Cream of Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey

Brian’s Cream of Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey Review:

reviewed 21-June-2022

CREAM OF KENTUCKY STRAIGHT RYE WHISKEY REVIEW:

Cream of Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey (Cream of Kentucky Rye) is without a doubt the most unusual rye I have ever had the pleasure to enjoy. I do not get the usual rye freshness, and there are few sweets to tempt either, yet its earthy depth is intriguing. Best of all there is just enough heat to add another level of complexity. I’ll give this a positive nod and say pick one up when you see it on your store’s shelf.

CREAM OF KENTUCKY STRAIGHT RYE WHISKEY VITAL STATS:
Cream of Kentucky Straight Rye

Category: Bottled-in-Bond Rye
Region: Middletown, KY
Distillery: Distilled, aged and bottled at Kentucky Artisan Distillery
Distiller: Jim Rutledge, former Master Distiller at Four Roses
Mash Bill: 100% Rymin Rye
Barrel Char: unpublished
Barrel entry proof: unpublished
Age: 4 years old (minimum)
ABV: 50% (100 Proof)
NABCA CSC #: 16195
Price: $80.45 USD in Idaho 2022

The Cream of Kentucky brand was originally introduced in 1888 by I. Trager & Co. of Cincinnati, Ohio. Just prior to the end of Prohibition, the brand was acquired by the famed Schenley Company and subsequently re-introduced in 1934 … [Acquired in 2018] Cream of Kentucky is now owned by J.W. Rutledge.
— Learn more at J.W. Rutledge Distillery.

ENJOYMENT METHOD FOR THE REVIEW:

Alternate pours, equaling about four ounces, were added into two Glencairns. My daughtesr and I enjoyed the bourbon neat for this review.

Check out Hannah’s review for this rye here!

And find Elora’s thoughts here!

CREAM OF KENTUCKY STRAIGHT RYE WHISKEY NOSE:

Alcohol nips at the nose in my first wafts. I smell a potpourri of dried grass, dusty grain, and fresh cut hay drying in the late afternoon summer sun. More scenting brings faint baking spices of cinnamon, powdered ginger, and freshly baked rye bread accompanied by faint cocoa malt. While I do sense a sweetness, it comes more as old fashion butterscotch candy than any other aroma. With additional and careful nosing, I detect roasted hazelnuts, hazy dry old oak and rich and fragrant potting soil.

CREAM OF KENTUCKY STRAIGHT RYE WHISKEY PALATE:

Cream of Kentucky Rye gives an alcohol bite filled with dusty grain and the hay found on the nose. There is faint crushed clove, powdered ginger, pepper, and more rye bread, cocoa malt, and a little milk chocolate as well. While I wouldn’t classify this as sweet I do taste woody caramel which goes in hand to hand combat with roasted hazelnuts and toasted sesame seeds. I taste a lot of earthy depth here too which fades in as hazy old barrel char and dirty leather. This is a complex rye and so distinctive from others I enjoy.

Cream of Kentucky Straight Rye

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
Cream of Kentucky Rye has a buttery mouth feel. While there is a bit of a tongue tickle, each sip is easy to hold even though the pour clocks in at 100 proof. Each waft and sip is complex, deep and earthy. Above the terracotta colored pool, fat evenly spaced long legs cling, then fade, leaving behind only a few drops in the broken crown.

CREAM OF KENTUCKY STRAIGHT RYE WHISKEY FINISH:

Cream of Kentucky Rye offers up a medium throat warming finish with the same potpourri of dusty grain and dry hay. Powdered ginger drives the molten heat as the theme of rye, malt, milk chocolate and woody caramel quickly fade into damp dirt and hazy char. As I tip back the last drops, the empty Glencairn smells of dry oak sawdust.

MY RATING: 88/100

Will I buy this whiskey again? YES
… And I do have another in the bunker.
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

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

WHISKEY TRAITS, FLAVOR NOTES AND PROFILE GRAPH:
Cream of Kentucky Straight Rye
Cream of Kentucky Straight Rye

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Cream of Kentucky Rye Review

Hannah’s Cream of Kentucky Rye Review

Original review written June 21, 2022

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

Unique and original full of rye bread punchiness and even raisins and bran like the cereal *wink wink*. Happy to have it, and I know I’ll never have another rye like it again. 91/100

VITALS:
Cream of Kentucky Rye Review

– Made In: Middletown, Kentucky, USA
– Distiller: Kentucky Artisan Distillery
– Classification: Bottled-in-Bond Rye
– Age: 4yrs (minimum)
– Mash Bill: 100% Rymin Rye
– Casks: unpublished char
– Barrel Entry Proof: unpublished
– ABV: 50% (100 proof)
– Price: $80.45 USD in Idaho in 2022

“The Cream of Kentucky brand was originally introduced in 1888 by I. Trager & Co. of Cincinnati, Ohio. Just prior to the end of Prohibition, the brand was acquired by the famed Schenley Company and subsequently re-introduced in 1934. Through the 1930s and 1940s, Cream of Kentucky grew to becomes on the leading bourbon brands, with renowned artist Norman Rockwell provid[ing] much of the award-winning artwork for the brand during its heyday.”

