Little Book Chapter 3: The Road Home Review

Hannah’s Little Book Chapter 3: The Road Home Review

Original review written May 10, 2022

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

A complex, fruity, spicy burn that’s high proof and from one of my favorite distillers. Happy to have this pre-pandemic gem open at last. 97/100

VITALS:
Little Book Chapter 3 The Road Home Review

– Made In: Clermont, Kentucky, USA
– Distiller: Jim Beam Distillery
– Classification: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey; Blend of Jim Beam Bourbons
– Blend Overview:
9-year-old Knob Creek Bourbon
9-year-old Basil Hayden’s Bourbon
11-year-old Booker’s Bourbon
12-year-old Baker’s Bourbon
– Age: 9 yrs.
– Mash Bill: Blend of Corn=77%; Rye=13%; Malted Barley=10% (Knob Creek, Baker’s, and Booker’s), and Corn=63%; Rye=27%; Malted Barley=10% (Basil Hayden’s) – Recipe 51

Little Book Chapter 3 The Road Home Review

– Casks: Char #4
– Barrel Entry Proofs: 125
– ABV: 61.3% (122.6 proof)
– Release Date: September 2019
– Price: $124.95 USD in Idaho 2019

Visit https://beamsuntory.com/ for more information

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

I enjoyed the spirit neat from a Glencairn glass with sister, as well as father and fellow Whiskey for the Ages reviewer, Brian.

Check out his review for this bourbon here!

SETTING:

Might be a little brisk, and there might be a chilling mist keeping you from seeing far into the distance, but I imagine The Road Home would fit well on this kind of path. Old, gnarled trees keep you company and offer walls to lean on, rather than poke and jab you for coming too close. The Road Home is about the journey, after all, and while unconventional and perhaps not immediately desired, this Road Not Taken is refreshing and wild all at once.

Photo by Adarsh Kummur on Unsplash

NOSE:

This is a fruity, spicy Booker’s at first inhale. Dark fruits, like grapes and figs are everywhere, but the burn from the alcohol is rough in a way only a Jim Beam product can be. There’s a distinct toffee essence, with nuts dominating, but I can find a chewy, fudgy caramel. The spice, while definitely peppery, links up with an old, gnarly oak to offer some immediate depth and richness. Along with that wood is a musty leather and earth component. It’s old, dusty, and has just a touch of grain mixed in it. While there are those sweet aromas, it’s these darker, earthy, spicy alcohol tones that overwhelm the nose the more it continues to breathe. Complex, dark, spicy – that’s about what I’d expect from a Jim Beam nose.

PALATE:
Little Book Chapter 3 The Road Home Review

– Mouth Feel: Raspy and textured, this settles into the taste buds, especially at the back of the palate where it burns more potently.
– Balance: Solid. I like the spice chasing the fruit, and with a deep oaky foundation, I feel more like a bystander than an active participant. The bourbon doesn’t really need my involvement with chews, or holding it, to taste good and complex.
– Visual: Old oak in color, this leaves behind an almost perfect inverted crown, complete with clinging droplets that fall slowly in thick legs back into the glass.

– Taste: I can hold this on the palate for longer than I would have expected to originally, but that bite does settle in the more it sits. When it moves across the palate for tasting, fruits like figs, dried cherries, and partially baked, tart apples meld with an almost burnt caramel that both adds sweetness and a hint of bitter. Following the fruit, is a grassy element that eases some of the burn that comes at the back of the palate, and boy, is this necessary. The grass fights off more than just the alcohol too – locating anything pepper or rye and trying to choke it out like a fire without oxygen.

Nevertheless, the alcohol is harsh, and a Kentucky chew makes the whole mouth burn and tears come to the eyes. Knives of pepper go through the tongue like stakes covered in thorns. NOT a pleasant experience, but the spices do wake up even more, showcasing cinnamon and allspice. Oak and prunes and raisin are there on the coming-down; they don’t take away the heat, but they distract you from the pain of the chew somewhat.

FINISH:

– Lasting Power: Very long. The heat lingers and lingers and lingers… and lingers. A Kentucky hug is most certainly possible with this pour. Some flavor does linger, but it’s about the heat.
– Between Sips: Oak with dark vanilla and grain mix together between sips, remaining complex even here in the finish.

– No More: Sweeter flavors emerge the longer I sit with this bourbon. Simple syrup, caramel, and vanilla grow ever stronger, still backed by the alcohol warmth and emerging allspice first noted on the Kentucky chew.

The empty Glencairn is a spicy oak, with lots of harsh burn remaining and pepper. It’s warm and complex, and a great finish to a great pour.

WORTH THE PRICE?

