Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond

Brian’s Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond Review:

reviewed 17-September-2023

HEAVEN HILL BOTTLED-IN-BOND BOURBON REVIEW:

Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond (HH BiB) is one of the most peculiar bourbons I have had opportunity to enjoy. This is not to say there is anything wrong with it, in fact in my opinion, it is a solid “B” performer. What makes it unusual is its aroma, palate and finish are like looking into a mirror. No single element outshines the other. It is unlikely I will seek it out, but should one become available and I’m trying to build relationships with a particular Liquor Store’s staff, I wouldn’t say no to adding another to the bunker.

HEAVEN HILL BOTTLED-IN-BOND VITAL STATS:
Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond

Category: Bottled-in-Bond Bourbon
Region: Bardstown, KY
Distillery: Heaven Hill
Mash Bill: 78% corn, 10% rye, 12% malted barley
Barrel Char: #3
Barrel entry proof: 125
Age: 7 Years
ABV: 50% (100 Proof)
Fair Price: $71.36 (BoozApp, August 2023)
Paid: $49.95 (Oregon, Spring 2023)
No unique batch or bottle number identifiers

“This Kentucky Bourbon pays tribute to the earliest days of the Distillery’s history when in 1939 it released Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond. The namesake brand quickly became the number-one-selling Bourbon whiskey in the state of Kentucky. Still today, the craftsmanship poured into this bottle by the same founding family meets the exacting standards first set forth in the Bottled-in-Bond act of 1897.”

Learn more at Heaven Hill Distillery.

ENJOYMENT METHOD FOR THE REVIEW:

By alternating pours, I added about four ounces into a Glencairn and a Weck. My daughter and I enjoyed the bourbon neat while I prepared this review.

HEAVEN HILL BOTTLED-IN-BOND NOSE:

When first brought to my nose I sense warm, herbal, roasted corn bathing in mild ethanol. In another waft, dried fruits of apricot, currants, and raisin though few, seem freshened with a squeeze of acidic citrus. Breathing in HH BiB, I smell classic spices of cinnamon, ginger, pepper, and rye which blend with nearly caramelized, light vanilla infused simple syrup, with hint of dark molasses drizzled over bitter hazelnuts. Though the wood does not dominate the pour, there is enough dry seasoned oak and little hazy toasted wood along with a touch of earthy leather treat the senses.

HEAVEN HILL BOTTLED-IN-BOND PALATE:

The flavors in HH BiB, nearly mimic what I sensed on the nose. Warm herbal, roasted corn dance on the tongue with currants and raisins and now a bit of bitter and acidic citrus. Though I cannot tell what the fruit is, I taste cinnamon, ginger, pepper, and rye blended in a jar of red berry jam. The sugary sweetness is somewhat diminished but I do still find rich vanilla in soft caramelizing simple syrup topped over hazelnuts as well. And under it all, there’s the dry seasoned oak and hazy toasted wood I’ve come to expect from Heaven Hill.

Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
HH BiB is a simple but well balanced bourbon. No single component outshines the other, to the degree some might deem this a simple pour. The first sips give the tongue a manageable tickle but the liquid is creamy and becomes oily the longer it is held. As the glass is swirled, a thick and solid crown is formed, then clinging droplets break and quickly fall. After each sip, thin medium legs break from the veil transporting the liquid back to the dark carrot colored pool.

HEAVEN HILL BOTTLED-IN-BOND FINISH

I could have almost cut and pasted my notes for the warm medium-long finish of HH BiB from the remarks above. In the mouth and on the tongue I sense roasted corn, currants, raisin and the bitter acidity of citrus zest. An aftertaste of cinnamon, pepper, and rye pairs nicely with sensations of vanilla simple syrup and slightly bitter hazelnuts. As each sip fades away, dry seasoned oak and hazy toasted wood remind me of the pour’s balance. And when the last dram is downed, swept dry oak sawdust piles waft from the empty Glencairn.

MY RATING: 85/100

Will I buy this whiskey again? YES
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

Click 85/100 to access other whiskies with this score.
To access other reviews from this brand, click Heaven Hill Distillery.

WHISKEY TRAITS, FLAVOR NOTES AND PROFILE GRAPH:
Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond
Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond

Back to …

Brian’s Whiskey Reviews –
Individual Whiskey Reviews –

Elijah Craig 18 Year Single Barrel

Brian’s Elijah Craig 18 Year Single Barrel Review:

reviewed 16-September-2023

ELIJAH CRAIG 18 YEAR SINGLE BARREL BOURBON REVIEW:

The Elijah Craig 18-Year Single Barrel bourbon boasts an aromatic blend of sweet smoke, musty leather, aged potpourri, and wood-forward earthiness. Its mellow taste unfolds with warm wine, grassy hints, and herbal dusty grain, intertwined with chocolate-covered blood orange and vanilla-infused toffee. This bourbon combines wood dominance with unexpected notes like mint, blood orange, and yellow cake, offering an easy-to-sip experience marked by a distinctive glass appearance and a medium-long, dry finish with herbal undertones, retaining a wood-focused profile and leaving a lingering sawdust scent.