Visit www.jwrutledge.com for more information

ENJOYMENT METHOD:

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

Check out his review of this rye here!

And find Elora’s thoughts here!

SETTING:

This one is nostalgic for me in a way that makes me want to pour a glass of this with a bowl of raisin bran cereal. It’s rich, dense, with hints of sweetness mingling throughout. The rye bread of the pour will pair well, and the acidity of the grain will likewise lift the depth of the cereal. It’s homey, and it’s something I can really see myself settling into when I am just looking for a day of simplicity and comfort.

Photo by Cristine Despares on Unsplash

NOSE:

This certainly does smell creamy on the first inhale – an absolute rye bread explosion – as well as incredibly (I cannot stress this enough) nutty. Walnuts, hazelnuts, almonds, even cashews abound. Surrounding them in a light drizzle of a dark caramel and a bit of banana. I can find bran (like a cereal), which makes the whole nose smell outwardly quite healthy – not a common trait in a whiskey, but I’ll take it. There are some dark fruits here in a fruit leather variety, but they are very subtle, and certainly not a berry kind of fruit. They seem to be much more like prunes and perhaps dates and figs.

With the bread and nuts being so dominant, it’s difficult to find wood (but there is a malt-type of foundation) and quite difficult to find an alcohol burn also. It’s an enjoyable, unique nose that I know I have not had the likes of before. Definitely intrigued by what I will find on the palate.

PALATE:
Cream of Kentucky Rye Review

– Mouth Feel: Believe it or not, but creamy is an appropriate description here. There’s depth and oiliness that just eases the rye around the palate without needing any kind of aggravation.
– Balance: Heavy on bread and earthy tones, so perhaps not the most balanced. However, if you like those flavors, I don’t think you’ll be too bothered here (I am not).
– Visual: Terracotta pot in color, this falls in one great sheet before leaving a thin ring and the occasional small droplet behind.

– Taste: After the (admitted) shock value of this palate being so different from what I was expecting, raisin bran cereal absolutely captures my taste buds. It’s as if I’m having the cereal in front of me now, and I’m getting ready for school. (I always like healthier, grain cereals as opposed to something sweet with artificial fruit flavor, chocolate, or marshmallows.) As such, this rye is drinking in a very nostalgic way, right off the bat. When I dig around in the palate, I find spice like nutmeg, many of the nuts listed above, and sweetness like simple syrup to add complexity to the rye grain and cereal. There are other dried fruits here also, like the prunes and dates from the nose, and now currants as well.

All the while, the alcohol gives a little nip now and then, as if peeking out from behind a corner sheepishly. It’s not aggressive when it does bite, hearkening, again, back to a bashful attempt at getting attention. It’s playful. It combines with the rye in a way that makes the already established complexity, that much more multidimensional. I still cannot find much wood here, but the strong presence of the rye bread/raisin cereal are such a good foundation. I can forgive the lack of wood. There’s even a soda bread component to go with the rye that creates a bit of needed acidity to lighten up the dark, malty flavors.

FINISH:

– Lasting Power: Medium-Long. The aftertaste certainly perpetuates and there is a noticeable warmth that sits just at the top of the throat – not burning, but hovering.
– Between Sips: Raisin and the rye bread is constant throughout the pour, including here between sips. I’m grateful for the consistency. There are not many whiskeys that stay so true to that first inhale on the nose.

– No More: As stated – consistent as I go through the glass. The bran element grows in intensity, making me feel as though I could actually chew on this whiskey. (Note: When I did partake in a Kentucky chew, that alcohol woke up. It bit hard with rye bread before backing off again to that familiar dark, dried, fruity goodness.)

The empty Glencairn is dirty sawdust. It’s been trampled down and beaten badly, but at the end of the day, it’s still warm and as welcoming as ever.

WORTH THE PRICE?

