Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch Review

Hannah’s Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch Review

Original review written January 14, 2020

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch Review: Doesn’t taste at all like a Booker’s and while it’s decent, it seems overpriced and not what I personally love or look for in a Booker’s. 79/100

VITALS:
Booker's 2020-03 Boston Batch Review

– Made In: Kentucky, USA
– Distiller: Jim Beam Distillery
– Classification: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey; Small Batch
– Age: 6 yrs. 3 mo. 10 days
– Mash Bill: Corn=77%; Rye=13%; Malted Barley=10%
– Casks: Char #4
– Barrel Entry Proof: 125
– ABV: 63.25% (126.5 proof)
– Price: $84.95 USD in Idaho

Booker's 2020-02 Boston Batch Review

– From Master Distiller’s Notes: Boston Batch is made up of barrels that were aged in 4 different locations/warehouses (WH)… Breakdown is as follows:
33%: 5th floor of 9-story WH G
29%: 5th floor of 7-story WH Z
27%: 6th floor of 9 story WH H
11%: 3rd floor of 7 story WH 5

Find more information at bookersbourbon.com

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

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

Check out his review for this bourbon here!

SETTING:

Given the lack of complexity found in this pour, I think Boston Batch would be most enjoyable in or around an ice cream parlor or diner, where one can order a Boston shake to enjoy on a warm, summer day. The smells of the small restaurant can cloud the senses and fill you with pleasant, innocent happiness and make you feel a bit lighter in heart and in mind.

Booker's 2020-02 Boston Batch Review

Photo by R. Mac Wheeler on Unsplash

NOSE:

Floral notes and vanilla come out of the glass first, with a very inoffensive alcohol burn. There is a dry, sweet spice here too, but it isn’t very distinct flavor-wise, rather acting as a binding scent for other flavors. There is a dark fruit here, but it is gentle, perhaps like figs or another stone fruit. I find a pastry element here also, something cake-like, but slightly overbaked – nevertheless sweet and tasty. There isn’t a distinguishable wood here either, which is surprising for a Booker’s. Overall, this bourbon’s nose is full of baking spices, albeit a far cry from any Booker’s nose I’ve ever experienced… still, of course, very inviting.

PALATE:
Booker's 2020-03 Boston Batch Review

– Mouth Feel: Creamy with just the slightest tickle.
– Balance: Blends well but it’s not jaw-dropping.
– Visual: Carrot in color, there is a short-lived crown that turns quickly into clinging droplets.

– Taste: Carrying on from the nose, the palate of Boston Batch is unlike any other Booker’s I’ve ever tasted, even on its first sip. The alcohol is incredibly tame and barely burns while I decipher flavors – a true feat for a 126+ proof offering. While I may have been expecting baked goods, instead, I find almost an herbal quality to this profile, with grassy notes coming through in a soft, light way. There is a fruit that wants to come out underneath the grass, maybe the stone fruit from the nose, but it’s struggling to do so.

Age in a dusty, leathery way emerges the longer I let it linger on my tongue and maybe a sweet oak, but it’s minimal. This tastes fine, but admittedly, it tastes nothing like traditional Booker’s and never would I guess so in a blind tasting. (If anything, maybe an elevated Basil Hayden’s.)

A Kentucky chew wakes up the alcohol and a bit of pepper (undefined) that does burn, but no other flavors to be found.

FINISH:

– Lasting Power: Long: There’s warmth that settles everywhere, along with a bit of an aftertaste.
– Between Sips: There’s leather and dirt and even a subtle eucalyptus (like in a cough drop). It’s not necessarily unpleasant, but I’d rather it not stay on my palate too long.

– No More: Wood chips are becoming more apparent the more I get into the glass and the eucalyptus lingers strongly with it at the back of the palate.

The empty Glencairn is a sweet, warm oak that reminds me of the original nose, but still not at all of the taste. It’s disappointing, simply because if the pour itself drank as how this empty glass smells, it would have been phenomenal.

WORTH THE PRICE?

As a Booker’s product, I expect a great deal more from the line as a whole, and paying $85 for an elevated version of Basil Hayden’s (a bourbon I already think is overpriced as it is), I’m disappointed, and don’t think Boston Batch is worth this kind of money.

RATING: 79/100

Click to see Hannah’s rating process

Click 79/100 to access other whiskies with this rating.
To access other whiskies from this brand, click Booker’s.

Back to …

Hannah’s Whiskey Reviews
Whiskey Reviews

Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch Review

Brian’s Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch Review

written 14-January-2021

BOOKER’S 2020-02 BOSTON BATCH REVIEW:

For me, Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch tastes like what a high proof Basil Hayden’s might be, definitely not what I’ve come to expect from a bottle of Booker’s. The aroma is good; the typical fruit, sweet and nut flavors I look for are missing. It’s not bad, in fact Boston Batch would be a pretty good $40-$45 bourbon. The trouble here, Booker’s is priced as a premium bourbon. Boston Batch does not meet the expectations of my palate or wallet. Fred what have you done! Dad told you, “… don’t mess with my Booker’s!”