ELIJAH CRAIG 18 YEAR SINGLE BARREL VITAL STATS:
Elijah Craig 18 Year Single Barrel

Category: Aged Single Barrel Bourbon
Region: Kentucky, USA
Distiller: Heaven Hill
Mashbill: 75% Corn, 13% Rye, 12% Malted Barley
Barrel Char: #3
Barrel Entry Proof: 125
Barreled: 2001
Barrel: 4632
Age: 18 Years Old
Bottled: 12-June-2019
ABV: 45% (90 Proof)
NABCA CSC #: 17920
Fair Price: $249.31 (BoozApp, September 2023)
Current MSRP: $159.95 (Idaho, September 2023)
Note: This particular bottle was purchased in late 2019 in Idaho for $129.95

ACCORDING TO HEAVEN HILL

“Elijah Craig 18-Year-Old Single Barrel Bourbon is the oldest Single Barrel Bourbon available in the world. Only a handful of the millions of barrels of Bourbon aging in Kentucky have been allowed to mature this long.”

Learn more at Heaven Hill.

ENJOYMENT METHOD FOR THE REVIEW:

Taken out of the newly opened bottle, the first one and a half ounces mixed with the bourbon in our Infinity Bottle Project. Then, by alternating the pours, four once review amounts went into Glencairn and a Weck. My daughter and I enjoyed the bourbon neat as I prepared this review.

ELIJAH CRAIG 18 YEAR SINGLE BARREL NOSE:

Even before I take the first draw, sweet smoke and musty leather drift up from the glass. As I breath in, EC18 greets with an old potpourri satchel of dried fruit tree blossoms. With carefully nosing, the unexpected faint scent of a mint topped baked apple with a tiny dollop of apricot jam peeks in. I struggle to find more fruit, and when I do, dry and dark prune fruit leather, infused with cinnamon, ginger, and pepper comes to mind. When I move on, a single peeled wedge of blood orange atop yellow cake makes its surprise entrance. There are sweets here too, as blended simple syrup and rich vanilla cooked with caramelized brown sugar, and orange blossom honey treat the senses. However it is wood forward earthiness which carries this pour, as peanut, dry old oak sawdust and hazy barrel char dominate the nose.

ELIJAH CRAIG 18 YEAR SINGLE BARREL PALATE:

I do not recall enjoying a more mellow bourbon. Individual flavors in this pour of EC18 are hard to detect making me think this is simple, but there are surprises. I feel warm wine on my palate, being sipped under the shade of an old oak atop a rolling hill on the edge of an open field. I take in the hay-like grassiness, along with herbal dusty grain, which at first seems a touch bitter. Nearly all trace of fruit has disappeared, yet there is a treat of chocolate covered blood orange dipped in cinnamon, white pepper, smoked pepper and cocoa malt powder. Then a confection of vanilla infused, chocolate and dark brown sugar toffee dances across the tip of my tongue. But like detected on the nose, dry old oak, smoky sweet char, and a touch of old leather make this a wood forward experience.

Elijah Craig 18 Year Single Barrel

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
As to be expected, the balance is heavily skewed towards wood. The unexpected aromas of mint, blood orange and yellow cake promenade with flavors of baked apple, smoked pepper, and cocoa powder but wood dominates the pour. Each sip is mellow and easy to hold. In the glass, a solid crown gives way to large drops, and after each sip, long thick legs transport the dregs back to the mahogany colored pool.

ELIJAH CRAIG 18 YEAR SINGLE BARREL FINISH

Elijah Craig 18-Year-Old Single Barrel Bourbon offers a medium-long, dry, warm finish with a fairly strong herbal aftertaste. Dusty grain and the sensation of fresh cut hay left in the field to dry blend with cinnamon, ginger, and cocoa which lay hidden in woody caramel and dark toffee. Like noted above, the finish follows the wood-forward suit, having plenty dry old oak, char, and leather. And when the last drops are downed, the empty Glencairn smells of dried sawdust swept into a pile at the end of a long workday at the mill.

MY RATING: 89/100

Will I buy this whiskey again? Maybe …
At $160, the price makes it a hard ask. The conditions would have to be absolutely right.
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

Click 89/100 to access other whiskies with this score.
To access other reviews from this brand, click Elijah Craig.

