What makes whiskey precious?
Maybe it’s the age. Producing outdated whiskey is, at the least economically, a dangerous endeavor. Yearly a producer leaves whiskey growing old is one other 12 months of deferred income whereas product actually evaporates into skinny air (and considerably uniquely to Kentucky, it accrues one other 12 months of growing old barrel taxes).
That’s one other 12 months of risking a nasty flip in taste, or tipping previous the purpose the place a tiny cooperage flaw turns disastrous. At a sure age, a given barrel could possibly be as prone to produce award-winning spirit as oaky sludge. With nice danger ought to come nice reward (and costly value tags), proper?
Seasoned imbibers may discover fault on this logic. Rising up in Nineties-era Bardstown, Kentucky, I bear in mind being educated that “outdated” bourbon — actually, something over eight or so years — was idiot’s gold, meant for far-away markets and consumers who have been very happy to evaluate a guide by its cowl. Again then, the now “standard” metric of $10/12 months for an age acknowledged bourbon would have elicited quite a lot of disillusioned sighs and gazes towards the bottom.
Like many issues in life, actuality in all probability exists someplace within the center. Properly-aged whiskey can hit unmatched excessive notes, nevertheless it’s not a assure of greatness. Style within the blind, and it’s not extraordinary for youthful whiskeys to punch a decade or extra above their weight.
In fact, there are value-added elements past age. Very like eighth grade math college students, right now’s producers are sometimes keen to point out their work to justify premium value tags: dangerous mashbill experiments, cutting-edge cask finishes, sonic enhancement, and a litany of different novel methods. It’s the stuff PR writers dream about.
Within the dialog balancing age and energy, the most recent launch in Jim Beam Grasp Distiller Freddie Noe’s signature line takes a powerful stand towards effort. Little E-book Chapter 6: “To The End” may be very a lot a younger whiskey with a complete lot of additional steps, a mix that includes 5 completely different parts and 4 separate wooden finishes. At $124.99 it boasts a premium price ticket, firmly within the higher quartile for American whiskey.
In response to the official press launch, this sixth iteration of Noe’s annual batch options the next parts:
- 4 12 months outdated Straight Malt Whiskey completed with cherrywood staves
- 4 12 months outdated Straight Malt Whiskey completed in applewood smoked barrels
- 4 12 months outdated Straight Malt Whiskey completed in hickory smoked barrels
- 4 12 months outdated Straight Malt Whiskey completed with maplewood staves
- 4 12 months outdated Kentucky Straight Bourbon
That’s quite a lot of 4-year whiskey, and extra wooden varieties than you’re prone to see in a median Kentucky smokehouse. It’s a younger, advanced, and assuredly labor-intensive mix.
The Noe household is famed all through Central Kentucky virtually as a lot for his or her meat grilling, smoking, and curing as for his or her bourbon pedigree. The official press junket attracts a daring line between that heritage and the most recent Little E-book providing:
“Noe makes use of the normal technique of smoking hardwoods to create completely different aromas and flavors in meals, and he’s utilized that very same technique to the whiskey-making course of, utilizing distinctive wooden staves and barrel methods for Chapter 6. This course of brings completely different traits collectively to create a last mix that has an ideal stability of flavors.”
Notably, all liquid streams have been produced below the steering of Noe, who joined the distillery in 2013. Naturally, because the world’s largest producer of Kentucky bourbon, Beam’s warehouses might very nicely maintain extra 5-year-old bourbon than wherever else within the Bluegrass state. The truth that latest Booker’s Bourbon batches have been teetering again up previous seven 12 months age statements is one other signal they’ve loads of flavorful product sitting within the five-to-eight 12 months vary.
This American Single Malt element is a comparatively new public revelation, regularly growing old in Kentucky since Beam started distilling a malt mashbill in 2017. We’ve seen Noe make use of different unconventional mixing parts in prior Little Books, together with brown rice bourbon and a 40 year-old Canadian rye. That exceedingly outdated Canadian distillate was sourced from Alberta Distillers, one other behemoth producer in Beam Suntory’s portfolio with hyperlinks to the Noe household. Alberta Distillers Common Supervisor George Teichroeb spent years in Kentucky working below the tutelage of Freddie Noe’s father, Fred B. Noe.
As well as, Freddie himself has hung out on the Calgary-based Alberta Distillers campus. From an Alberta press journey in Might 2022, I witnessed firsthand among the well-aged inventory they’re sitting on and would guess on a reappearance of their distillate in future Little E-book releases. (Alberta solely distills single-grain runs, so count on 100% rye and 100% corn whiskeys.)
