There’s often too much focus in
bourbon reviews on inaccessible bourbon.
While those reviews can be intriguing and can help narrow your focus for
bourbon hunting, the lower shelves could use some attention too. There are more than plenty low-priced bourbons
to choose from, but the vast majority use rye as their secondary grain. To narrow the choices I decided to compare
only bourbons that use wheat as the secondary grain (by far the minority),
giving them a different profile than bourbons that use the more traditional rye
mash bill.
So for this review, we compared
three wheated bourbons that can be found readily at all stores for about $20.00. I didn’t actually go to the very bottom of the shelf. In fact, for each bourbon, the respective
brand offers an even less-expensive version.
Here is the order of blind tasting:
Rebel Reserve
Distillery: Bernheim Distillery (Heaven Hill),
Louisville, Kentucky
Age: NAS (but longer than Rebel Yell)
Proof: 90.6
Cost: $20.99
Real bottom shelf version: Rebel Yell ($12.99)
Thanks to the mayor of Louisville
in 1949, Charles Farnsley, the name “Rebel Yell” refers to the battle cry of
the Confederacy. Perhaps recognizing the
riskiness of that name, Stitzel-Weller originally only distributed this brand
in the deep-south, but it soon was more widely distributed and later gained
recognition as a favorite of Keith Richards. While the Rebel Yell brand is distilled at
Heaven Hill’s (new) Bernheim Distillery in Louisville, Heaven Hill sold the
Rebel Yell brand to Luxco, Inc.
John E. Fitzgerald Larceny Bourbon
Distillery: Heaven Hill Bernheim Distillery (for some
reason the bottle only discloses “bottled by…”)
Age: NAS
Proof: 92
Cost: $21.49
Real bottom shelf version: Old Fitzgerald ($11.99)
Larceny is the newest brand in this
comparison, making its debut in 2012, with the marketing department going
hog-wild on the backstory for this reinvention of the Fitzgerald line. Despite the claim on the bottle, Larceny was not established in 1870. In a bit of marketing misdirection, that date
really only applies to the date that Old Fitzgerald was released as a private
brand. While not containing an age
statement, Larceny is advertised as a small batch of 100 or less barrels and “hand
selected by the Master Distillers to have a taste profile of a six-year-old
Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey.”
Old Weller Antique 107
Distillery: Buffalo Trace, Frankfort, Kentucky
Age: NAS (but used to be seven years)
Proof: 107
Cost: $19.99
Real bottom shelf version: W. L. Weller Special Reserve ($14.99)
Old Weller Antique 107 is part of
the famed Weller line, named after William Larue Weller (1825-1899), who is the
grandfather of all wheated bourbon. After the repeal of National Prohibition, the Stitzels and Wellers built the Stitzel-Weller Distillery, opening on Derby Day in 1935. Big corporate acquisitions and mergers followed, Stitzel-Weller closed in 1992, and after moving distillation to New Bernheim, the brands were sold off to other distilleries. Without William Larue Weller, we would not be
having this tasting at all, because Rebel Yell and Larceny wouldn’t exist.
1st Glass (Rebel
Reserve):
The nose clearly gave away that
this was a wheated bourbon. The alcohol
scent was a little strong on the nose, but the caramel and brown sugar notes
were enticing. Unfortunately, there was
also an unfavorable scent of medicinal cherry (like cherry cough drops). The taste was not complex, mostly hot and sweet,
with hints of caramel, grain and corn.
Not much to it. The finish was short-ish,
and predictably sweet and not complex.
It was still mostly inoffensive just until it started to fade, when the
cherry cough drops come back for an unwelcome reprise.
2nd Glass (John E.
Fitzgerald Larceny):
The second glass was brighter in
color, with more of a copper tone. The
nose had a butterscotch aroma, with other sweet notes like toffee, but also a
lot of cinnamon. The taste was sweet,
with flavors of caramel, honey and sweet corn, with some spice and nice bite,
but it turned a little bitter. Like the
first glass, there was not much complexity, but there were more slight hints of
fruit and spice. There was a bit of
harshness when drinking the second glass neat, but it improved dramatically
with ice. A splash of water helped too,
but the sweet flavors opened up better just with ice. The finish was quick to medium, and slightly
warm.
3rd Glass (Old Weller
Antique 107):
The third glass had a hint of
orange to its amber color. The nose
revealed its higher proof right away, but after adjusting for the alcohol, the
predominant note was caramel – lots of caramel – but also strong vanilla. Caramel was also the predominant taste, just as
predicted by the nose. But there was
also a nice balance of other sweet flavors like vanilla, apple, honey and
toffee, along with some spicier flavor of cinnamon. It was actually remarkably balanced for a
bourbon lacking rye, but for anyone who really favors rye as the secondary
grain, you’ll still miss the spiciness of rye.
The higher proof gives a nice bite that compensates somewhat for the
lack of true spice flavors. The finish was
a little longer than the others and it was a more balanced, satisfying finish
of caramel, cinnamon and vanilla.
Winner: Old Weller Antique 107.
Bottom Line:
Practically all wheated Kentucky
bourbons are related, and these three are no exception. They all have lineage in William Larue Weller
and the Stitzel-Weller distillery, and they all tout that history. Rebel Reserve mentions Weller by name on its
back label (“created from a time-honored Weller family recipe…”). Similarly, Larceny’s marketing story obviously
relies prominently on Fitzgerald, but maybe because of the general perception
of that name as a transitioning to a bottom-shelf brand over the past decades,
the deft marketers refer to the Van Winkle family and the Stitzel-Weller
distillery.
All three also claim to be
made from their original recipes and methods.
If true, that should mean that the mash bills, yeast strain,
distillation techniques and char level should all be the same, with the only
differences being barrel location and age.
The variances between Rebel Reserve, Larceny and Old Weller Antique
either disprove the entire story about each using the old Weller recipe, or
they emphasize the incredible differences that can be imparted by the barrel,
age and aging conditions. Remember also
that if Rebel Yell and the Fitzgerald line are made from the same Weller
recipe, they start the same as Pappy. Everybody
wants to ride the coattails of Pappy, so expect more comparisons.
Despite their family origins,
these three bourbons are not in the same league. None of the three were going to have peppery
or spicy notes due to the lack of rye, but Old Weller Antique did the best job
out of the three in delivering a well-rounded profile. Not only was Old Weller Antique the
hands-down winner, we added W.L. Weller Special Reserve after the
reveal, and it was preferred over Rebel Reserve too.
Keith Richards
doesn’t need to be your role model for bourbon, and you don’t need to pay for
new marking of old Fitzgerald. So be
sure to try Old Weller Antique, although it has become rare ever since the
disappearance of W.L. Weller 12 Year Old (if
you see Weller 12, ignore everything written here and buy a bottle for about
$26.00). If both of those are
missing, grab a bottle of W.L. Weller Special Reserve and save $5.00 instead of
getting Rebel Reserve, or splurge and try Larceny.
Scores on The
Sipp’n Corn Scale
Rebel Reserve: 1.5
Larceny: 2.5
Old Weller 107: 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.
Awesome review. I love wheated bourbons. Can't wait to get some Old Weller 107.
ReplyDeleteOld Weller 107 might not be what it used to be, unfortunately, but it's still one of the top value buys out there.
DeleteIf you can find it these days...
DeleteVery true. I suppose Buffalo Trace is saving it for the Van Winkle line.
Delete