* Update: This batch (WT-03RB) ended in spring 2014. The new Rare Breed batch is unnumbered and 112.8 proof.
Bourbon: Wild Turkey Rare Breed, 108.2 proof (barrel proof); a blend of Wild Turkey 6-, 8- and 12-year-old stocks. Batch No. WT-03RB.
Distillery: Wild Turkey, Lawrenceburg, Kentucky.
Cost: $37.99
Color:
Amber with an orange tint.
Nose:
Noticeable rye, but also vanilla and caramel sweetness.
Taste:
Rare Breed is smoother than many other bourbons of similar
proof. It has a hint of citrus and big kick
of spice. A splash of water opened up sweeter
flavors like caramel, but you have to be cautious about over-diluting because
the spice was too quick to disappear. A
single large ice cube did just as well at bringing out the sweetness without
sacrificing the spice.
Finish:
Long finish, with nice lingering rye heat.
Rating:
I finally went on the Wild Turkey tour last August. Getting to go into Warehouse A – built in
1890 over the Kentucky River – was a highpoint for me, but the tour of the
modern distillery was a little sterile.
I’ll definitely go back for the new visitor’s center, but my tour still
ended in the tiny tasting room of the cramped old house that served as the visitor’s
center. We got to choose three out of
five offerings, which unfortunately did not include Kentucky Spirit. Of the five available, the two that I was
most interested in were Russell’s Reserve 10-year and Rare Breed. Between the two, Rare Breed was my clear
favorite. The nose of Rare Breed was
better and the spice in Russell’s Reserve was a little prickly. So I knew that I needed to do a little more
research with my own bottle of Rare Breed.
I was pleased to find that it was even better than I had
remembered from the tour. Rare Breed has
the heat, the flavor complexities and the finish that we’re all looking
for. I tend to prefer some more fruit
flavors to balance the spice, but I didn’t really miss those flavors here. Occasionally, however, there was some
harshness and bitterness. That was
usually tamed by a splash of water or a single large ice cube, but as noted
above, there’s not much room for error before you over-dilute.
Maybe that’s why they say that Jimmy
Russell recommends serving Rare Breed chilled from the freezer. He certainly knows more about bourbon than
I’ll ever hope to know, but after several tastings, I still prefer my Rare
Breed with a large ice cube in order to open up the sweeter flavors.
As so many more bourbons fly past
the $50 mark and beyond, $40 is quickly becoming the new $30 in bourbon, and
Rare Breed is knocking on the $40 door. Fortunately,
there are several excellent bourbons still priced in the high $20’s and low
$30’s; I just wish that Rare Breed was one of them. While it may be on the verge of overpriced, I
highly recommend that you include a bottle of Rare Breed in your home bar.
Score on The Sipp’n
Corn Scale: 3.5
The Sipp’n Corn Scale:
1 – Wouldn’t
even accept a free drink of it.
2 – Would
gladly drink it if someone else was buying.
3 – Glad to
include this in my bar.
4 – Excellent
bourbon. Worth the price and I’m sure to
always have it in my bar.
5 – Wow. I’ll search high and low to get another
bottle of this.
It doesn't cost anything to ask. In the tasting rooms following tours, I have asked for Kentucky Spirit, Elijah Craig 18YO, and Parker's Heritage. Was graciously obliged. Sometimes there is a large group in the tasting room and it is more difficult for the servers to deviate from script.
ReplyDeleteVery, very true. You rarely get anything if you don't ask for it. Also, many gift shops will offer tastes of their really expensive Bourbon when they're selling that particular Bourbon. So definitely ask away!
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