Wheated Bourbon

William Larue Weller Bourbon Whiskey (2014) Review

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William Larue Weller is the only wheated bourbon in the Buffalo Trace Antique Collection.  In essence, this is a barrel proof W. L. Weller 12 year old, which is not a bad thing.  I’m sure this release gets choice barrels from the W. L. Weller line of whiskies.  A wheated bourbon means wheat is used as the flavoring grain instead of the more common rye.  Maker’s Mark and the Van Winkle bourbons are all wheated bourbons.  Mr. Weller is credited with being the first distiller to use wheat instead of rye for bourbon back in the mid-1850s.

This year’s release of William Larue Weller is a hellish 140.2 proof.  That’s the highest proof this bourbon’s ever been.  It’s even higher than this year’s George T. Stagg… if only by a couple of proof points.  Buffalo Trace Distillery provided a review sample.

When I take a nice big whiff of this bourbon, I get lots of alcohol and caramel.  When I take a smaller whiffs, I get LOTS of caramel and toffee, as well as a little oak.  Tasting it there’s a lot of sweet caramel, baking spices like cinnamon and cloves, and toffee.  The finish is sweet and dry.  While the high proof does come into play in terms of spice and heat, I find it slightly more palatable to drink neat when compared to George T. Stagg.  Adding water to this calms down the heat and really brings out the sweetness.

Make no mistake, this is one delicious bourbon.  Being a member of the Buffalo Trace Antique Collection means it’ll be very hard to find in stores.  If the planets align and you run across a bottle, pick it up for the $80 suggested retail price.

9/10

W. L. Weller 12 Years Old Review

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W. L. Weller 12 Year old bourbon is one of my favorites.  It’s a wheated bourbon, like the impossible-to-find Pappy Van Winkle line.  This one, however, is pretty readily available…at least in the New Orleans market (I hear it’s hard to find in areas of the country).  Buffalo Trace distills both.  In fact, they use the same recipe, or mash bill.  Well, if they’re made by the same distillery using the same recipe, are they the same bourbon?  No, they’re not.  From what I gather, the Van Winkles have first dibs at barrels of wheated bourbons.  They take what they consider the best, and the rest goes to the Weller line.

Part of enjoying whiskey is smelling it.  If you’re not doing that, you’re really doing yourself a disservice.  This one has a STRONG sweet caramel smell.  I could smell this all day.  How’s it taste?  Definitely on the sweeter side.  Honey and caramel are pretty strong.  The finish doesn’t last too long.  It mainly stays on your tongue for a few seconds.  This doesn’t taste like a 90 proof bourbon.

W.L. Weller has a few products out.  Their Special Reserve, which is a little cheaper and another great bourbon, and their Old Antique 107 proof.  I’ve yet to run across a bottle of Old Antique Weller in New Orleans.  Of the two I’ve tasted, I easily prefer the 12 year.  It runs close to $25, but I’ve seen it more expensive – as high as $40.  People refer to it as the poor man’s Pappy.  They might be similar enough to say that, but these are still two different bourbons.  Pappy Van Winkle’s bourbons are at the top of the heap.  If W. L. Weller is the leftover stuff, that’s nothing to balk at.  This is one delicious bourbon.  Have you tried Weller 12 year?  Comment below and let me know what you think.

Highly recommended  9/10