Maker’s Mark Private Select Idaho Director’s Cut Batch 5 Review

Brian’s Maker’s Mark Private Select Idaho Director’s Cut Batch 5 Review

written on 07-July-2019

MAKER’S MARK PRIVATE SELECT IDAHO DIRECTOR’S CUT BATCH 5 REVIEW:

Maker’s Mark Private Select Idaho Director’s Cut Batch #5 (MMPS ID-DCB5) has a slight fruity nose, with some nice pastry and barrel aromas.  But once in the mouth, this bourbon comes to life with plenty of cinnamon heat and closes nicely with lots of bourbon warmth.  See below for my full review.

MAKER’S MARK PRIVATE SELECT – IDAHO DIRECTOR’S CUT BATCH 5 VITAL STATS:
Maker's Mark Private Select Idaho Director's Cut Batch #5 Review

Category: Barrel Finished Kentucky Bourbon
Region: Loretto, KY, USA
Distiller: Maker’s Mark
Mash Bill: Mashbill: 70% corn; 16% soft red winter wheat; 14% malted barley
Barrel Char: Barrels are “seasoned” outdoors for nine months, (over a summer) in new American white oak then fired for 40 seconds to achieve #3 char.
MAKER’S MARK PRIVATE SELECT – IDAHO DIRECTOR’S CUT BATCH 5 FINISHING STAVES:
  1  Baked American Pure (P2)
      (Adds brown sugar, vanilla, caramel and spice)
  3  Seared French Cuvée (Cu)
      Adds toasty oak and caramel)
  2  Maker’s Mark 46 (46)
      (Adds dried fruit, vanilla and spice)
  3  Roasted French Mocha (Mo)
      (Adds char, maple and cacao)
  1  Toasted French Spice (Sp)
       (Adds smoke, coumarin and spice)
Barrel entry proof: 110
Age: 8 years, 9 weeks
ABV: 54.35% (108.7 Proof)
Price: $69.95 USD in Idaho

Notes from the Maker’s Mark website:
“Maker’s Mark Private Select offers a new take on the Maker’s Mark 46 process … cask-strength Maker’s Mark is aged for nine additional weeks in barrels specially fitted with 10 oak finishing staves … Private Select separates itself from Maker’s Mark 46 … using five different stave types.”

Learn more at https://makersmark.com/

*STAVE SELECTORS:

The Idaho State Liquor Division & Chris Bailey of “The Whiskey Bar – Boise, ID, USA

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:

When MMPS ID-DCB5 is brought to the nose, sherry, fruit tree blossoms, fresh picked apples, and hints of maraschino cherry waft from the Glencairn.  Fresh apple cinnamon pastries, butter cream frosting, allspice, and vanilla custard quickly follow.  Further nosing brings simple and gentle honeycomb which combine nicely with strong fresh-cut oak and hazy barrel spice.

PALATE:

This whiskey is strong and hot, but the alcohol burn is not unpleasant.  In the mouth, it presents wheaty, with a dark stone fruitiness and lots of heat featuring cinnamon apple, red hot candies, and black pepper. The juice is calmed by a little sweet brown sugar backed by old leather, seasoned oak barrel spice, and char.

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
MMPS ID-DCB5 is a spicy but well-blended bourbon with a creamy mouthfeel that departs the tongue and throat with a tickle.  When swished in the glass, clinging droplets give way to long slender legs which fall back into the mahogany and henna tinted liquid.

FINISH:

This Idaho Director’s Cut finishes with medium length. It lingers with warmth, wheatiness, and has plenty of black pepper to let you know it is there.

COMPARISON NOTES:

I initially enjoyed an ounce of the three Maker’s Mark Private Select Idaho Director’s Cut editions (created by The Idaho State Liquor Division & Chris Bailey of The Whiskey Bar) at a special release party hosted by Maker’s Mark held at a local Boise, ID bar.   Even with less than ideal reviewing conditions at the crowded venue, I rated MMPS ID-DCB5 to be better than MMPS ID-DCB3, but for my tastes, not quite as good as the  MMPS ID-DCB7 offering.  These conclusions held through to my controlled tasting sessions.

