Weller 12 Year Old Review

Brian’s Weller 12 Year Old Review

updated review 23-September-2023
(originally posted in Apri 2018)

WELLER 12 YEAR OLD REVIEW:

Weller 12 Year, my first bottle of “Rare Bourbon”, was purchased in November 2017 as a result of my entry being drawn from the Idaho State Liquor Lottery. The following is an update of my original review.

Weller 12 Year Old (Weller 12) offers balanced aromas and flavors of warm wheat, cherries, plums, and blueberry treats while delighting the senses with cinnamon, nutmeg, and white pepper. The pour has a buttery, viscous, and rich mouthfeel, which help prepare it for the medium-long and warming finish. The sensations deepen as dark molasses and heavily toasted oak, becomes more pronounced as I progress through the glass. Once emptied, the Glencairn presents with residual alcohol notes and the scent of freshly milled oak sawdust.

WELLER 12 YEAR OLD VITAL STATS:
Weller 12 Year Old

Category: Allocated, Wheated Bourbon
Region: Kentucky, USA
Distillery: Buffalo Trace
Mash Bill: undisclosed, but believed to be approximately: about 70% Corn; 14-16% Wheat; 16-14% Malted Barley:
Barrel Char: #4
Barrel entry proof: 114
Age: 12 years old
ABV: 45% (90 Proof)
NABCA CSC #:
Fair Price: $159.58 (BoozApp, September 2023)
Paid: $39.95 (Idaho, September 2023)

Learn more at Buffalo Trace.

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

On Day 23 of the 2023 30 Bourbons in 30 Days Challenge, by alternating the pours, eight onces were split between a Glencairn and a Weck. After posting updates to social media, my daughter and I enjoyed the bourbon neat as I prepared this review. About 30 minutes had gone by before my first sip.

NOSE:

My first waft of Weller 12 brings sweet fruit tree blossoms and warm summer wheat. Deeper draws bring sweet cherries, plums and the unexpected aroma of blueberry filling blended with faint cinnamon, nutmeg, and white pepper in a fresh baked pie. Additional baking notes of graham cracker, chocolate cream, and vanilla find their way to my nose as well. Then come sweets of caramel corn, brown and maple sugar, with a drizzle of maple syrup over pecans. Also in each breath I find freshness in light sweet oak.

PALATE:

Each sip of Weller 12 I take, is warm and wheaty. Like I found on the nose, maraschino cherries and plum yield to blueberries, now in the form of syrup, and cheesecake on a baked chocolate graham cracker base. Spices of cinnamon, nutmeg, and pepper along with rich vanilla serve to enhance the confection. The sweetness builds as simple syrup, brown sugar, maple sugar and pecan supports light and toasted oak.

Weller 12 Year Old

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
I find the fruit and sugar flavors in Weller 12 to be in perfect harmony with one another while its spice and woody notes play a fine supporting roll. The blend is incredibly easy to hold as salivary glands flood to make mouthfuls feel buttery, viscous and rich. In the glass, a thick, solid crown forms. And after each sip, the liquid veil breaks into irregularly spaced clinging legs to drain the extra back to the flame-colored pool.

FINISH:

The finish I get from Weller 12 Year Old is long on the palate while it warms the throat. It offers a soft wheaty punch while dark berries, cherry, and plum trade with sensations of cinnamon, black pepper, and vanilla. Then the finish deepens, as dark molasses and dry, heavily toasted oak mix with tanned leather. The pour becomes more earthy the further into the glass I venture. Once the final drops are gone, the empty Glencairn has notes of residual alcohol ans smells of freshly milled oak sawdust.

MY RATING: 90/100

Will I seek out this whiskey in the future? Yes
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

Click 90/100 to access other whiskies with this score.
To access other whiskies under this banner, click Weller.

WHISKEY TRAITS AND FLAVOR WHEEL AND GRAPH
Weller 12 Year Old
Weller 12 Year Old

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Old Ezra 7 Yr Barrel Strength Review

Brian’s Old Ezra 7 Yr Barrel Strength Review:

written on 02-November- 2019

OLD EZRA 7 YEAR BARREL STRENGTH REVIEW:

I stumbled across a bottle Old Ezra 07 Year Old Barrel Strength (OE7YO) while searching for other limited release bourbons. What a find – I only wish I could source more. It is a salivary gland workout. The nose is a sweet brown sugar bomb, but all manner of flavours abound on the palate. It is a warming winter bourbon with a pleasant bite with plenty of heat all the way through its lingering finish. Super value at MSRP … buy, Buy BUY!

OLD EZRA 7 YEAR BARREL STRENGTH VITAL STATS:
https://luxco.com/

– Region: Kentucky
– Category: Small Batch Bourbon
– Distillery: Sourced and unpublished (believed to be Heaven Hill)
– Bottler: Luxco (LuxRow Distillers)
– Mash Bill: unpublished (supposedly 78% Corn, 12% Malted Barley, 10% Rye)
– Cask: New Charred Oak
– Age: 7 Years Old
– Barrel Entry Proof: unpublished
– ABV: 58.5 (Proof: 117)
– Purchase Price: $41.95 USD in Idaho

https://luxco.com/

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

For the evaluation, I shared the juice neat from Glencairn glasses with my daughter and fellow Whiskey for the Ages reviewer Hannah.