However let’s get again to the discharge at hand. With this Little E-book chapter, we’re seeing Noe and his workforce lean closely into a specific method for a high-end bottle: Younger whiskey, completed by way of a fancy sequence of wooden finishes after which blended right into a last batch.
It’s not that Beam doesn’t have older whiskey in some provide. In interviews, Freddie has mentioned Beam’s extraordinarily restricted amount of 16 and 17 12 months outdated bourbon of various mashbills; two of these uncommon barrels went into the inaugural Bardstown Assortment in January 2022, with just below 200 bottles launched. In fact, there are far wider releases to think about. In 2022 alone, Beam’s nationwide drops expanded with Hardin’s Creek “Jacob’s Properly” (15 years outdated) and a long-awaited Knob Creek 18 Yr expression.
Within the presence of these older releases, Little E-book Chapter 6 looks like a acutely aware option to marry younger whiskeys for a high-end price ticket. In a lucky nod towards the worth column, the discharge maintains its nature as a cask energy product, this time clocking in at 117.45 proof.
Finally, the strain between age and energy stands on the sidelines. For the patron, what ought to matter most is the interaction of expertise and value; the upper the worth tag, the higher the whiskey must be to justify its worth. And for higher or worse in American whiskey, age is a part of that method. Right now’s consumers often equate excessive value tags with excessive age statements.
Something that breaks the accord most by some means, in opposition to some odds, justify its personal existence, even contemplating the hassle that comes with mixing completely different wooden finishes. In that realm, at a premium value unusual for 4 and 5 year-old whiskey, Little E-book Chapter 6 has given itself a tall job.
The pattern tasted was supplied for gratis by Beam Suntory.
Little E-book Chapter 6 “To The End” – Evaluation
Coloration: Mild copper.
On the nostril: The nostril instantly signifies younger whiskey, then offers option to a fancy mixture of notes, layering one after one other in fast succession. Younger, inexperienced oak is the very first thing that hits, then mint. As soon as the nostril acclimates, that provides option to smoke: Candy and sticky like BBQ, not biting or astringent within the slightest. Hickory and maple stand out from the wooden finishes. Sweetness lingers within the nostrils, together with a noticeable metallic word, which I not often expertise with Beam distillates, and will owe to the youthful malt.
Within the mouth: There’s that sweetness, with BBQ, largely hickory and maple but additionally paying homage to mesquite flavoring. Toffee and fruitiness are available on the mid-palate. The fruity high quality is fascinating and hard to pinpoint; the closest I might muster is apricot. Returning to the glass brings much less warmth and extra nuttiness, this time pecan. Then extra smoke on the tip, growing with depth with slightly “Kentucky Chew.” The end has a thick, minty high quality that sticks on the higher palate and tingles on the tongue for a very long time. The whiskey doesn’t style as younger because it noses on first odor; there’s a dialog right here between the 5 blended parts, with nobody stream fully dominating. I might (in fact) love to do that mix with older parts, as a result of I believe there’s much more depth of taste these parts merely haven’t reached but.
There’s stability to maintain the assorted liquid streams in concord, but additionally sufficient interaction to make issues fascinating from one sip to the following. An excessive amount of restraint, and Chapter 6 may need fallen flat. However the last product hits a number of corners and evolves greater than any 4 or 5 year-old mix I’ve had in latest reminiscence.
Conclusions:
It’s not possible to debate Little E-book Chapter 6 with out stating the plain worth dilemma: $125 is a darn excessive value to pay for younger whiskey, in all probability too excessive for a lot of drinkers. To be truthful, the road’s seemingly everlasting bump up from $100 to $125 probably doesn’t fall to Noe or the workforce of distillers and blenders below his watch; a rating of things and company resolution makers harmonized to get it there. What Noe and workforce did was produce a youthful whiskey with quite a lot of transferring components and new-to-us malt distillate. It’s tasty and definitely enjoyable to drink, particularly in terms of tying taste parts to particular finishes or the bourbon base. (Consider it like a sport in a glass!)
The actual fact stays there are different, also-tasty, also-complex blended whiskeys accessible for much less. Many additionally characteristic a number of revolutionary wooden finishes! Chapter 6: “To The End” is a whiskey I’m desirous to share and revisit, however the price ticket hampers this launch from reaching up only one extra degree. My hope is that future Little Books can preserve this degree of enjoyable whereas incorporating older liquids with much more depth of taste.
Rating: 6/10
This was a pattern supplied freed from cost by Beam Suntory, which – per Malt’s editorial coverage – doesn’t have an effect on our notes or scores.