Full Review

Chicken Cock

Chicken Cock
8 Year Old Double Oak Barrel Kentucky Whiskey

Category: American Whiskey

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 46%
92 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$99

Chicken Cock
8 Year Old Double Oak Barrel Kentucky Whiskey

Category: American Whiskey

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 46%
Gold color. Aromas and flavors of butterscotch hot roasted walnuts, caramel corn, butterscotch pudding, and anise with a round, vibrant, dry medium-to-full body and a tingling, interesting, medium-long finish conveying nuances of dark honey syrup on cornbread, maple syrup cut with honey, cinnamon and candied chocolate covered orange peel, and caraway seed. Rich barrel flavors dominate with lovely aspects of sweet caramel corn and candy citrus cresting and falling from the first sniff through to the finish.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Rich & Full
Aroma Aroma: butterscotch hot roasted walnuts, caramel corn, butterscotch pudding, and anise
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with nuances of dark honey syrup on cornbread, maple syrup cut with honey, cinnamon and candied chocolate covered orange peel, and caraway seed
Smoothness Smoothness: Tingling
Enjoy Enjoy: in cocktails, neat, on the rocks, with cigars and with drops of water
Cocktail Cocktails: Sazerac, Old Fashioned, Manhattan
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Rich barrel flavors dominate with lovely aspects of sweet caramel corn and candy citrus cresting and falling from the first sniff through to the finish.

The Producer

Grain & Barrel Spirits

The Producer
1250 Elizabeth Ave. Suite 1
West Palm Beach, FL 33480
USA

American Whiskey

Spirits Glass Glencairn Canadian Amber.jpg
Serve in a Glencairn Ganadian Whisky Glass
American Whiskey is a Beverage Testing Institute classification for specialty whiskies bottled in the United States that do not neatly fit other categories.
Some spirits producers in the U.S. have started crafting blends of different types or categories of whiskies together to create a unique flavor profile. Examples include products made from Single Malt Scotch Whisky blended with a high-rye Bourbon, or a 50/50 blend of straight bourbon and straight rye. Under federal TTB regulations these whiskies would fall into the 'Blended Whiskey' or 'A Blend of Straight Whiskies' categories. BTI gives these products the American Whisky category designation to better capture their producers' experimental intents to delineate them from the younger, lower-priced blended whiskies that often include neutral grain spirits and/or added coloring or flavoring.