MY RATING: 88/100

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

Click 88/100 to access other whiskies with this score.
To access other whiskies from this distillery, click Maker’s Mark.

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Maker’s Mark Private Select ID Director’s Cut Batch #5 Review

Hannah’s Maker’s Mark Private Select ID Director’s Cut Batch #5 Review

Original review written December 3, 2019

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

A good bourbon, to be sure; however, of the private selects that came to Boise, Idaho (Batches 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7), this one is not my favorite, but my third favorite. Independent of its siblings though, this is an incredibly enjoyable spirit. Read my Maker’s Mark Private Select ID Director’s Cut Batch #5 Review here! 89/100

VITALS:
Maker's Mark Private Select ID Director's Cut Batch #5 Review

– Made in: Kentucky, USA
– Distiller: Maker’s Mark Distillery
– Classification: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey; Private Select
– Age: 8 yrs. 9 weeks
– Mash Bill: Corn=70%; Soft red winter wheat=16%; Malted Barley=14%
– Casks: Char #3
– Barrel Entry Proof: 110
– ABV: 54.35% (108.7 proof) – varies by bottle
– Maker’s Mark Private Select Idaho Division Cut Batch #5 (MMPS ID-CB5) finishing staves:
3 Seared French Cuvée (Cu) to provide toasty oak and caramel
3 Roasted French Mocha (Mo) to provide char, maple and cacao
2 Maker’s Mark 46 (46) to provide dried fruit, vanilla and spice
1 Baked American Pure (P2) to provide brown sugar, vanilla, caramel and spice
1 Toasted French Spice (Sp) to provide smoke, coumarin and spice
– Stave Selectors: The Idaho State Liquor Division and Chris Bailey of “The Whiskey Bar” in Boise, Idaho, USA
– Price: $69.95 USD in Idaho

Visit makersmark.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 close my eyes and picture sitting in the stark, white field of snow and ice in the Arctic night. Every sound is blissfully muffled by the thick blanket of snow. The skies are perfectly clear with the stars shining brighter than ever, obscured only by the colorful Aurora Borealis as it dances in vibrant green, pink, blue and yellow ribbons, across the an inky sky.

Photo by Scott Rock on Unsplash

NOSE:

The nose is well blended, and it takes some serious nosing to discern any flavors. Aside from a soft alcohol bite, there is plenty of vanilla in the glass, along with caramel. Fruit is subtle but a little apple-y. Otherwise, it’s mostly sugar variants, with maple syrup chiming in as the glass warms. Still, it isn’t overwhelmingly sweet, which is good news for those of us not afflicted with a sweet tooth. Very little, if any, dark fruit present and the blend is too good to do much discerning. Maybe a chocolate covered cherry.

PALATE:
Maker's Mark Private Select ID Director's Cut Batch #5 Review

– Mouth Feel: Big and tingly; very nice!
– Balance: I really like this one for its solidity and complexity.
– Visual: Auburn in color accompanying a crown that has fast-dropping, thin legs.

– Taste: Despite not being there on the nose, huckleberries and blueberries come forth, only to be chased by a gang of cherries. The alcohol shows itself a bit more here as well but hovering at around 108 proof (this bottle), it isn’t aggressive. There is a mild undercurrent of oak here too that mixes with a couple of prunes to make everything else pop a bit more.

A Kentucky chew livens up the oak and alcohol, letting some maple in, as well. Very nice!

FINISH:

– Lasting Power: Long. My mouth and throat stay warm to however long I pause between sips. The warmth does not go further, preventing me from giving it an exceptionally long finish.

– Between sips: The oak abandons its prune partner to run away with the apple from the nose, but again, it isn’t intense – more like you are left with the impression of apples.

– No More: The darker fruits disappear the further I get into the glass, and a little bit of carameled apple with the oak still keeping the apply company. It’s a bit fresher, but very enjoyable all the same. There may be a maraschino cherry if I really concentrate.

