by jcskinner » Fri Feb 12, 2010 12:19 am
Any aged rye would be a treat, but OP does seem to get a tremendously good press.
Despite myself, I'd be intrigued to try their recreations of early American whiskeys too. I know it's only marketing guff, but they're still intriguing experiments, and there is a little validity to the claims they make.
I hear good things about Stranahan's in Colorado too. Located next to a microbrewery I think. They've won some awards recently.
Along similar lines, Tuthilltown in New York do a range of whiskeys, including a couple of ryes and four grain bourbon. One of the ryes is allegedly a recreation of the whiskey used in the original Manhattan cocktail. More guff, of course, but they're an artisan operation and the products, though young, are very interesting.
I have a bottle of McCarthy's Oregon Single Malt, which I picked up at its only European retail outlet, McCarthy's in Amsterdam last Autumn, which the society can have if they want for this tasting. I tasted it in Holland and it's like a very young, feisty, fiery Islay. Tons of smoke, which normally I'm not that impressed by. But it was good stuff.
I've had a couple of corn whiskeys in the past, but I wouldn't necessarily recommend the experience except as a learning one.
And I never appreciated the cloying vanillan quality that comes from the Lincoln County Process in Tennessee whiskey, but that's just me.
Bourbons easily warrant a night all to themselves, perhaps. But it all comes down to what we can source and what people would like to try.