I got back Sunday from a fantastic Bourbon trail experience. A few notes if anyone is interested:
- Louisville Slugger and Churchill Downs - fantastic tours. Highly recommend both if you are into either sport at all.
- At at the Brown Restaurant Thursday night. The Hot Brown was fantastic (they created it). The rest of the food was ok, but overpriced. FYI - had several Van Winkles on the menu...out of all of them.
- Visited BT and Woodford on day 2. Both were fantastic. at BT, met Fred, one of the tasters. He had just finished trying the Van Winkle 23. BT is a definite must on a trip like this. They aren't on the "bourbon Trail" because it would cost them 6 figures to be in the "association" and they didn't think it was worth it. Oh, and BT had a sweet product called Bourbon Cream which is great if you like Amraula/Bailieys/etc.
- Woodford's opportunity to get your own barrel is very cool. Cost was something like $10k, which worked out ot be something like $55 a bottle, which isn't all that far off. Neat option for someday.
- Stayed in Lexington that night, and ate nowhere special, but a local diner. Very gracious folks in KY all the way around
- day 3 Dad wanted to see as many distilleries as we could. Started at 4 Roses distillery. Not a bad tour, but not as great as the others. No bottleling at that facility. Then to Makers. Got to dip our bottles, which of course was cool. Neat option here is to sign up to be a Makers ambassador. Clearly a marketing ploy like the Tenessee Squires, but there was a set of ambassadors there that had gotten their golden ticket saying their bottle was ready. They got the VIP treatment and a bottle with thier name on it.
- Next we headed to Heaven Hill/Bourbon museum. This was the most expensive tour ($20/person) but we also got to try Elijah Craig 23, Larceny, William Heaven Hill small batch and Heaven hill select stock, which were the highest end bourbons on the tours. Not really much of a tour, but cool history and I didn't realize this group plus Jim Beam make up 50% of the bourbon market. Probably worth it.
- We squeezed in Willet to end the day. Obviously much smaller, but really neat family vibe. Here we tasted one of the best we had the entire trip (although a rye) - Willet Sraight Rye rare release. Made me curious about their more aged bourbons (which were $150+ a bottle)
- Drove right past Jim Beam on the way to Louisville, so checked out the grounds. Great photo ops, but we didn't tour.
We had 24 different bourbons in the 2.5 days. Nothing super out of the ordinary or really high end since most came from tours. We did a rough rating throughout the trip and surprised that Town Branch was near the top. Dad liked Makers Cask strength. I also put Eagle Rare up there, amoung others. Few had heard of the Texas bourbons (I didn't actively bring it up, Dad always told people we were from Texas), but the Woodford guys told us the Garrison guys spent a lot of time studying their operations.
tl,dr - Highly recommend the tour. Take your old man if you want good quality time. Worth a spot on your bucket list.