
WhistlePig 18, Michter's Toasted Barrel Sour Mash Whiskey & More New Releases
August 9, 2019 –––––– Susannah Skiver Barton
WhistlePig 18 year old Double Malt Rye (2019 Release)
Style: RyeOrigin: CanadaAge: 18 years oldProof: 46% ABVPrice: $400Release: August 2019Availability: 10,000 bottles in 2019
Need to know:
Made at Canada's Hiram Walker Distillery, this is the oldest WhistlePig release to date. It showcases a different side of rye, featuring a mashbill that includes malted rye: 6% malted barley, 15% malted rye, and 79% rye. It's packaged with a custom glass stopper made by Burlington's AO Glass.
Whisky Advocate says:
Although WhistlePig's master distiller, Dave Pickerell, passed away last year, this whisky was in the works before his death. It was ultimately put together by Pete Lynch, who serves as master blender for the brand. Although a limited edition with 10,000 bottles available this year, there will be additional releases of this whisky in the future.
Michter's US*1 Toasted Barrel Finish Sour Mash Whiskey
Style: WhiskeyOrigin: KentuckyAge: Not statedProof: 43% ABVPrice: $60Release: August 2019Availability: Limited edition
Need to know:
Michter's has finished its mature Sour Mash American whiskey in toasted barrels. Although this release is similar to Michter's Toasted Barrel Finish bourbon and rye, the distillery employed a different toast profile with milder flavors.
Whisky Advocate says:
Michter's Sour Mash whiskey is made with a mashbill that doesn't qualify it to be a bourbon or rye, but is aged in new charred oak barrels just like those styles. The extra flavors added through the toasted finish are meant to complement those imparted by the charred barrels. Not sure how it all works? Our article about toasting versus charring will explain.
Elmer T. Lee 100 Year Tribute Single Barrel Bourbon
Style: Straight bourbonOrigin: KentuckyAge: Not statedProof: 50% ABVPrice: $100Release: August 2019Availability: Very limited
Need to know:
Don't get excited—this isn't a 100 year old bourbon. It's a bourbon, made with the Elmer T. Lee mashbill, that honors former master distiller Elmer T. Lee on what would have been his 100th birthday. It is, however, 100 proof and costs $100, and is a limited, one-time only release of an unspecified number of single barrels. All proceeds from the whiskey's sale benefit the Frankfort, Kentucky VFW Post 4075, where Lee was a member until his death in 2013.
Whisky Advocate says:
Elmer T. Lee was serving as master distiller at Buffalo Trace (then known as George T. Stagg) Distillery in 1984 when he created the first single-barrel bourbon, Blanton's. Although bourbon was at a low point in the 1980s, Lee's accomplishments made him one of the first distiller rock stars—even though he was a pretty humble guy.
Writers' Tears Cask Strength (2019 Release)
Style: Blended whiskeyOrigin: IrelandAge: Not statedProof: 53% ABVPrice: $100Release: July 2019Availability: 1,200 bottles for the U.S. out of 3,780 worldwide
Need to know:
Bottled at 53% ABV, Writers' Tears Cask Strength is an amped-up version of the core blend, which is made up of Irish single malt and single pot still whiskeys.
Whisky Advocate says:
Cask-strength Irish whiskey isn't terribly common. Redbreast has a 12 year old at cask strength, and Jameson has an 18 year old, while West Cork offers its Barrel Proof. This offering from Writers' Tears—whose 2018 cask-strength release scored 92 points—is especially noteworthy as the blend is single malt-single pot still.
Glen Moray Rhum Agricole Cask Finish Project
Style: Single maltOrigin: Scotland (Speyside)Age: Not statedProof: 46.3% ABVPrice: £55 (about $67)Release: August 2019Availability: 3,060 bottles for sale in the UK only
Need to know:
A UK-only release, this Glen Moray was finished for two years in rhum agricole casks from St. James AOC rhum in Martinique.
Whisky Advocate says:
Glen Moray launched its Cask Finish Project last year with a cider cask-finished single malt that led to censure from the Scotch Whisky Association for its use of non-traditional casks. (While rules about what cask types are allowed in scotch production were recently updated, cider casks are still not allowed.) Rhum agricole casks are certainly unusual, but shouldn't be problematic, as cask-matured rum is a longstanding practice in Martinique and elsewhere. If you want to get your hands on a bottle of this whisky, you'll have to head to The Whisky Exchange, where it's available now, or the UK, where it hits retail shelves in September.
The John Walker Last Cask
Style: Blended whiskyOrigin: ScotlandAge: Not statedProof: 40% ABVPrice: CNY 21,835 (about $3,099)Release: August 2019 Availability: 330 bottles; not for sale in the U.S.
Need to know:
This whisky is comprised of six single malts (Glen Albyn, Cardhu,Mortlach, Clynelish, Dailuaine, and Talisker) and three single grains (Cambus, Port Dundas, and Cameronbridge), which were blended and then married in a cask made from 100 year old oak staves. Master blender Jim Beveridge has determined that this cask is no longer useable and will be retired—meaning that this is the last release in The John Walker range.
Whisky Advocate says:
The John Walker blend (94 points) debuted over ten years ago to showcase whiskies that were in existence during John Walker's lifetime in the early to mid-1800s. Each blend was married in a cask made of 100 year old staves, which was apparently so essential to the blend's creation that its decommissioning has led Diageo to wrap up the series. This final whisky will not be for sale in the U.S., but is available in China and at travel retail.