Category: American Whiskey

  • 5 Things that Excite Me About American Single Malt Whiskey Right Now

    5 Things that Excite Me About American Single Malt Whiskey Right Now

    Two weeks ago, I zipped from Arizona to Colorado to attend the American Single Malt Whisky Commission Convention in downtown Denver. It was a last-minute trip, but I couldn’t resist the opportunity to one of my favorite cities, try more Colorado whiskies, and see more than 20 American Single Malt distillers all together in one room.

    As I stumbled away at the end of the evening, I carried with me a few business cards, several stickers, and five things that excite me about American Single Malt Whiskey right now:

    1. Peat is just as exciting in American Single Malt Whiskey as it is in Scotch.
    2. Experimentation is the name of the game in American Single Malt Whiskey.
    3. There is joy in the American Single Malt Whiskey industry.
    4. The community of American Whiskey is tight-knit and welcoming.
    5. Bourbon may be America’s whiskey, but American Single Malts is on the rise.

    Keep reading as I expand on each!

    Five Things that Excite Me About American Single Malt Whiskey Right Now

    As a whisky enthusiast and an American Single Malt Whiskey (ASMW) enthusiast, these five things about the ASMW category that most excite me right now.

    The use of peat is just as exciting in American Single Malt Whiskey as it is in Scotch.

    I’ll start right out with the most controversial take, fully admitting that not every ASMW drinker (or even every Scotch drinker) will share this opinion. I happen to be a verified Peat Monster. I want peat in my whiskey, and I want it to be so big and bold that it practically crawls out of the glass of its own volition.

    American single malt producers are known for experimenting with different types of smoke, and with great success. Whiskey Del Bac, headquartered just a few miles from my home in Tucson, runs on the slogan “mesquited, not peated.” Every month, they light the firebox with locally-sourced wood to complete their in-house malting process. The result is Dorado, a lovely, rich smoky whisky that many local whiskey lovers rave about.

    But while “it’s not like peat” was often a selling point for skeptical visitors on the tours I once led at the distillery, the cozy campfire smoke of mesquited barley malt and the brash, medicinal peat of Scotland’s western isles are different. Not better or worse. Just different. And both have their place in ASMW.

    For someone who cut their whiskey teeth on peaty Scotch, the use of peat in American whiskies is exciting. I sipped peated whiskey from three distillers at the ASMW Convention: Cedar Ridge Distillery, Boulder Spirits, and McCarthy’s from Hood River Distillers. All three source their peated barley directly from Scotland before mashing and distilling it onsite in the US. And all three were fantastic whiskies that I wouldn’t hesitate to order or buy.

    Sampling Westland Distillery whiskies in their Seattle-area distillery and tasting room.

    Experimentation is the name of the game in American Single Malt Whiskey.

    While my posting here has been sparse over the last few months, there have been commonalities in the distilleries and whiskies I’ve visited and sampled. More often than not, the distilleries are relatively new—especially when compared to the historic distilleries of Kentucky and Ireland and Scotland—and small, some even largely unknown outside of a dedicated local whiskey community.

    There is something to be said for this anonymity (or, perhaps in some cases, notoriety). Last summer when I visited Denver on my first whiskey trip, I noted how the city’s various distilleries were forging their own path with local ingredients and innovative practices and philosophies. Even in Edinburgh, I found the same spirit of experimentation when I dropped into Port of Leith and Holyrood distilleries.

    Without the 200+ years of distilling history that many big whiskey brands enjoy, making a name for yourself in the whiskey world can certainly be a challenge. But where newer distilleries may falter on history, they’re excelling in innovation.

    There is freedom in being unknown, and I see that freedom in the American Single Malt industry in spades. Whiskey Del Bac, as previously mentioned, was one of the first to burn mesquite to dry their malted barley. Iowa’s Cedar Ridge has a delicious whiskey that’s aged in 20+ casks(!!!) before being married in a solera process that keeps various batches all perpetually marinating together. McCarthy Whiskey (officially the first distillery to make American Single Malt) employs brandy stills of just 60 gallons to distill their small-bath whiskey.

    If I had to guess, some of this innovation may be born out of necessity. When you’re just getting started in any business, you have to be a little bit scrappy, making do with limited resources. But, as they say, necessity is the mother of all invention.

    There is joy in the American Single Malt Whiskey industry.

