Wild Turkey has been making a push
over the past two years to enter the “super premium” (and super-expensive)
segment by offering a series of limited edition bottlings, starting with
Diamond Anniversary, then Master’s Keep, and most recently Russell’s Reserve
1998. Brands usually cannot make the
jump straight from mid-priced offerings to super-premium limited editions, so
Wild Turkey laid a nice foundation over many years with Russell’s Reserve and
Kentucky Spirit.
Wild Turkey made another smart
decision in the past few years to start a private barrel program for Russell’s
Reserve and Kentucky Spirit, which helped increase its profile and buzz. Wild Turkey had always puzzled me a little
with its market strategy of having three brands (these two plus Rare Breed) all
priced within reach of each other. That
seems to cannibalize itself, when perhaps instead Kentucky Spirit or Russell’s
Reserve could be reserved for limited bottling runs, and of course a higher
price, giving a cleaner progression between those three labels.
The plain bottle for Russell’s
Reserve seems to send the message that it is intended to be not quite as
“premium” as the stunning art deco Kentucky Spirit bottle, but that’s not where
I’ve landed in the past between the two.
Regardless, I like the standard bottle of both of these, and had high
hopes for these private selection bottles.
Kentucky
Spirit & Russell’s Reserve
Private
Selection Review
Bourbon:
|
Wild Turkey Kentucky Spirit – Kentucky Straight Bourbon
Whiskey (Barrel No. 44)
|
Distillery:
|
Wild Turkey, Lawrenceburg, Kentucky
|
Age:
|
8 years, 10 months
|
ABV:
|
50.5% (101 proof)
|
Cost:
|
$56.99
|
Bourbon:
|
Russell’s Reserve – Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey (Barrel
No. 57)
|
Distillery:
|
Wild Turkey, Lawrenceburg, Kentucky
|
Age:
|
9 years, 11 months
|
ABV:
|
55% (110 proof)
|
Cost:
|
$56.99
|
Tasting Notes
Color:
The Russell’s Reserve is a bit darker, as should be expected
due to the lack of chill filtration, one year longer in the barrel, and less
water added. Russell’s Reserve is dark
amber with a tinge of reddish-brown, whereas Kentucky Spirit is more of a
standard medium amber.
Nose:
Russell’s Reserve had a better nose, with more caramel and
oak, and far more robust. Kentucky
Spirit’s nose was overall faint, with plenty of corn, fresh grass, vanilla, and
honey. The edge goes to Russell’s
Reserve because of its deeper aromas, but both were enjoyable.
Taste:
Russell’s Reserve was creamy with a nice blast of caramel
and flavors of oak, leather, tobacco, and baking spice. Kentucky Spirit was thin and less robust in
comparison. Prominent flavors were corn,
some pepper spice and cinnamon, along with a little honey, vanilla, and lemon
zest, but not enough oak to write home about.
Once again, between the two, the more robust Russell’s Reserve takes the
edge.
Finish:
The finish of Russell’s reserve was overall dry, with good
balance and great warmth. I was looking
for a longer finish, but it was medium at best, and even then it had to linger
to get there. Kentucky Spirit’s finish
was mostly sweet and on the shorter side, but perfectly pleasant in its own
right (perhaps a finish that would be preferable for someone new to
Bourbon). For me, it was an easy call in
favor of Russell’s Reserve.
Bottom Line
Before you buy private selection
barrels, see if your store has samples available. Although
I could have, I didn’t try either of these ahead of time. If I had tried them, in hindsight, I might
have bought three Russell’s Reserves instead of two, and I would have passed on
the private selection Kentucky Spirit, but maybe bought the standard issue
instead, knowing that I couldn’t have gone wrong with Jimmy and Eddie making
the picks.
The choice between Russell’s
Reserve and Kentucky Spirit is easy for me; I knew that ahead of time though
(hence buying two Russell’s Reserves out of the gate). Now both Russell’s Reserves are empty, and
the Kentucky Spirit is still half full.
Regardless, I’ve liked the standard Kentucky Spirit much better than
this private barrel, and would expect future ratings to be higher.
Score on The
Sipp’n Corn Scale:
Kentucky Spirit
Private Selection Barrel No. 44: 2.5
Russell’s
Reserve Private Selection Barrel No. 57:
3.0
The Sipp’n Corn Scale:
1 – Swill. I might dump the bottle, but will probably
save it for my guests who mix with Coke.
2 – Hits the
minimum criteria, but given a choice, I’d rather have something else.
3 – Solid Bourbon
with only minor shortcomings. Glad to
own and enjoy.
4 – Excellent
Bourbon. Need to be hyper-critical to
find flaws. I’m lucky to have this.
5 – Bourbon
perfection. I’ll search high and low to
get another bottle of this.
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