Wenzel Distillery Sherry Barrel Finished Bourbon, Batch 2

I’d like to thank Wenzel Distillery and their PR team for providing this sample with no strings attached.

IMAGE: Small bottle of Wenzel Distillery Straight Bourbon Whiskey finished in sherry casks sitting on a deck railing with bright green trees blurred in the background.

As I am an old man, I know a lot of old songs. And as much as it pains me to realize this, the 1980s were 40 years ago. Which is an objectively long time. There was an old song by a band called Cinderella, that was popular when I was a young lad titled Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone). And we are living that in the BourbonGuy household this week. We recently got new neighbors on one side of our house. We live in a tightly packed neighborhood, but what made it lovely were all the trees in everyone’s yards. It made it easy to pretend that our houses were further apart than they really were.

Well, this week, the new neighbors to the south took down their three extremely large maples. Which sucked for us since they provided shade and, more importantly, privacy from the neighbors beyond them. It was sad and has us trying to figure out how to replace the effect. But it does provide much more sun for a garden that was shaded most of the morning, which is nice. So it’s a mixed bag for us. But they seem to like it. And the motto around here has always been that there are few objectively bad things, just things that we don’t personally like (this is why there are few “dislike” ratings on the site). How boring would it be if we all liked the same things, including whiskey, the same way? There would be no reason for experimentation or even multiple brands of whiskey. We’d all like the same thing, so that’s what would be produced.

That isn’t to say that all experiments are successful. At least not to every audience. Case in point: tonight’s bourbon. While there are people who love a sherry cask finish, I am not one of them. I don’t mind it now and then. Sometimes it even adds a touch of fruitiness to an otherwise boring bourbon. Other times it seems to overpower the bourbon entirely. Sherry fans may very well love when the latter occurs. Not being a sherry fan, I usually prefer the former.

Tonight’s bourbon is more of the sherry-forward variety. As the producer was purchasing this whiskey from another distillery that was shutting down, the liquid in the barrel spent three years in the ex-Oloroso Sherry finishing barrels instead the months that is a more typical length for a barrel-finish. That liquid became Batch 1 of Wenzel Distillery Sherry Barrel Finished Bourbon. For Batch 2, they ended up blending some of the remaining barrels from Batch 1 with other barrels that were aged longer but finished for a more normal length of time. Batch 2 is made up of 679 bottles. It is bottled at 119.1 proof and is for sale at the distillery in Covington, KY, or on the distillery website for $109.

Wenzel Distillery Sherry Barrel Finished Bourbon, Batch 2

Purchase Info: This sample was sent at no cost by the producer for review purposes. The suggested retail price is $109 for a 750 mL bottle.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $7.27

Details: 59.55% ABV. Batch 2

Nose: Caramel, walnut, baking spice, and leather.

Mouth: Hot and dry in the mouth. Slightly astringent. Notes of toffee, leather, walnut, cinnamon, and oak.

Finish: Hot and long. Notes of toffee, nuts, vanilla sugar cookies, and nutmeg.

IMAGE: A hand-drawn neutral face that denotes that while I personally don’t care for the product, others may well love it.

Thoughts: It turns out that we are not Oloroso sherry fans in the BourbonGuy household. We’ve had some lovely bourbons with a hint of sherry finish, but this has a lot of sherry influence. Not my cup of tea, nor my wife’s. Because I wasn’t a fan of this in a Glencairn glass (I felt that the tasting glass accented the more astringent notes), I tried it how I normally drink my whiskey for pleasure: in a rocks glass with a little piece of ice. The added dilution took away the astringent notes and accented the fruitiness of the sherry finish, but it also brought out a graininess in the whiskey that had previously been obscured by the proof. Which was better, and bumped it from a dislike to a neutral rating.

Bottom line: if you love sherry, you will probably love this. But if not, you may not. However, I love the experimentation and hope more people are willing to do fun things like this. In the old days, over-aged bourbon would have been redistilled to try to “salvage” it into something that would make the producer money. Today we get people trying new things, and that is awesome.


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