody saw that coming because the man has lived a reasonably successful and happy life. Or so it seems but then, we never really know the interior lives of others. It’s the same with barrels of whiskey – what’s inside is impacted by everything that happens outside.

A hundred barrels of the same new whiskey can be rolled into the warehouse together but they will emerge at different times and in varying states of quality. Differences depend on the style and location of the warehouse, the quality of the barrel, its placement in the warehouse, and how long it stays there. And then there’s how hot the summers are and how cold the winters. The warehouse (some prefer rickhouse or rackhouse) is where the mystery of whiskey making is most evident. It’s there that nature takes charge, and with time on her side transforms raw and grainy-tasting white dog into an amber liquid, flashing red when held up to light, full of rich and complex flavors.

Warehouses are outfitted with at least minimum heating capabilities because the aging process is suspended at 32º Farenheit. As the whiskey reposes in the barrel, it’s safe to say that pretty much everything happening has some bearing on the final outcome as warm temperatures expand the liquid into the wood and cold extracts it again, pulling flavors with it. Proprietary yeast strains, GMO or non-GMO grain, the thickness of the barrel stave, the depth of the char, temperature, humidity, distillation proof, barrel-entry proof, storms, drought, sunny days and cloudy, and number of years in the wood all converge to determine the character and flavor of the whiskey within.

The age statement on the label reflects the youngest whiskey in the bottle. With some brands that’s the only whiskey in the bottle while others contain a blend of different ages. Generally speaking, the older the whiskey, the more expensive it is, implying more care. The current bourbon boom has skyrocketed prices of extra-aged bourbons but that’s not necessarily a guarantee that the contents are as exceptional as the price. Some old barrels are sweet and mellow while others come out fiery and woody. That’s why there’s mingling. Julian Van Winkle can only watch over so many barrels.

Currently, the industry is trending to No Age Statement (NAS) on labels, presumably to provide the flexibility to mix in younger whiskey as long as the result still meets the brand’s taste profile. After all, “Aged Four Years” doesn’t quite have that premium ring to it. Using a younger spirit gains volume for the distiller in these days of high demand since there’s way more young spirits than old. Bourbon enthusiasts are as suspicious of this as they are of the Non Distiller Produced (NDP) whiskeys, posting online rants about how distillers are trying to pull a quick one on us in the form of more bucks for less bang. The industry has entered quick growth mode and so will be sorting itself out for years to come as it evolves to meet new demand and adapts to new aging and tracking technologies. Is this bad for the drinker? The proof, of course, is always in the bottle.

Who Made the First Bourbon?

A number of pioneer distillers have been named the first to make bourbon but such claims remain without documentation – Jacob Spears, Wattie Boone, Elijah Pepper, Marsham Brashears, Jacob Froman, Jacob Myers, Irish brothers Joe and Sam Daviess are but a few. Evan Williams is often cited as the first to distill corn whiskey in Kentucky in 1783 in a small distillery on the river at the foot of Fifth Street in Louisville. The Reverend Elijah Craig, equally active at preaching and distilling in Kentucky’s Scott County around 1790, is often credited with being the first to mix and distill bourbon’s holy trinity: corn, rye and barley. In truth, assigning the accolade of being first to any one person is impossible simply because distilling was so common that whomever got to Kentucky first surely made the first batch of Kentucky whiskey shortly thereafter.

The Reverend Craig is also named for accidentally inventing charred barrels while burning away the odor left in fish barrels so he could fill them with whiskey. Another story tells of an unnamed cooper who heated his staves so he could bend them more easily and charred a batch in the process. Being a frugal pioneer, he made them into barrels anyway and delivered them to a distiller. Months later the distiller requested that all his barrels be charred. Still another suggests that the purifying benefits of charcoal were already known and used in Europe and China, and that the application was deliberate.

The truth remains tucked away in history somewhere and hardly matters, really, except that we inventive Americans like to have a name to go with every invention. Such development often is not linear, but rather a convergence of intentions and mistakes, misunderstanding and insight, all scrambled around until serendipity asserts itself and a good new thing is recognized and passed along.

The first distiller to put bourbon in a bottle, however, is well documented. It wasn’t until 1874 that distillers began insuring the quality of their product by bottling their whiskey rather than sending it to retailers in barrels. Distillers included hand blown glass decanters with the barrels of whiskey to be used for serving or selling the barrel’s contents. Filling the decanters with a cheaper product or diluting the barrel contents happened as often as not.

That year George Garvin Brown addressed the problem with the sale of his Old Forester Straight Bourbon Whisky in labeled and sealed bottles, a brand still popular, still bottled in Louisville by Brown-Forman Distillery, and still spelled without the e in whiskey. (Scots and Canadians drop the “e” while the Irish keep it, and American distillers use both spellings.) The idea immediately caught on. According to Oscar Getz in Whiskey, An American Pictorial History “the demand by distillers for bottles was so great that the distilling industry is credited with giving the greatest impetus to the growth of the glass bottle manufacturing industry during the twenty-five years after Mr. Brown first introduced his bottled Bourbon.”