$125 is a big ask, but if you see Little Book (I’ll go so far as to say any chapter*), it’s a fun edition to have to the bunker, and given their rarity and originality in mash bills and blends… It’s a no-brainer. If it was regularly available, perhaps I wouldn’t pay this much for it, but it’s fun to splurge every now and then, and this is a bourbon worth splurging on.

*Though you will not find it in my Whiskey Reviews section, I have had and thoroughly enjoyed Chapter 2 from Little Book. As I have equally enjoyed many Booker’s products already. Click here to read Dad’s review of Chapter 2, and remember, I LIKED IT TOO!

LITTLE BOOK CHAPTER 3 THE ROAD HOME REVIEW RATING: 97/100

Click to see Hannah’s rating process

To access other whiskies with this rating, click 97/100.

Click Little Book to read my thoughts on other whiskies in the series from Freddy Noe.

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1792 Single Barrel Bourbon

Brian’s 1792 Single Barrel Bourbon Review:

reviewed 03-May-2022

1792 SINGLE BARRELBOURBON REVIEW:

1792 Single Barrel Bourbon (1792 SiB) seems (to me) to be a “chip off the old block”. With the exception of their 1792 Sweet Wheat, the four other 1792 bourbons I’ve had have similar traits, with the most common being an earthy freshness, a solid backing of oak, faint sweets, a bit of unexpected heat and a surprisingly light tawny color. 1792 SiB is no different, and for me a bit of a letdown.

1792 SINGLE BARREL VITAL STATS:
1792 Single Barrel

Category: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Region: Bardstown, Kentucky, USA
Distillery: Barton 1792 Distillery
Master Distiller: Danny Kahn
Parent Company: Sazerac Company Inc.
Mash Bill: unpublished (Marketed as “High Rye,” and believed to be 15-25% rye)
Barrel Char: #3.5
Barrel entry proof: 125
Age: nas
ABV: 48.3% (96.6 Proof)
NABCA CSC #: 21443
Price: $49.95 (in Idaho, April 2022)
Limited edition and availability
No barrel, batch or bottle number identifiers
(One would think the barrel number might be included on the bottle)

In order to create this unique bourbon, the finest barrels are selected and tasted from the best aging warehouses. Only those barrels deemed “exceptional” are then bottled individually, one by one. This preserves the distinct character of each barrel.
— 1792 Bourbon

Learn more at 1792 Bourbon.

ENJOYMENT METHOD FOR THE REVIEW:

After opening a new bottle, alternate pours, equaling about four ounces, were added into two Glencairns. My daughter and I enjoyed the bourbon neat for this review.

Check out her review for this bourbon here!

1792 SINGLE BARREL NOSE:

With heavy draws, 1792 SiB gives the nose a quick but manageable burn. As the whiskey rests, I can coax out roasted corn, dusty grain and faint, barely there fresh mint mixed with the aroma of blueberries and bananas. Then come allspice, nutmeg, white pepper, and rye which almost overpowers sweet chocolate chips, light vanilla, woody dark caramel, and light molasses. But throughout my nosing, it is earthy air seasoned dried and toasted oak with barrel char and potting soil which have the largest impact on this bourbon’s aroma.

1792 SINGLE BARREL PALATE:

1792 SiB’s flavors are few and most are faint. Like sensed on the nose I get roasted corn and dusty grain but in my mouth there are sensations of acidic and bitter citrus although I cannot settle on any particular fruit. There is pepper and rye here too along with bittersweet chocolate, light vanilla and notes of light molasses. But much like the nose, it is the woodiness which dominates. I both taste and feel seasoned dried oak, toasted wood and barrel char.

1792 Single Barrel

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
The first sip of 1792 SiB is mellow and warm, creamy and easy to hold yet gives my mouth and tongue a slight tickle. After an aggressive Kentucky chew the whiskey becomes agitated and I feel hot ethanol. Further, this pour is uneven; there is a bitter and acidic aftertaste. But does it come from citrus, burnt toffee, nuts, or wood? I cannot say. Then, as I set the glass down between sips, long and thin clinging legs return the liquid to the tawny colored pool leaving behind an uneven and irregularly spaced inverted droplet crown.

1792 SINGLE BARREL FINISH:

1792 Single Barrel Bourbon has a long and bitter finish. While I will not say this is bad, there is a warm burn with a surprising amount of heat in the throat. Like the aromas and flavors, these sensations are subtle. In the finish I feel the a presence of roasted corn, some black pepper, bittersweet chocolate and dark molasses, but they seem at odds with one another. And always the seasoned dry and toasted oak and char. And once I finished the last drops, the empty Glencairn smells of dry old toasted oak. Sadly, I am not happy with this pour.

