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10 Bourbons You Can Afford To Drink. Every. Single. Day.

Great blurb from Thrillist about some inexpensive bourbons to check out.






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If you could afford to drink very good bourbon every day, your life would be as amazing as Leonardo DiCaprio's, except instead of cruising around on boats full of models, you'd be drinking very good bourbon -- and other men would admire you instead of hating you. Here's the fun part: if you're not blinded by the notion that you have to spend boatloads of cash on maximally aged, hyper-limited editions, you can afford to drink very good bourbon every day. To guide you on your way, we tapped Derek Brown -- owner of Washington, DC's Southern Efficiency, Mockingbird Hill, and Eat the Rich -- as well as his Southern Efficiency bar manager J.P. Fetherston, to give us a list of bourbons they feel provide the most bang for the buck. And because bourbon's a journey, not a destination, they also gave us an easy primer on how to track down your own reasonably priced favorites.

http://www.thrillist.com/drink/nati...wild-turkey-four-roses-evan-williams-and-more


The Very, Very Quick Primer
1. Figure out what style you like, starting with the mash bill, which is not an outrageous bar tab rung up by Alan Alda, Loretta Swit, and Jamie Farr, but rather the grains that make up the whiskey. Your point of entry will depend on whether you prefer a mash bill that veers traditional (like Knob Creek), contains a fair amount of rye (e.g., Bulleit, whose bourbon contains 28% rye), or goes heavy on the wheat (prime example: Maker's).

2. Once you've figured that out, find a distillery you like and run through its full roster. The mash bill is only the beginning -- every operation has further distinguishing factors -- everything from the yeast strain they use, to how they treat their barrels. If you like a distillery's flagship bourbon, you're going to find you enjoy their less expensive offerings as well.

Okay, told you it'd be really quick. Now on to our Derek's picks -- complete with estimated retail price (it varies wildly depending on how cool your state is, etc) -- followed by a few additional notes from J.P.:


Wild Turkey 101 ($23)
"The kickin' chicken may have a undeserved bad reputation, but it's delicious stuff. Full of flavor and relatively cheap to boot, this is a cocktail maker's bourbon and not a bad sipper over ice."


Elijah Craig 12 year ($23-$27)
"For a fantastic 12-year-old bourbon you'll be paying about $25 dollars. Let me repeat, 12 year, $25. That's about $2 a year. Yeah."

Johnny Drum Private Stock ($35)
"This is a great sipper made in small quantities. It's bourbon with a spicy edge but also has the classic caramel, marzipan notes. I'll add to that peanuts. In fact, I'll drink this tonight with peanut soup."


Old Bardstown Estate Bottled (anywhere from $19-$29)
"This is a great 10 year old Bourbon that takes the place of the fancy stuff you've been drinking. Top whiskey writers like Jim Murray like it, I like it, you'll like. And you'll pay around $25, sound fair?"


Old Grand-Dad 100-proof Bottled in Bond ($20)
"This puppy is a bonded Bourbon under $20 bucks that's worth every penny and then some. But it needs ice. I use it in cocktails."


Four Roses Yellow Label ($20)
"I still remember ordering this in Spain and wondering when America was going to catch up. For the longest time, it was only for export. Now that we have it, drink it. It's a good value and, might I add, a very pretty bourbon, like a neighborhood girl who went abroad and came back a little more stylish and sophisticated."


Wild Turkey Rare Breed ($35-$40; $50 sometimes happens)
"This is the really good stuff for mid-level pricing. For my money, it's what I'd drink every day/night if I drank bourbon every day/night, which has happened on occasion."


Very Old Barton 100 ($14)
"When I take a break from Rare Breed, here's what I grab. It's cheaper. It's also robust. It's high octane but you don't feel it. It's the good stuff just not the really good stuff."

Evan Williams Single Barrel ($30)
"Single Barrel usually means expensive. Not here. Also, it's vintage dated. So, you can collect year by year. It's an incredible value and while the word smooth gets bandied about a lot this fits that word to a T. Evan Williams is smooth."


Pure Kentucky XO ($35)
"This is a slightly spendier 12-year-old than Elijah Craig, but what makes it worth it is that it displays some funkier, aged characteristics. Think butterscotch and cedar together. This is for the wine geek turned whiskey connoisseur who can't stop using terms like 'forest floor' to describe their wine."



Those few extra notes from J.P.
"Kentucky Bourbon Distillers -- aka Willett Distillery -- make excellent value bourbons. See Johnny Drum, Old Bardstown, Pure Kentucky XO, and Noah's Mill.

Heaven Hill has some of the best older stocks of bourbon and rye, and knows how to manage them. See Elijah Craig, Evan Williams, Parker's Heritage Collection releases, etc.