    When I stopped by the Boulder Spirits booth, the team told me that they also make bourbon. They said it almost apologetically, perhaps knowing the crowd that this event would draw. Bourbon, they said, keeps the lights on and the stills running so the team can keep making single malt whiskeys.

    This isn’t the first time I’ve heard this tale: bourbon pays the bills, but single malt brings the joy.

    Many ASMW distilleries are small, and, according to my sources, have had some real moments of financial struggle in the last year or two. This isn’t Jim Beam or Maker’s Mark, putting out a single malt on a whim. Many of these distilleries are focused on the category simply because they love it.

    That passion for single malt was felt through the conversations I had with brand reps (who, admittedly, are paid to smile about their product), but also through the crowd in attendance. ASMW isn’t on every street corner; I’m lucky to live in a town with a distillery producing great barrel-aged spirits, but many aren’t. And the complicated distribution laws and networks of the US mean that the ASMW section in most liquor stores is scant—if they have one at all.

    In fact, one of the reasons I went to Denver is because I have tried, and failed, to access whiskey from a wide range of distilleries. I simply can’t get my hands on a bottle. What this means is that the community around single malt whiskeys produced in the US is intentional. People who know about it and love it get excited about it. Some of us even book a last-minute flight for it.

    The hybrid stills of Stranahan’s Whiskey Distillery in Denver, Colorado.

    The community of American Whiskey is tight-knit and welcoming.

    While visiting Seattle a few years ago, I naturally trekked south of downtown to visit Westland Distillery, still one of my favorite ASMW brands. It was early 2021 and the world was still in the throes of COVID regulations. Officially, the distillery wasn’t offering in-person tours, but when I mentioned that I worked at Del Bac at the time, the doors opened—literally.

    With a swift welcome, we were granted special access and taken on a casual walk-through of the production floor and lab. Shortly after, our impromptu tour guide came to Tucson, and I returned the favor by connecting her with the team at Del Bac.

    I’ve come to expect this camaraderie in the ASMW community as I’ve visited distilleries and chatted with other fans. ASMW fans and distillers are united in the fact that we’re all rooting for the underdog, both in the US and on a global scale. American Single Malt, while growing, remains the little brother of both American Whiskey and the global single malt industry.

    But it’s growing, and the community around it remains part of its appeal. More than once in Denver, I witnessed distillers trading off their duties, allowing each other to venture out into the room and sample their colleagues’ spirits. Almost always, the swap was precipitated with the words, “I really want to try…”

    Bourbon may be America’s whiskey, but American Single Malts is on the rise.

    Before I left Denver two weeks ago, I got coffee with two members of the Edinburgh Whisky Academy team, Kirsty and Heather. They were in town working alongside the convention on a special project: filming distillers and malters and other experts for their American Single Malt Whiskey Certificate, a new course offering from the EWA.

    American Single Malt is, and has been since the first distillation of such, a legitimate category of American whiskey. However, there’s something about a credentialing course that underlines the category’s rightful place in the whiskey world.

    Plus, the packed spaces of Seven Grand in Denver proved a significant interest in the category, something dedicated fans of ASMW already knew. It’s my understanding that this year’s event was the inaugural convention. If so, I can’t wait to see it grow and expand over the coming years.

    Whiskey Del Bac’s official mascot and mouser, Two Row.

    A Challenge to American Scotch Drinkers

    Any time someone asks me to compare a single malt whiskey to bourbon, I usually just laugh. I simply don’t have the experience and language of bourbon to make those connections. So while I absolutely advocate for bourbon drinkers to try American Single Malt Whiskey, this section is specifically for Scotch fans living in the United States.

    Here’s your challenge: if you haven’t yet, try an American Single Malt Whiskey. And then try another. Buy a bottle, or maybe two. Follow the brands on social media. Sign up for their newsletters. Take a tour.

    I’ve linked several brands within this post, but here are a few more worth mentioning. I’ve had the opportunity to sample these whiskies, either in Denver or at my local whiskey bar:

    For even more, check out the American Single Malt Whisky Commission member list, available online.

    I won’t tell you to replace your Scotch entirely (I certainly won’t be doing that anytime soon!), but make space in your liquor cabinet for American Single Malt Whiskey, nestling it in next to the Glenmorangies and Macallans and Laphroaigs on your shelf.