Booker's 2020-02 Boston Batch

BOOKER’S 2020-02 BOSTON BATCH VITAL STATS:

Region: Kentucky, USA
Distiller: Jim Beam, Master Distiller Fred Noe
Classification: Small Batch Bourbon
Batch: 2020-02 “Boston Batch”
Mash bill: 77% Corn, 13% Rye, 10% Malted Barley
Casks: New Charred Oak
Barrel Char: #4
Barrel Entry Proof: 125
Age: 6 Years, 3 months, 10 days
ABV: 63.25% (126.5 Proof)
Price: $84.95 (August 2020, Idaho)

MASTER DISTILLER NOTES:

Batch 2020-02 is made up of barrels from three different production dates stored in four different locations rickhouses. The breakdown of the barrel storage is as follows:

33% came from the 5th floor of 9-story warehouse G
29% came from the 5th floor of 7-story warehouse Z
27% came from the 6th floor of 9-story warehouse H
11% came from the 3rd floor of 7-story warehouse 5

“This will be a history-making batch of Booker’s Bourbon since I selected this batch with the help of my son and 8th generation Beam Distiller, Freddie Noe. The color is a rich, light brown that reminds me of the beautiful horses throughout Kentucky. The aroma contains vanilla, tossed nuts and some hints of baking spices. The flavor is full and has a finish that can be enjoyed neat. We enjoyed tasting it and selecting the barrels on an unseasonably cool and rainy day. This batch is special to me since I created it with my son on my father’s legacy and his distillery location. I hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed selecting it.”

LABEL INSPIRATION:
Booker's 2020-02 Boston Batch

“The second release of the Booker’s® 2020 Collection is Booker’s® Batch 2020-02 “Boston Batch.” This batch is named after the production site where my father, Booker Noe, first started his distilling career.

The distillery, newly renamed the Booker Noe Distillery, is located in the small community of Boston, KY, and was purchased by the James B. Beam Distilling Co. in the early 1950’s as a second distilling location to increase production capability at the time. Because Boston was removed from the day-to-day of our flagship Clermont, KY distillery, Dad was able to experiment with whiskey a bit more and truly master his craft and style as a distiller there. Some may say this is where he found his love of experimentation.

If you ever wanted to find my Dad, Boston is where he’d be. That plant was his life for more than 40 years. He hired a bunch of folks from the Boston area and made it like one big family over there. Mom always said the Boston distillery was Dad’s first baby and I was his second.

I hope this latest batch of Booker’s finds you in good spirits and that you enjoy it.”

— Fred Noe, Beam Family 7th Generation Master Distiller
Learn more at https://www.bookersbourbon.com/.

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

For the evaluation, I poured into Glencairn glasses from a previously opened bottle. The pours were sipped neat with my daughter and fellow Whiskey for the Ages reviewer Hannah.

Check out her review for this bourbon here!

NOSE:

The aroma of Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch hints of greatness. Like most Booker’s offerings it starts dry, offering a quick burn of alcohol and just a trace of ethanol. After all, this is a 126.5 proof bourbon. Subsequent nosings bring an aire of light fruit tree blossoms, sweet corn and dusty grain with a trace of minted tobacco. While difficult to discern, there is a dark fresh fruit component; maybe blackberries or currants and even a bit of blood orange, but all are quite muted. Allspice, cinnamon, powdered ginger, and yeasty rye, almost bready waft with prolonged nosing. (I want to take my first sip.) Yet I detect little sweet or the nuttiness I’ve come to expect from a Booker’s – maybe a trace of vanilla taffy or caramel corn tailings found in a near empty snack bag. But where the fruit, spice and sweets are subdued, woodiness of seasoned dry old oak, toasted wood, even heavy and hazy barrel char abound.

PALATE:

I was salivating from the aromas and held the first sip long, letting it tickle my tongue. My second sip included a Kentucky Chew before the swallow. Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch doesn’t drink like 128.5 proof, but unfortunately this is the only trait which follows other Booker’s bourbons I’ve enjoyed. Boston Batch’s flavors are fleeting: dusty grain, orange zest, dark fruit leather and an essence of eucalyptus – not cough drop harsh, but unexpected just the same. I detected no sweetness and none of the trademark Jim Beam nuttiness to counter the pepper and rye. But there is an abundance of dry oak, toasted wood and hazy barrel char … almost ashy on the tongue. All this barrel influence nearly overpowers the faintness of rubbed leather as each sip is downed.

Booker's 2020-02 Boston Batch

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
The dry finish of Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch is long and offers a lingering warm bite to the back of the tongue. The bourbon is silken, creamy and seemingly well blended yet each taste is unexpected; almost to what a high proof Basil Hayden’s might aspire. In the Glencairn, the liquid veil breaks into a curtain of fat legs which return quickly to the auburn colored pool. I wish this whiskey offered more.