MY RATING: 82/100

Will I buy this whiskey again? NO
Barton 1792 Distillery products are either a hit or miss for me. 1792 SiB is a miss for me.
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

To access other whiskeys with this score, click 82/100.
Click 1792 Barton to see other whiskies from this distillery.

WHISKEY TRAITS, FLAVOR NOTES AND PROFILE GRAPH:
1792 Single Barrel
1792 Single Barrel

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1792 Single Barrel Review

Hannah’s 1792 Single Barrel Review

Original review written May 3, 2022

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

Bitter, woody, with a lack of overt sweetness. If you don’t care for sugary (whether through fruit or otherwise), this may be something to look into. Otherwise, it’s a pass for me. 80/100

VITALS:
1792 Single Barrel Review

– Made In: Bardstown, Kentucky, USA
– Distiller: Barton 1792 Distillery
– Classification: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
– Age: nas
– Mash Bill: unpublished (marketed as “High rye” and believed to be 15-25% rye)
– Casks: Char #3.5
– Barrel Entry Proof: 125
– ABV: 48.3% (96.6 proof)
– Price: $49.95 USD in Idaho 2022

Visit http://1792bourbon.com for more information

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

I enjoyed the spirit neat from a Glencairn glass with father and fellow Whiskey for the Ages reviewer, Brian.

Check out his review for this bourbon here!

SETTING:

I envision an abandoned wooden shed, completely overgrown with plant-life and dirt. It’d barely be recognizable unless you knew where to look. It’s the perfect hideaway – a place to go with your thoughts and something that won’t distract you from them. 1792 Single Barrel fits perfectly into this category. There’s enough instant burn to bring you back to reality but a lack of complexity to let your thoughts just *roam*.

Photo by Andrew Ly on Unsplash

NOSE:

This has significantly more ethanol on the first inhale than I would have originally anticipated for something under 100 proof. It’s not that it’s an aggressive alcohol bite that stings, but it is that essence of alcohol regardless that is most striking. It covers other aromas on the outset, but underneath can be found cinnamon, clove, brine, and black pepper. This spice dominant nose mixes with fruit leather of a dark, stone fruit like plum as well as a peanut-heavy toffee, chocolate, and vanilla. In fact, it’s this toffee smell that gradually takes over as the bourbon continues to breathe. There’s also subtle hazelnut and old, oaky sawdust to round off this increasingly complex bourbon nose.

PALATE:
1792 Single Barrel Review

– Mouth Feel: Despite the zing of the alcohol, I feel like there lacks a complex, well-woven foundation. As such, I’d say the mouth feel is watery.
– Balance: Unbalanced. There’s marked disjoint where this alcohol and the bitter stands out too far from everything and anything else.
– Visual: Tawny in color, this leaves fast-falling, thick legs from an even and similarly thick crown. They all fade quickly.

– Taste: Nutty bitterness crosses the palate first, but there is chocolate, and burnt caramel for some degree of sweetness to balance out the bitter. Nevertheless, the nuts do dominate – again, with peanuts, hazelnuts, and now even walnuts. The oaky sawdust from the nose is here as well, offering a chewy component that this bourbon is in much need of. There’s leather to go with the wood, but it’s new with still a bit of tang to it.

The alcohol is surprisingly forward and feels like needles in the throat. Much like a bed of nails on the back of my palate. There isn’t pain necessarily; however, there is discomfort. This forward alcohol, with the proof (again) being under 100, indicates a sense of unbalance for me. I’m a little let down. A Kentucky chew pulls more wood and leather forward, chased quickly by bitterness.

FINISH:

– Lasting Power: Long. The warmth lingers at the back of the palate, with some minor aftertaste as well.
– Between Sips: Bitterness with nuts and sawdust linger between sips – just a carryover from what’s happening on the palate.

– No More: This does improve the further into the glass I get, but I’m not convinced it’s one that earns any kind of high praise from me. A bit more fruit in the way of darker ones like plum and a stray cherry appear every now and then, but it’s subtle.

The empty Glencairn is freshly sawn oak – the kind you’d find in a woodshop. Strong, warm, with just a bite of age.

WORTH THE PRICE?

$40 is a decent asking price for any bourbon these days. I do think there are better ones within this price range (Eagle Rare, Knob Creek, Four Roses, and others), but I can see a new bourbon drinker really finding this one approachable. It’s nice to have (now that I’ve had almost all of the 1792 line), but I don’t think it’s necessary for me to purchase again.

1792 SINGLE BARREL REVIEW RATING: 80/100

Click to see Hannah’s rating process

To access other whiskies with this rating, click 80/100.
Click 1792 Barton to see other whiskies from this distillery.

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