    Then crack open those bottles and pour yourself a dram.

    Sláinte, y’all!

  • Sipping Spirits in the Mile High City: Denver, Colorado

    Sipping Spirits in the Mile High City: Denver, Colorado

    Update: this post was intended to be part one of a two-part series, but it’s been six months, and my dog ate my homework (aka..my laptop ate my draft), so it’s been updated to a standalone post. It seems that another trip to Colorado is in order!

    In July when I began planning a semi-impromptu trip to Denver, Colorado’s capital city, I didn’t intend to make it a “whiskey trip” per se. Yes, the primary driver of the visit was attending the first night of respected Scotch whisky writer Dave Broom’s brief US tour. And, as a single malt enthusiast, a visit to Stranahan’s Whiskey Distillery, the city’s well-known single malt makers, was required.

    More, I expected to partake in a good amount of local beer. Colorado is, after all, home to the perrenial favorite of dads and hipsters everywhere, Coors Brewing, not to mention well-known craft breweries like Oskar Blues. But whiskey? I doubted that my explorations in the spirits realm would go very far.

    I was—happily—wrong.

    Big Chief Bottling Co. in Denver, Colorado; July 2023. Photo by The Whisky Type.

    Colorado, an underrated whiskey destination.

    By their current count, Colorado is home to approximately 40 distilleries producing craft spirits ranging from vodka to gin to bourbon and rye, not to mention American single malt and the nation’s first single pot still whiskey. Known collectively as the Colorado Spirits Trail, several of these distillers are peppered throughout the state, tucked between mountains and along distant trails, promising a bit of adventure with each sample. However, most are gathered along the state’s urban corridor spanning Colorado Springs to Fort Collins.

    In Denver alone, there are 15 distilleries, a fact I discovered when I googled “Denver Distilleries” on a whim last month. The first search result, published by VISIT DENVER, presented me with a list of no less than 12 active distilleries in and around the city. Another posting suggested a few more, topping off the list.

    I had only a few days in the city to explore, so I quickly perused the webpages of each local distiller, determining the type of spirits they produced, a few points of interest, and, most importantly, where and when I could find them for a tasting. By the end of my research, I had identified nine targets for tours and tastings.

    It was an ambitious plan and I’m not ashamed to admit that I failed to accomplish it. My alcohol tolerance is on the lower end of most whisky enthusiasts even without the added limitations of mountain elevation, so the effects of the alcohol quickly outpaced my ambitions. Even so, I managed to try spirits from five different distilleries while in Denver— and I was not disappointed by the experience. I’ll get into my experiences at each in part two, but first, let’s explore some of what, in my observation, makes Colorado’s spirits unique.

    A vintage still at Stranahan’s Whiskey Distillery; July 2023. Photo by The Whisky Type.

    Forget farm-to-table; this is grain-to-glass.

    All whiskies journey from the fields to the still room to the barrel before landing in your glass, but in Colorado, that journey is often personal. Much like a farm-to-table restaurant, the distilleries that I visited almost unanimously noted their use of local grains and botanicals, mashing together Colorado’s rich agricultural history with their distillation present.

    Nearly half of Colorado’s 66 million acres were used for farmland in 2022, according to a bulletin produced by the US Department of Agriculture. As a state, Colorado is ranked 5th in the nation for barley production, with 52,000 acres producing more than 5 million bushels last year, and 18th for corn, despite nearly 1.4 million acres and 148,000,000 bushels.

    Those grains are utilized in a number of ways: as food for humans and livestock, for a variety of grain-based products, and, of course, for the state’s robust beer and spirit industries (fun fact: 87% of the state’s barley goes directly to Coors Brewing Company for their beer).

    But it’s not just the grains or the geography that make Colorado spirits so, well, Coloradan. El Dorado Springs, a small unincorporated area near the city of Boulder, produces some of the best water in the world (and the best bottled water in the nation). Many nearby whiskey distilleries draw on this natural spring water at various points in the distillation process, particularly between the barrel and the bottle, and are quick to infer that this renowned spring water plays an important part in producing high quality spirits.

    Of course, the question of whether “terroir” has an impact on whiskey is constantly under debate. A 2021 scientific study suggested that locality does, in fact, impact the final flavor. Still, some of the industry’s greatest minds suggest that landscape and climate have more of a place in marketing than in the glass.

