Dry Fly 101 Review

Brian’s Dry Fly 101 Review:

written on 30-September-2019

DRY FLY 101 REVIEW:

I rarely write a review when the stopper of a new whiskey is popped, but do make a few mental notes while enjoying a dram or two. Such was the case after Dry Fly Straight Washington Bourbon 101 Whiskey (Dry Fly 101) was opened. I remember thinking this was a good one and when I the cork was pulled again, it was with GREAT anticipation. The reward: Dry Fly 101 ticks all my boxes: aromatic, subtle sweetness, heat, and earthy oak. While challenging to find, I highly recommend this whiskey.

DRY FLY 101 VITAL STATS:
Dry Fly Bourbon 101 Review

– Region: Washington, USA
– Distillery: Dry Fly Distilling
– Category: Straight Bourbon
– Mash Bill: 55% Corn, 45% Triticale: (Triticale is a wheat/rye hybrid, first bred during the late 1800’s in German and Scottish laboratories.)*
– Cask; new 53-gallon oak barrels
– Barrel Entry Proof: unpublished
– ABV: 50.5% (101 Proof)
– Age: 4 years*
– Price: $36.95 USD in Idaho

*Data from https://dryflydistilling.com/

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

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

Check out her review for this bourbon here!

DRY FLY 101 NOSE:

Dry Fly 101’s sweet wheat, hints of ripe dark berries, sweet Rainer cherries and fresh cut green apples smothered in soft caramel waft from the Glencairn. Its spice comes in as faint cinnamon and rich vanilla hidden in crescent roll dough. The sweetness of maple sugar and buttery toffee is an added treat as it mixes with regal toasted and spicy barrel notes of new oak. Dry Fly 101’s aroma has so many scents, it is difficult to discern them all before a first draw is demanded.

DRY FLY 101 PALATE:

Upon entering the mouth the liquid glides back to provide the throat with a lingering burn, much more than one might expect from 101 proof. Few of the aromas pass to the palate but once the heat is mastered, the mash peeks in: corn and subtle wheat, but now rye shines. Plentiful and well blended allspice and black pepper nearly mask the vanilla before providing an intensely earthy, toffee-like barrel of heavy and strong spicy oak. If this is the trick of Triticale, more distillers should experiment with the grain. It works: the mouth salivates for more.

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
Dry Fly 101 is a dangerous and inviting balance of aromas, heat and sweet. A big viscous mouthfeel first bites then fades to a pleasant throat tickle. Long quick dropping legs leave an up-side-down crown clinging to the inside of the Glencairn. Then hey fall back into the auburn and polished mahogany coloured pool.

DRY FLY 101 FINISH:

When the liquid is swallowed, pepper and rye linger then give way to a tickling burn in the throat. There is an idea of confection, but from what … bittersweet chocolate? As the glass is emptied, earthy heavy oak wafts from the Glencairn.

MY DRY FLY 101 RATING: 89/100

Will I seek out this whiskey in the future? YES
I ALWAYS have a bottle of Dry Fly 101 on my shelf. This bourbon is a regular in my rotation.
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

To access other whiskeys with this score, click 89/100.
Click Dry Fly to read my thoughts on other whiskey from this distillery.

DRY FLY 101 TRAITS AND FLAVOR NOTES AND PROFILE GRAPH:

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Jefferson’s Reserve Review

Brian’s Jefferson’s Reserve Review:

written on 19-January-2019

JEFFERSON’S RESERVE REVIEW:

Jefferson’s Reserve is a bigger, higher proof brother to Castle Brands’ Jefferson’s Very Small Batch. Its promise of sweet freshness detected on the nose betrayed what I was to pick up on the tongue. A strong nutmeg aftertaste lingers. While this bourbon is not unpleasant, it does not compare with my favorites.

JEFFERSON’S RESERVE VITAL STATS
Jefferson's Reserve Review

– Classification: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
– Distillery: Kentucky Artisan Distillery (KAD) … Castle Brands (as of early 2019 Castle Brands has a 20% ownership stake in KAD)
– Mash bill: unknown; believed to be high Rye
– Age: NAS
– ABV: 45.1% (90.2 Proof)
– Batch #: 360
– Bottle #: 05070
– Price: $47.95 USD in Idaho

Per the company’s website, Jefferson’s Reserve is a blend of up to four sourced new and aged bourbons from established distilleries finished with “… some old-fashioned experimenting …”

See more at Kentucky Artisan Distillery Brands.

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:

The nose has no detectable alcohol and is gentle and subtle . An aroma of fresh shucked sweet corn combined with fresh picked apples. A faint caramel sweetness dissipated nicely into fresh whipped cream.

