Distillery: O.H. Ingram
Suggested retail price: $69.99
Drink The Bottles score: 96/100
Distillery: O.H. Ingram
Suggested retail price: $69.99
Drink The Bottles score: 96/100
Due north of Boulder, Colorado sits a small town of about 2200 residents and an unsuspecting distillery, born out of the reamins of and old motorcycle repair shop. Head distiller and co-founder CraigEngelhorn (aka Hair of the Dog) had a dream to take his home-brewed beer hobby to the next level. With the help of some like-minded friends, Spirit Hound Distillers was born.
Tasted from sample, this is brown sugar in color. On the nose is a sweeter fruity note, fig pudding, hints of flower bouquet and grape. We dug right into this one and found that the palate was not as sweet as we had anticipated or that was hinted from the nose. Mutt got spice up front while Jeff took note of the espresso bean taste. The spice tapered off quickly and suggested cinnamon stick, fig and roasted nuts (specifically cashews) on the back end. This was literally mouth-watering.
While this is a limited release, it is available at the distillery and will be released in select markets in January 2025. Check out our YouTube video review below.
The first thing we noticed is how Redemption knocked it out of the park with the label and packaging. While some may find the label too busy, we really like how the label explains the entire process from mashing to enjoying a glass of this straight rye whiskey. Education is a big part of this bottle as it is isolated from everything else on the market. The 95% rye and 5% mash bill, non-chill filtered three year whiskey drinks more like a 5-6 year due to the "sur lie" method and periodic rolling of the barrels.
Hazy golden color, similar of a sultry summer sunset right before it disappears over the horizon. We weren't expecting a heavily roasted marshmallow aroma, but it was instantly mouth-watering. Dry straw, evergreen needles, and caramel chews also made an appearance. This is incredibly viscous and if that's your thing, you're going to savor this whiskey! Light brown sugar, orange marmalade, sweet grain and hints of star anise on the palate led to a really nice push of rye with medium heat on the finish. The mouthfeel is what really stood out to us as far as uniqueness of this bottle. The "on the lees" method of aging created the viscosity but time and subsequent batches of this whiskey will tell whether or not sur lie aging added enough flavor for the distillery to abandon the practice. Either way, we really enjoyed this one and hope you do too!
We had the opportunity to explore two of Still Austin's cask strength offerings - their bourbon and their rye whiskey. The bourbon has a minimum of a 2 year age statement while the rye isn't disclosed just yet. For you whiskey snobs, you've probably already clicked off of this article after reading the previous sentence. But if you were patient and openminded enough to stick around, let us just say this: color. Look at the color. Do these bottles look like they've been sitting in char #3 barrels for only 2 years? Nope. That's the beauty of the hill country weather. The fluctuations, going from one extreme to another, really give the barrels a work out and many people argue that the whiskey tends to age in half the time as many other parts of the country. Let's take a look!
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