The empty Glencairn is a warm, oak sawdust. Very rich and keeps my nose glued to the rim. One of my favorite empty glass aromas.

WORTH THE PRICE?

Yes

RATING: 89/100

Click to see Hannah’s rating process

Click 89/100 to access other whiskeys with this rating.
To access other whiskies from this distillery, click Maker’s Mark.

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Brian’s Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat Whiskey Review

Brian’s Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat Whiskey Review

original review written on 25-July-2019

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

I have been intrigued with the idea of “finishing” bourbon in old wine barrels ever since I first heard of 1792’s Port and Angel’s Envy releases a couple of years ago.  And as a fan of wheaters, I thought it would be a nice marriage.  I’ve enjoyed Dry Fly Straight Wheat Whiskey, so when I saw this iteration on the shelf, I secured a bottle for the bunker.

But how does one rate such a thing?  Strictly speaking, the juice is whiskey, but this confection is unlike anything else I have tasted.  Dry Fly’s Port Finish Wheat is good – maybe even better than good – but I would not want more than a couple of ounces at any one time as it is quite sweet.  Is there such a thing as a “dessert whiskey”? Read the Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat Whiskey Review here!

DRY FLY PORT FINISH WHEAT VITAL STATS:
Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat Whiskey Review Bottle

– Region: Spokane, WA, USA
– Distiller: Dry Fly Distilling
– Classification: Straight Whiskey
– Mash bill: 100% local soft white wheat from eastern Washington
– Process: Twice distilled
– Age: 3 years plus another 6-12 months in the huckleberry-infused port barrels
– Casks: New 53-gallon American Oak barrels
– Barrel Char: #3
– ABV: 45 (90 Proof)
– Price: $34.95 USD in Idaho
– No batch or bottle number identifiers

From the Dry Fly website: “Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat Whiskey is the same whiskey as our Washington Wheat, aged 3+ years in American Oak and then moved to a Port Wine barrel for an average of 6-12 months. It has a soft port finish and a slightly higher tannin level from the port barrel.

“Dry Fly utilizes port barrels obtained from Townshend Cellar, a neighbor … in Washington who produces Huckleberry Port. The port … offers ‘aromas of dried black currant, huckleberry, fig and black cherry with a hint of licorice.  The huckleberry, chocolate, coffee and black currant linger with a long satisfying finish.'”

Data from dryflydistilling.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:

Fresh ripe huckleberry explodes from the bottle even before the juice is nosed in the Glencairn.  Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat has a distinct, deep, red wine fruitiness and packs a Port punch.  Further nosing brings soft wheat, figs, red grapes, plums as well as dried prunes, and raisins.  There are hints of mulling spices, sweet, yet slightly citrusy vanilla, and bursts of maple which mix with an ever-so-slight touch of oak. 

PALATE:

On the tongue, sweet syrupy dessert wine dominates and hides any acidic tones of whiskey.  The wheat base adds smoothness.  This is a fruity juice: berries, dates, figs, ripe grapes, plums, and loads of plump, gourmet raisins.  As noted on the nose, mulling spices and maple sugar sweetness coats the tongue.

Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat Whiskey Review Glass

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat is a loaded and well-balanced fruit train and has a port-style mouthfeel which coats the tongue in syrupy goodness.  The slight whiskey heat is a welcome addition to the rich and smooth creaminess.  The juice clings to the inside of the Glencairn in oily sheets.

In a glass (and in the bottle), this wheat looks darker than most others, taking on a reddish, copper hue.

FINISH:

Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat has a short finish but offers a lasting warmness of huckleberry syrup infused with spices of nutmeg and cloves.

MY RATING: 85/100

Will I seek out this whiskey in the future? Yes
But it won’t be a must have in the bunker.
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

Click 85/100 to access other whiskeys with this score. However, this whiskey should not be selected in place of these or other drinks.  Dry Fly Port Finish Wheat stands in its own light.
Click Dry Fly to read my thoughts on other whiskey from this distillery.

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