WHISKEY TRAITS, FLAVOR NOTES AND PROFILE GRAPH:
Elijah Craig 18 Year Single Barrel
Elijah Craig 18 Year Single Barrel

Back to …

Brian’s Whiskey Reviews –
Individual Whiskey Reviews –

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof B523

Brian’s Elijah Craig Barrel Proof B523 Review:

reviewed 15-September-2023

ELIJAH CRAIG BARREL PROOF B523 BOURBON REVIEW:

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof B523 (ECBP B523) offers hints of ethanol, and an inviting aroma of roasted corn, grain, with fruity notes and spices. An alcohol bite accompanies flavors of barrel tannin, sherry notes, rich sweetness and a little oak. B523 achieves a nice balance with a creamy body and is surprising easy to hold despite its high proof. In the glass, it forms droplets and liquid legs after each sip. The finish is long with notes of roasted corn, dark fruits, and spices, and the empty glass retains the scent of alcohol and oak sawdust, offering a fine conclusion to the pour.

ELIJAH CRAIG BARREL PROOF B523 VITAL STATS:
Elijah Craig Barrel Proof B523

Category: Small Batch Barrel Proof
Region: Louisville, Kentucky, USA
Distillery: Heaven Hill/Bernheim Distillery
Mashbill: 78% Corn, 10% Rye, 12% Malted Barley
Barrel Char: #3
Barrel entry proof: 125
Age: 12 Years
Non-chill filtered
ABV: 62.1% (124.2 Proof)
Availability: Tri-anual Limited Release
Release Date: May 2022
Fair Price: $94.54 (BoozApp, Sept 2023)
Paid: $79.95 (Summer 2023, Idaho)
NABCA CSC #: 17917
Batch number identifier: B523
▪”B” Second release of the year
▪”5″ Released in May
▪”23″ Released in 2023

Learn more at Heaven Hill.

ENJOYMENT METHOD FOR THE REVIEW:

Taken out of the newly opened bottle, the first one and a half ounces mixed with the bourbon in our Infinity Bottle Project. Then, by alternating the pours, four once review amounts went into Glencairn and a Weck. My daughter and I enjoyed the bourbon neat as I prepared this review.

ELIJAH CRAIG BARREL PROOF B523 NOSE:

The aroma of ECBP B523 is warm and inviting, with distinct notes of roasted corn and grain and with heavy draws, a hint of ethanol emerges. Fresh scents of blueberry, caramel apple, currants, and raisins add a vibrant sweetness as allspice, nutmeg, and white pepper complement rich undertones of brown sugared pastry and graham cracker. This sweet scent is furthrt enriched by rich vanilla, brown sugar, caramelized sugar, and buttery Kraft caramels. A little light molasses and toffee round out the profile, while subtle pecan notes add depth to elements of dry oak sawdust and hazy toasted wood.

ELIJAH CRAIG BARREL PROOF B523 PALATE:

ECBP B523 offers a warm and noticeable alcohol bite. Barrel tannins and sherry notes provide a robust foundation, while roasted corn and grain add depth. Syrupy berry nectar, currants, and raisins add fruity sweetness, and are enhanced by hints of cinnamon, ginger, black pepper, and rye. Dark, bittersweet chocolate and rich vanilla build richness and pair well with caramelized sugar, brown sugar, and dark chocolate toffee. The flavor adventure concludes with dry, heavy, and strong oak, barrel spice and char undertones, culminating ia a touch of leather earthiness.

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof B523

Balance, Body, Feel and Look:
ECBP B523 achieves a reasonable balance, with a dominant sugar profile but there is a noticeable presence of wood and spice. Its body is creamy, viscous, and oily, but does give an aggressive tickle on the palate. Surprisingly, it’s relatively easy to hold considering its high proof. In the glass an inverted crown of fast-falling droplets hangs in the bowl. And after each sip, a sheet of liquid descends from the rim of the glass, before it breaks into fast-dissipating legs to transport the dregs into the dark, old oak-colored pool.

ELIJAH CRAIG BARREL PROOF B523 FINISH

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof B523 finishes long, accompanied by a slight bite, with a dry, warm sensation on the back of the palate. Notes of roasted corn and dusty grain remain, as does the essence of dark dried fruits while hints of cinnamon, ginger, and black pepper provide a lingering spice. Brown sugar and dark toffee, along with the dry, heavy, and strong oak, with barrel char and leather undertones cap the experience. After enjoying the contents, the empty Glencairn glass retains the scent of alcohol and damp oak sawdust, providing a lasting olfactory reminder of the experience.

MY RATING: 92/100

Will I buy this whiskey again? YES
Click to read Brian’s scoring process.

Click 92/100 to access other whiskies with this score.
To access other reviews from this brand, click Elijah Craig.

WHISKEY TRAITS, FLAVOR NOTES AND PROFILE GRAPH:
Elijah Craig Barrel Proof B523
Elijah Craig Barrel Proof B523

Back to …

Brian’s Whiskey Reviews –
Individual Whiskey Reviews –