Check out her review for this bourbon here!

NOSE:

I detected no alcohol burn on the nose. Huge amounts of rich brown sugar in all its forms treat the olfactory receptors: brown sugared pastry, sugar coated Teddy Grahams, and rich vanilla ice cream melted by hot and buttery brown sugar caramel. Deep draws pull dried corn husks, fresh yellow gourmet raisins, berry syrup and allspice. There are also faint hints of honeycomb infused maple syrup, but in the end this juice smells earthy, simple and gentle with just a touch of leather and nearly hidden toasted pine.

PALATE:

Oh my! In the mouth, there is a quick bite followed by a gentle but growing and welcomed heat. OE7YO plays on the tongue like spicy raisin fruit leather drug though black pepper and rye and with a good swish and chew, warm gingerbread cookies come in to visit. The vanilla, brown sugar and leather detected on the nose are still there but greatly subdued. It sips nice and every so often, candied cinnamon coated almonds and dusty old oak sneak in.

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
OE7YO is a riot of well balanced flavours. Each sip begs another, but always with a controlled simmer of heat. This juice is big, full and oily in the mouth and gives the throat a nice tickle as it slides down. In the Glencairn, long quick dropping legs fall back into the burnt amber bourbon reservoir.

FINISH:

Old Ezra 07 Year Old Barrel Strength finishes exceptionally long and lingers with a little heat, just the way I like it. There is a faint aftertaste of cinnamon infused pine cones, nutmeg and pumpkin. When the burnt amber nectar is gone, heavy old oak barrel char wafts from the Glencairn.

MY RATING: 92/100

Will I seek out this whiskey in the future? Yes
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

Click 92/100 to access other whiskies with this score.

WHISKEY TRAITS AND FLAVOR NOTES AND PROFILE GRAPH:

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Yellowstone Select Bourbon Review

Hannah’s Yellowstone Select Bourbon Review

Original review written on October 31, 2019

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

This one is interesting with an herbal base, predominantly in grass. Spices and fruits are detectable. While herbal bourbons may not be for everyone, it’s one of my favorite profiles, just behind the fruits. 88/100

VITALS:
Yellowstone Select Bourbon Review

– Made in: Kentucky, USA
– Distiller: Limestone Branch/Luxco (sourced)
– Classification: Blended Bourbon Whiskey
– Age: undisclosed (possibly a blend of sourced 4 yr. old and 7 yr. old)
– Mash Bill: undisclosed
– Casks: new charred oak; undisclosed char
– Barrel Entry Proof: undisclosed
– ABV: 46.5% (93 proof)
– Price: $39.95 USD in Idaho
(Limited geographic availability)

Visit limestonebranch.com for more information

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:

In perfect timing for the season (Halloween if you’re from the future), I imagine an old, eerie shack with a black cat, a broom, and bushels of herbs hanging from the rafters of musty, old wood. It’s night time and moonlight is trickling in through some fogged up windows. You’ve got your feet propped up next to a roaring fire, and you feel as though you’ve carved our a rare, special piece of your own personal heaven.

Photo by Stéphane Juban on Unsplash

NOSE:

This one is very herbal in nature, and it’s quite a fresh herb. Maybe potpourri. It isn’t aggressive, but I imagine you could get carried away with it very easily. The hint of black pepper and rye (not as fresh as the herbs) make the whole spirit easily compatible with grilled chicken (should you eat with your drink). Then again, this is just the nose. However, with other, subtler notes of caramel and oak, maybe I would consider pork.

PALATE:

– Mouth Feel: There is a tingle there that morphs into richness.
– Balance: I’d say a pretty good balance. Nothing seems off.
– Visual: Tawny colored, clinging droplets with fast-dropping legs.

– Taste: While being aromatic in a fresh sense, the first sip is full of traditional bourbon warmth. Mixed with that warmth, eventually I feel as though I’m able to detect a grassier note that’s both summery and sweet. Other sups coax out the black pepper and rye from the nose though this also dissipates quickly back into the bourbon’s comfort zone of grass and herbs.

Greater time taken between sips makes me think there’s a light fruit leather in there, maybe like apricot? At the same time, my brain thinks there’s a dark fruit here too (fig?), but it is not the main attraction, and I can’t distinguish it further.

With a Kentucky chew, I’m instantly salivating. The peppery bit explodes, but it falls back much more calmly. Strangely enough, a macadamia nut snuck in for some hearty sweetness but left before I was ready.

FINISH:

– Lasting Power: This finish is lo…ng. The spicy burn fades quickly, but there’s still so much left on the palate that running out of flavors seems an impossibility.

– No More: More leather comes out the further down the glass I get and the spice and fruit therefore fade a bit. Not going to lie, I do miss them. Other bitter notes come our with the leather, but it’s not bad.

The empty Glencairn is absolutely fully of oak. This is the first indication of oak in this glass.

WORTH THE PRICE?

I’d say yes.

RATING: 88/100

Click to see Hannah’s rating process

Click 88/100 to access other whiskies with this rating.

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