FINISH:

There’s so much more on the nose of Booker’s 2020-02 Boston Batch than can be found on the palate or finish. The finish is long and lingering with a dark indistinct and almost offensive fruit leather aftertaste. My tongue and throat are warm, almost hot as bourbony pepper and rye dominate. And as found on the nose and palate, dry oak toasted barrels and hazy char linger. When emptied, the Glencairn smells of sawdust from fresh sawn oak plywood.

MY RATING: 86/100

Will I buy this whiskey again? HARD NO
As a Booker’s fan, I’m disappointed. While certainly a solid “B” level bourbon, at $85 there is no value. Is it possible the three releases of 2020 (rather than the typical four) were because of this batch?
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

Click 86/100 to access other whiskeys with this score.
To access other whiskies from this brand, click Booker’s.

WHISKEY TRAITS, FLAVOR NOTES AND PROFILE GRAPH:
Booker's 2020-02 Boston Batch
Booker's 2020-02 Boston Batch

Back to …

Brian’s Whiskey Reviews
Individual Reviews

Old Grand-dad 114 Bourbon Review

Hannah’s Old Grand-dad 114 Bourbon Review

Original review written November 12, 2020

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

The nose is phenomenal, but the taste sticks to a grainy acidity and nutty bitterness, with not enough colorful pops to keep my attention. 80/100

VITALS:
Old Grand-dad 114 Bourbon Review

– Made In: Kentucky, USA
– Distiller: Beam Suntory Distillery
– Classification: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
– Age: nas (believed to be about 6 yrs.)
– Mash Bill: Corn=63%; Rye=27%; Malted Barley=10%
– Casks: unpublished char
– Barrel Entry Proof: undisclosed
– ABV: 57% (114 proof)
– Price: $30.99 USD in Dickinson, North Dakota

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

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

Check out his review for this bourbon here!

SETTING:

Sit in a field at nighttime with your back pressed up against a rusty, old truck with only the stars and moon to shed light on your corner of the world. Listen to surrounding crickets and breeze as you sip Old Grand-dad and be transported to a simpler time with simpler and imperfect flavors to keep you company.

Photo by Ian Parker on Unsplash

NOSE:

Rye and apricot fruit leather/jam emerge from the glass on the first inhale. I find a bit of pepper and chocolate too, along with a hint of butterscotch which contributes to an undercurrent of softness despite the evident spice. Along with that peppery spice is ginger and sour cherry.

Crystalized maple sugar makes for an interesting edge to an otherwise minimal alcohol twinge. Not too much wood, but there is a bitter nut that almost seems woody, just not quite.

The rye seems similar to Jim Beam products in its strength; however, all of these other aromas are very unique to this bourbon, all of which are actually very well-blended.

PALATE:
Old Grand-dad 114 Bourbon Review

– Mouth Feel: Tickly, but not enough to really hurt.
– Balance: Unexpected. I can’t shake a bitterness that’s a little bothersome.
– Visual: Tawny in color, there is a strong, lingering crown with minimal legs.

– Taste: Ginger crosses the palate first, along with rye and a little grass. I can get a citrus zest and maybe some mint that make the palate both edgy and bright. I can’t find any bold fruits, rather mostly earthy tones. It’s almost as though I can taste the acidity of the soil where the corn or rye was grown. And though there is this noticeable acidity, I can also find a distinct bitterness, like the nut (perhaps walnut) from the nose. If I’m being honest, I’m a little underwhelmed as a whole, especially given the smattering of deep and cohesive scents from the nose.

The alcohol is here, but not quite enough to go for a full burn, rather a pleasant tickle. A Kentucky chew makes the grains, as a whole, pop more against an elevated alcohol backdrop. Still, that tang or sour and bitter sits on my tongue.

FINISH:

– Lasting Power: Long. I have warmth and an aftertaste clinging to my tongue and throat.
– Between Sips: I get a mix of mild cherry and grass between sips… This is actually my favorite aspect of this bourbon.

– No More: The glass stays consistent as I continue to sip, with only dryness becoming more apparent. This is decent, but at 114 proof ($30 or not), I do have higher expectations.

The empty Glencairn is a straight-up, beautiful oak. I’m almost offended that these weren’t flavors I could find on the palate, where they were definitely needed.

WORTH THE PRICE?

$30 sounds nice for a 114 proof bourbon, but I will confidently say that I would sooner purchase Old Forester 1920 at $60 and 115 proof than Old-Grand-dad 114 at this price. Take that how you will.

RATING: 80/100

Click to see Hannah’s rating process

Click 80/100 to access other whiskies with this rating.
To access other whiskies from this distillery, click Jim Beam.

Back to…

Hannah’s Whiskey Reviews
Whiskey Reviews