    The truth is, no one is really sure exactly what goes into the precise flavor of a whiskey, not even those who make it. Whether proven or promise, Colorado distillers seem to be marching ahead under the assumption that locality is, in fact, critical to the outcome. And they might just be onto something; in the spirits I tried, certain qualities did suggest a regional influence: the balance of botanicals selected for a local gin, for example, or even a unique grassiness to balance the spice of a rye whisky.

    Using local grains isn’t, of course, new. Distilleries have been utilizing regional sourcing techniques for centuries, but a global economy has supplemented nearby sources with an open door to the world’s agricultural products. The commonality of this ancient practice throughout Denver’s distilleries is something that makes it—and those distilleries—unique.

    The hybrid still at Stranahan’s Whiskey Distillery, Denver, Colorado; July 2023. Photo by The Whisky Type.

    Keeping Colorado ( and its whiskey) weird.

    Around the world, most distilleries use a pot still or a column still in their distillation process. On the occasion that they employ both in the same still house, they’re separate and distinct machines. During my visit to Stranahan’s Whiskey Distillery, however, I was confronted with something akin to Frankenstein’s monster—but much prettier.

    The hybrid still, as they explain it, is believed to offer the best of both worlds in whiskey distillation: the even boiling and flavor-retention of a pot still and the efficiency and clean cut of a column. According to the tour guide, Stranhan’s was the first to employ the unusual stills, which featured a short, four-window column atop a wide pot. Their use has since spread, at least in the Denver area; I saw a similar configuration down the road at Laws Whiskey House.

    Hybrid stills are not the only way in which Stranahan’s is forging its own path in distillation. Two other points of distinction center around their barrels and their boilings.

    Early in the tour, our guide explained that the distillery boils their wort between the mash tun and the fermenter, a process that I asked the tour guide about after we concluded our tasting. “That’s how they do it in Scotland,” he told me confidently. According to my classes at the Edinburgh Whisky Academy, not to mention the production tours I’ve taken at Glenkinchie, Balvenie, GlenAllachie, and Bruichladdich, it’s not; wort typically is cooled after leaving the mash tun, not reheated. But I gently prodded a little further, and we speculatively decided that it could be part of the beer brewing process; Stranahan’s made its mark on the industry by first distilling beer (actual, intentional beer rather than distiller’s beer) into whiskey.

    When we reached the barrel-packed warehouse, we also learned of Stranahan’s use of the Solera aging method, a process that is believed to increase the consistency of the spirits. Over time, some, but not all, of the whisky aging in the barrel is removed for bottling; it is then replaced with new make spirit, which mingles with the aged spirit left behind. It’s not a new method of aging, but it’s not one that has necessarily been widely adopted in the whiskey industry worldwide.

    Stranhan’s is also using foudre barrels — massive, egg-shaped barrels more commonly employed in wine-making — but I’ll admit that I was both too far away from the tour guide and paying too little attention in that moment to understand why or how.

    I have to wonder if Stranahan’s experimentation with new and old techniques may have come from its singularity; they were the first legal distillery in Colorado since prohibition. And while they were not the first to produce a single malt whiskey on American soil, the category was largely undefined (and unexplored) in 2006 when they released their first bottle.

    There’s something to be said for having the space to forge your own path. Even the bourbon distilleries I visited seemed to be doing their own thing in one way or another, whether or not they are following more traditional distillation methods. With all eyes on the better-known American whiskey regions of Kentucky and Tennessee, perhaps Colorado distillers have had more room to play.

    It’s likely that Colorado distilleries have charted a new course by necessity; the thin air and desert extremes of Colorado are a far cry from the cold, damp climates of Scotland and Ireland or even the humid, multi-seasonal atmosphere of the American mid-south.

    When whisky is aged in a humid climate, alcohol is the first element to evaporate. But in a dry climate, water particles in the new make rush into the wood and the air ahead of the alcohol. This can result in higher-proof whiskey straight from the barrel, but desert angels are greedy, and distilleries lose a lot more product to evaporationoverall. As a result, the whisky can’t spend as much time in the barrel — and you wouldn’t necessarily want it to anyway. Wide swings in temperature throughout the year and within some days cause Denver’s barrels expand and contract at a rapid pace, creating more agitation within the spirit and greater interaction with the wood.

