By the fall release season of 2013,
Bourbon’s popularity had already been surging for a decade. While it had legitimately developed into a “craze”
about two years earlier, 2013 was just about the time that truly limited
edition Bourbon became nearly impossible to find in Kentucky. The market hadn’t yet been flooded with 50
new “super-premium” brands or previously “lost” barrels, and brands like W. L.
Weller 12-year were still four deep on shelves.
Unfortunately, Weller 12 was just being discovered by a new breed of
Pappy histrionics who were hearing that Weller 12 “was the same thing as
Pappy.”
Demand was skyrocketing for Buffalo
Trace’s wheated Bourbon mash bill – which Buffalo Trace desperately needed to
succeed since it was just about out of its Stitzel-Weller stock used for Pappy
Van Winkle 20 and 23-year. Apparently,
however, Buffalo Trace had underestimated demand for longer-aged wheated Bourbon,
so it had sacrificed the seven-year age statements on Old Weller Antique and W.
L. Weller Special Reserve. Weller 12 was
also rumored to be discontinued or dropping its age statement, presumptively
because more needed to be held back for more profitable brands.
While fans are now dealing with
Weller 12 allocations, instant cleaning of shelves when it or Old Weller
Antique are released, and a high secondary market, at least Weller 12 didn’t
lose its age statement then (or since).
The other member of the Weller line that continued to receive high
acclaim was the wheated member of its popular Buffalo Trace Antique Collection
(“BTAC”), William Larue Weller.
In 2013, Buffalo Trace set aside 39
barrels for William Larue Weller. At 12
years old, these barrels could have been used for Weller 12 (90 proof) or Van
Winkle Special Reserve 12-year (90.4 proof), and gone a lot further. On average, about 55% of each barrel had been
lost to evaporation (meaning just about 23.7 gallons per barrel), but I suppose
that BTAC pricing for barrel proof Bourbon makes up for fewer bottles. Here are my thoughts:
Details
William Larue Weller Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Buffalo Trace Antique Collection 2013
Distillery: Buffalo Trace, Frankfort, Kentucky
Age: NAS label, but 12 years, 1 month
Barrel: Independent Stave #4 Char
Barrel Entry Proof: 114
Bottle Proof: 136.2
Warehouses: M and P, 3rd and 4th
Floors
Filtration: None
Cost: MSRP $80.00
Tasting
Notes
Color:
Dark, luscious amber.
Nose:
This is a sweet nose with the expected caramel notes, and
other sweet notes of brown sugar and butterscotch, but with depth added with aromas
of raisins, espresso, and tobacco.
Despite the high proof, I didn’t really get any alcohol burn.
Taste:
I tried to find similarities in the taste alongside Weller
12, and while there are some (like butterscotch, caramel, and fresh bread), even
without considering the distractingly high proof of Weller BTAC, they seem
barely related. I did not particularly
enjoy this Weller BTAC neat, and I struggled to find the correct ratio of
water, but found that a single ice globe worked magic, retaining complexity and
opening up new flavors. The sweet
caramel and butterscotch flavors were heightened, along with other rich
sweetness like dried dark fruits.
There’s also a nutty quality, along with cinnamon with a blast of oak
and tobacco. With right amount of water
and chill, it’s a rich and robust powerhouse.
Finish:
The warmth outlasted the flavors on the finish, which was overall
dry with more leather, pepper spice, and really dark chocolate as it faded.
Bottom
Line
Although we’re hardly removed from
it, I think that we’ll look back at the summer of 2013 as the point when the
Bourbon craze turned into Bourbon pandemonium.
Since then, Buffalo Trace has pumped out press releases of doom and
gloom for the shortages of its premium brands, age statements have dropped like
flies (but sometimes numerals remain on the bottle), and old over-filtered
stocks have flooded the market in an attempt to capitalize on the resurgence of
Bourbon.
Value-wise, though I really enjoyed
it, this isn’t worthy of the hype or worth the trouble to hunt because there
are plenty of cask-strength alternatives now.
Maker’s Mark Cask Strength, for example, is readily available, and while
it is a little younger, it will satisfy your need for a wheated high-proof
Bourbon. Either way, you can count me as
one more person who is done hunting for the Antique Collection. Just let me reserve the right to change my
mind.
Score on The
Sipp’n Corn Scale: 4.0
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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