And finally, Wild Turkey is the great, under-appreciated producer of old-fashioned, no frills bourbons and ryes out there. To all the youngsters who ripped too many shots of 101 in college: give it another go."
 
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Nice list - I agree with most and want to try the rest! XO sounds mighty interesting. I expected to see a wheater but that is not a fault.
 
I've only had Wild Turkey and Four Roses Yellow, so looks like I got some shopping to do. Elijah Craig 12 looks to be first on the list. Though I hope it's a little more graceful than Jim Beam Black 8 year, which I find to be slightly bitter overly charry.
 

Claudel Xerxes

Staff member
For around those prices, I only have three that I ever consider buying anymore:

Woodford Reserve

Jim Beam Black (8 year)

1792 Ridgemont Reserve

To my palate, none of bourbons you've mentioned compare to the three I've just listed. That's just my preference.
 
"Kentucky Bourbon Distillers -- aka Willett Distillery -- make excellent value bourbons. See Johnny Drum, Old Bardstown, Pure Kentucky XO, and Noah's Mill.
Willett Distillery may be entitled to the name as they were once a distillery and started to reopen in 2012 but the bourbons currently on offer from them were sourced from elsewhere... some say Heaven Hill. My gripe here is that they use names like "Noah's Mill Distillery" on their bottles giving the impression of a small independent distillery.... not so.

Good to see Turkey getting some love for once, 101 is one of my staples as is their 101 Rye. Rare Breed is excellent and as a plus, they're not trying to pull any marketing BS.
 
I have tried several budget minded bourbons. My favorite right now is Rebel Reserve, mild enough I can drink it straight usually over ice. Good list above though, had several of them in the past (Rare Breed would be my choice).
 
Just by chance today I saw this thread and a local liquor store is on discounted weekend. So, I got two of the recommendations, plus Monkey Shoulder just because I've heard good comments. What do guys have to say about MS?
I don't think I've had any of these before. We'll see how it goes.




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Just by chance today I saw this thread and a local liquor store is on discounted weekend. So, I got two of the recommendations, plus Monkey Shoulder just because I've heard good comments. What do guys have to say about MS?
I don't think I've had any of these before. We'll see how it goes.



Big fan of Monkey Shoulder. Has a nice sweet, almost caramel taste with a hint of fruit. As it says on the bottle it's a blended Scotch that uses Speyside whiskies (Balvenie, Kininvie and Glenfiddich) so it may not be the ideal Scotch for the single malt purist or for those who like something smokey.

But for around $30 I think it's the best blended Scotch out there in terms of bang for your buck quality. I ran out of it just before Xmas so it's probably time to pick another bottle.
 
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I have tried Wild Turkey 101 and found it quite nice. Currently I have a bottle of Four Roses yellow label and Old Granddad Bonded waiting to be tried. I am now using Evan Williams 1783 and it is very good.
 
+1 on the Evan Williams Single Barrel. A lot of people are turned of just at the look at the name, probably because of his less liked brother. But the EWSB is a really good whiskey...especially for the price.
 
+1 on the Evan Williams Single Barrel. A lot of people are turned of just at the look at the name, probably because of his less liked brother. But the EWSB is a really good whiskey...especially for the price.

Agree with this about EW Single Barrel. By far, best of this lot. IMHO, Buffalo Trace and Makers Mark should be on this list, as they are often on sale and easily in this price range!
 
Big fan of Monkey Shoulder. Has a nice sweet, almost caramel taste with a hint of fruit. As it says on the bottle it's a blended Scotch that uses Speyside whiskies (Balvenie, Kininvie and Glenfiddich) so it may not be the ideal Scotch for the the single malt purist or for those who like something smokey.

But for around $30 I think it's the best blended Scotch out there in terms of bang for your buck quality. I ran out of it just before Xmas so it's probably time to pick another bottle.

Thanks Dave,
I tried a bit of all three of them last night. So far I like Wild Turkey the best, followed closely by Monkey Shoulder and Elijah in last place. I like to pour it over a big piece of ice so the watering down stays low.
How do guys drink this kind of bourbon?
What do you think about whisky rocks?
 
+2 on Evan Williams Single Barrel. And every year's release had a very different character. I like to try them side by side.
 
For around those prices, I only have three that I ever consider buying anymore:

Woodford Reserve

Jim Beam Black (8 year)

1792 Ridgemont Reserve

To my palate, none of bourbons you've mentioned compare to the three I've just listed. That's just my preference.

Looks like I found a drinking buddy, lol. I concur, especially when it comes to Black and 1792.
 
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