    While that may present challenges to a distiller, it’s a good thing for whiskey lovers; it means that the spirits are ready (and, importantly, palatable) much more quickly than usual.

    That’s a perfect way to segue into the tasting portion of my trip, but for that, you do have to wait—part two of my Denver trip notes (centered around the distilleries I visited) will be released later this week!

  • Jack Daniels Bonded // Smooth as Tennessee Whisky

    Jack Daniels Bonded // Smooth as Tennessee Whisky

    Friday is Bottled in Bond day, the 126th anniversary of the Bottled in Bond Act signed into law on March 3, 1897. This legislation was monumental for the whiskey industry in the United States, so I’m sipping Whisky Advocate’s top whisky of 2022, Jack Daniels’ Bonded on Whisky Wednesday in its honor.

    The whiskey is robust and rich, crashing onto the palate with sweet caramel and vanilla. Oak follows the sweetness, its lingering on the tongue with a dry, woody finish.

    As I sip this, I should be thinking about what makes a bottle of whiskey “bonded”, but we’ll have to come back to that some other time. I’m instead stuck on this question: what the heck is a Tennessee whiskey, and how is it different than bourbon?

    The best answer I can find is, not much.

    Technically, this whiskey is—or could be—bourbon. The mash bill contains at least 51% corn; it’s bottled at less than 160 proof and more than 80; and it was aged in charred new oak barrels.

    But what sets this whiskey apart from bourbon is a rigorous filtration process called the Lincoln County Process, named for the county where Jack Daniel got his whiskey-making start. Distillers of the region claim that this added filtration makes for an exceptionally smooth whiskey, softening some of bourbon’s coarser, corn-influenced qualities.

    True? Maybe. Filtering isn’t exclusive to Tennessee Whiskey — though there seems to be a singular intensity to the Lincoln County Process.

    But as someone who is often put off by the harshness of traditional bourbon, I think they might be onto something.

    Whether you call this spirit Bourbon or Tennessee Whiskey, and whatever happens in filtering, it was enough to earn this spirit a #1 spot on Whisky Advocate’s list….and in my whisky cabinet too.

    Sláinte, y’all!

    In My Glass

    Jack Daniels Bonded Tennessee Whisky
    American Whiskey, Bottled in Bond
    No Age Statement; 50% ABV
    USA

    On My Desk

    Royal Futura 600
    Manual Typewriter
    c. 1960

  • Corsair Distillery Tour

    Corsair Distillery Tour

    Rumor has it that the inspiration for Corsair Distillery’s distinctive label came from a trio of drunken, unbothered Scotsmen striding confidently down a Scottish road after an evening of troublemaking and revelry.

    That, and the film Reservoir Dogs.

    Either way, the spirits produced in this craft distillery are well represented by both its label and legend, bold and unbothered. Corsair’s roots span Kentucky and Tennessee, an area best known for bourbon (and a good bit of moonshine too). But they’re forging their own path, branching out from the whiskey family tree drawn by their regional forefathers.

    In addition to the single malt and rye whiskies produced on Corsair’s pre-prohibition pot still (affectionately named “Ethyl”), the current lineup includes an American-style gin, a spiced rum, a barreled gin, and an absinthe.

    Each bottle is carefully crafted, developed in small batches with experimentation and care, an answer to the ever-repurposed question “what if we…?” What if we smoked our barley malt with a blend of peat and cherrywood and beechwood? What if we spiced our rum, aged our gin in a barrel, and then put another spirit back in the barrel? What if we ignored all the propaganda around absinthe and made it anyway, tinting it bright red with hibiscus?

    As we move through the space, we learn that our tour guide, Carter, has been doing this for years. He knows—and loves—what he’s talking about as ushers us through the small production floor and back across the courtyard to the tasting room for sampling.

    Each sip of Corsair’s offerings is different, surprising. The flavors build and compete and then dance back together, never shy, always interesting. The space that the distillery inhabits (location one of two) is similarly complex, an early-1900s automobile factory turned modern retail space and museum. Like the whiskey, it’s easy to get lost in and, more importantly, even easier not to mind.

    Slainte, y’all!

    In My Glass

    Corsair Distillery – Dark Rye
    American Rye Malt Whiskey
    Aged 1 Year; 42.5% ABV
    USA (Tennessee)

    On My Desk

    1961 Olivetta Lettera 22, Made in Scotland