$80 makes for a pricey bottle, but the originality and the nostalgia it’s brought up for me, makes it worth the price. I’ve never had a whiskey like this before. If I’d tried this in my early years of whiskey adventuring, I don’t think I’d like it. It’s complex and it’s even quite affronting. If you’re experienced with ryes and bourbons, and like grain forward pours, give this a try and swallow the price tag. You’ll be pleasantly surprised.

CREAM OF KENTUCKY RYE REVIEW RATING: 91/100

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James E Pepper Single Barrel Rye BWE Pick

Hannah’s James E Pepper Single Barrel Rye BWE Pick

Original review written May 24, 2022

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

A great rye with plenty of complexity and intrigue from several different flavor profile characteristics – from fruit to spice to earth, this has it all. Happy to have it open in the collection. 95/100

VITALS:
James E Pepper Single Barrel Rye BWE Pick

– Made In: Indiana and Kentucky, USA
– Distiller: Ross & Squibb Distillery/MGP/Old Pepper Distillery DSP-KY-5
– Classification: Single Barrel Straight Rye; Prive Select Barrel
– Age: 4yrs
– Mash Bill: Rye=100% (both raw and malted)
– Casks: 12-month air seasoned Kentucky Oak; Char #3
– Cask #: 1239
– Selected by BWE (Boise Whiskey Enthusiast’s Facebook Group)
– ABV: 55% (110 proof)
– Price: $54.95 USD in Idaho 2022

Visit jamesepepper.distilleryspirits.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 rye here!

SETTING:

I imagine James E Pepper Single Barrel Rye would taste that much more phenomenal with a light and fresh cake to coax even more of the sweetness that this rye has. The cake may have honey, vanilla, and floral tones and that would pair well here. It exacerbates the summery brightness of both rye and cake and makes everything warm and the sipper quick to reach for another taste.

Photo by Hayley Maxwell on Unsplash

NOSE:

Malt and rye grain wash across the palate with hazelnut and light vanilla following close behind. Despite being so rye forward, there is already a noticeable complexity to this, with other sweet flavors like honey and flaky pastry with sugar crystals dusted on top. And there are deeper, earthier tones to match this sweetness like leather and caramelized/charred oak. I can’t find much for fruit sweetness aside perhaps from a dark fruit/berry nectar or a cherry jam preserve.

This rye may be 110 proof, however, the alcohol is incredibly mild and doesn’t sting at the nose at all. It’s a rye that invites deep draws and falling into the flavors offered.

PALATE:
James E Pepper Single Barrel Rye BWE Pick

– Mouth Feel: Viscous with a bit of grit to it, making the flavor linger and linger.
– Balance: Complex. I don’t know if it’s the proof influence but more and more seems to emerge, all in balance.
– Visual: Flame in color, this falls in long, thick legs from an irregular ring.

– Taste: Sweet vanilla with freshness trailing is the immediate impression. It’s floral yet buttery like a summery cake batter with even some tropical fruit kick like pineapple. Rye spice and grain mixes with a woody caramel that is just shy of being burnt – at the peak of its sugary performance. Accompanying this rye is more of the powdered ginger from the nose, and a pinch of white pepper. Cherries exist at the back of the palate, mixed with a syrup that deepens and enrichens the other existing flavors all the more.

The complexity abounds, and all the while, the alcohol offers just the right amount of kick for the flavors to play off of. This certainly does have a bite to it, and I can tell that it does want to give me a Kentucky Hug if I’d let it. (I like that.) When I give it a Kentucky chew, a brininess comes forward with a subtle fruit leather and light caramel to soothe the burn.

FINISH:

– Lasting Power: Long. The heat lingers at the back of the throat along with a good aftertaste.
– Between Sips: Warm caramel, cherries with a raspy rye – yum, yum, and yum.

– No More: This grows more complex and enjoyable the further into the glass I get, with the balance showing more and more maturity. I am thoroughly enjoying this rye, and I’m quite glad to have it in the collection.

The empty Glencairn is buttery oak and pecan and simple syrup/light caramel. It’s a different kind of empty glass that I’m used to, but it is entirely delicious.

WORTH THE PRICE?

Absolutely. This has complexity, depth, and heat, and it’s everything I could hope for in a rye. If you get the chance to buy any Single Barrel Rye, give this a try. You won’t be disappointed. And even if you’re only a bourbon drinker and trying to get into ryes, this may be a good gateway into doing so.

JAMES E PEPPER SINGLE BARREL RYE BWE PICK RATING: 95/100

Click to see Hannah’s rating process

Click 95/100 to access other whiskies with this rating.

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