PALATE:

The sweet freshness detected on the nose does not pass through to the tongue. A bold and surprising essence of cloviness gave way to nutmeg, which caught me off-guard. This bottle of Jefferson’s Reserve was a briny cinnamon apple. Its toffee and bittersweet chocolatiness mixed with a hint of pepper and barrel spice. This bourbon had no burn, but was warming with an oh-so-subtle piney woodiness.

Jefferson's Reserve Review

Balance, Body, Feel, and Look:
Jefferson’s Reserve is not full-bodied but creamy, and melts away in ones mouth. Its short legs clung in the Glencairn then as droplets fall back into the tawny bowl.

FINISH:

The finish was medium-long and dry. The clovi-nutmeg spiciness sensed on the palate, while not unpleasant, lingered extra long in the back of my mouth and tongue after the dram was swallowed. I felt as though a cleanse with a sweeter bourbon was needed to cut away the blend of baking spices.

MY RATING: 60/100

Will I seek out this whiskey in the future? No
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

Click 60/100 to access other whiskies with this score.

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Hudson Baby Bourbon Review

Hannah’s Hudson Baby Bourbon Review

Original review written on October 12, 2019

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

Was very intrigued by a 100% corn bourbon, but I’m afraid without any rye, I’m a little let down. Not bad, but certainly not great. Very disappointed. Read my Hudson Baby Bourbon Review here! 61/100

VITALS:
Hudson Baby Bourbon Review

– Made in: Gardiner, New York, USA
– Distiller: Tuthilltown Spirits
– Classification: Pot-distilled Bourbon
– Age: 3 months
– Mash Bill: Corn=100%
– Casks: 3 gallon new-charred oak with an unknown char
– Barrel Entry Proof: Undisclosed
– ABV: 46% (92 proof)
– Distillation Year: 2016
– Batch #: 11
– Bottle #: 3911
– Price: $49.95 USD in Idaho

Visit tuthilltown.com for more information

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:

I don’t want to be stingy and not give a bourbon I don’t enjoy a setting. For this drink, find yourself a busy harbor and drape your feet over the ledge of the dock to touch the ocean. Enjoy an icy, late-autumn ocean breeze run through your hair with the sounds of dozens of ships making port around you.

Photo by Jerome Monta on Unsplash

NOSE:

The first inhale brings in the smell of acetone with background notes of both molten caramel and interestingly enough, white pepper. I feel as though I can sense the corn husks as well, though my nose could be deceiving me based on what I know of the mash bill.

The longer it sits, another aroma kicks in. (For a while, I could not tell if I enjoyed it or not.) With further nosing, this aroma becomes a bit more displeasing, almost like old Play-Doh or an odd/old hazelnut.

Though it is a young spirit, I can detect old must as well, which surprises me, along with a darker and more sinister molasses.

Very little in the way of wood seems apparent.

PALATE:

– Mouth feel: Silken with only a twinge of roughness.
– Balance: Unbalanced; this is not sweet enough to just be sweet, so what little spice is present just isn’t enough.
– Visual: Auburn in color with clinging droplets and many short-lived toothpick legs.

– Taste: Very quickly (as in the first sip), I am acutely aware that corn is the only grain in this bourbon, given a lack of biting rye present. The longer I wait between sips, a strange, almost grapefruit-like quality comes through. The Play-Doh/hazelnuts (whatever floats your boat) are carried in from the nose, and they are most evident with a Kentucky chew.

Simple sugar flavors are present as well, but there seems to be an underwhelming lack of other flavors. It isn’t necessarily unpleasant, but I do like a bourbon that has a lot of tricks in the hat. This does not. But I imagine I could one day be in the mood for this. That mood may not be frequent enough to have a bottle of this on hand, but there you go.

I can tell it wants to be more than it is, and I feel as though if this aptly named “baby” proudly stood with its short list of flavors, I would enjoy this SO much more.

FINISH:

– Lasting power: Long, but only in the sense of an aftertaste. Not in the traditional warm bourbon sense, mind you. This aftertaste is certainly the most complex aspect of this bourbon, and it may not be for everyone. Slightly coppery, and for me, a bit citrusy. Again, I’ve had better.

– No More: More notes of almost a gasoline taste came through at the end and with the aftertaste taking on an almost salty spice. To be honest, I’m proud I managed to finish.

The empty Glencairn smells just as salty and still without a trace of wood in sight.

WORTH THE PRICE?

Unless you’re collecting the rare/obscure ones, definitely not.

RATING: 61/100

Click to see Hannah’s rating process

Click 61/100 to access other whiskies with this rating.

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