Country:
USA
Brand:
Jack Daniels Single Barrel
Type:
Whiskey (Tennessee)
Age: NAS (Usually over 4 Years)
Alcohol:
47%
Colour:
Deep Reddish/Full Gold
Nose:
Sweet Corn, Maple Syrup, Charred Oak, Vanilla, Spice (White Pepper), Acetone,
Banana, Furniture Wax and Butter. A bit of Alcohol is present what can be
expected when bottled at 47%. The Nose is a more mature version of the Old # 7.
After a while I get additional fruit (Peach). Quite nice. Need a little time to
open up.
Taste:
Cinnamon, Rye, White Pepper, Charred Wood, Vanilla, Toffee, Cigar Box, Cherries
and Licorice.
Finish:
Quite long. Dry, Spicy and Sour with Lemon, Licorice, Walnuts and Rye. Bit of
Maple Syrup is the only sweet component.
I
added a couple of drops of water to the whiskey that suppressed the Alcohol and
the White Pepper on the Nose. It becomes sweeter and mellow with more Cinnamon,
Maple Syrup, Sweet Corn and Caramel. Taste and Finish just mellow down a bit.
You can certainly experiment with a little water here.
Rating
82
Nose: 21.5 – Taste: 20 – Finish: 20– Overall: 20.5
General
Remarks: The Jack Daniels Distillery is located in Lynchburg (Tennessee). It
was indeed founded by a man called Jack Daniel in 1866 and it stayed in the
family until 1956 when it was bought by Brown Forman from Kentucky.
The
Single Barrels that are chosen for this expression are selected from the uppermost
floors of the warehouses located on the hills surrounding the distillery.
During the year these floors endure extremes in temperature resulting in very
aromatic and smooth whiskeys. Each bottle is hand–labeled and marked with the
number of the Barrel, the Rick and the date of bottling. In this case I’m
tasting bottle # II-5199 from Rick # L-2 that was bottled on the 13th
of October 2011. The mash bill for this whiskey consists of Corn, Barley and
Rye.
Drinking
Experience Neat: Good
Drinking
Experience on the Rocks: Very Good
Conclusion:
I found this Single Barrel to be in line with the general taste pattern of the
Old # 7. It’s a bit more mature and polished than # 7 but not too smooth like
the Gentleman Jack. It certainly benefits from the higher Alcohol percentage of
47%. If the Old # 7 would be bottled with the same percentage, it would be very
difficult to tell them apart in a blind tasting session. Having said that, the
nose of this Single Barrel was more interesting and mature than both Old # 7
and Gentleman Jack. The Peach tone was very convincing. And the colour is
really beautiful. And it tastes great with Ice thanks to the 47% Alcohol. Is it worth all the extra money? I don’t think so. Despite
the very nice bottle and packaging. In the end, I think that’s a compliment to
the producers of Jack Daniels. It means that they have a very adequate standard
expression with the Old # 7.
Jan
van den Ende September 10, 2012
Nice review Jan. Since I'm in the US, I have no excuse for not having tried this yet.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments Josh!
ReplyDelete