Full Review

Wild Call

Wild Call
4 Year Old Small Batch Tennessee Whiskey

Category: Tennessee Whiskey

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 40%
87 Points
Silver Medal
Highly Recommended
$19

Wild Call
4 Year Old Small Batch Tennessee Whiskey

Category: Tennessee Whiskey

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 40%
Gold color. Aromas and flavors of candy corn, light maple syrup, cream soda, and sandalwood with a satiny, vibrant, dry light-to-medium body and a tingling, interesting, medium-length finish with accents of cream soda, plantain chips, and honey roasted peanut. A pleasant and easy drinking sipper; soft and rounded flavors that will balance nicely in cocktails or go down dangerously smooth on the rocks.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Juicy & Smooth
Aroma Aroma: candy corn, light maple syrup, cream soda, and sandalwood
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with accents of cream soda, plantain chips, and honey roasted peanut
Smoothness Smoothness: Tingling
Enjoy Enjoy: in cocktails, neat and on the rocks
Cocktail Cocktails: Sazerac, Old Fashioned, Manhattan
Bottom Line Bottom Line: A pleasant and easy drinking sipper; soft and rounded flavors that will balance nicely in cocktails or go down dangerously smooth on the rocks.

The Producer

Mach Flynt Inc.

The Producer
1020 Pujo Street
Lake Charles, LA 70601
USA
1 337-794-0572

Tennessee Whiskey

Spirits Glass Glencairn Canadian Amber.jpg
Serve in a Glencairn Ganadian Whisky Glass
Tennessee Whisky must contain a minimum of 51% corn, be produced in Tennessee, be distilled at less than 80% ABV (160 proof), filtered through a bed of sugar maple charcoal, and be aged for a minimum of two years in new charred barrels.

The Taste: The taste descriptors for Tennessee whisky tend to parallel those of its Kentucky cousin. The distinction and the difference comes on the finish which is long, clean, and very, very smooth—a result of the final sugar maple charcoal filtration. Legally, Tennessee whiskeys could be sold as Bourbon; but the two Volunteer State distillers are proud enough of their “sipping whisky” to insist that the difference be known to all.

Tennessee whiskey is a first cousin of Bourbon, with virtually an identical history. The same sort of people used the same sort of grains and the same sort of production techniques to produce a style of whiskey that, remarkably, is noticeably different. The early whiskey distillers in Tennessee, for reasons that are lost in the mists of history, added a final step to their production process when they began filtering their whiskey through thick beds of sugar maple charcoal. This filtration removes some of the congeners (flavor elements) in the spirit and creates a smooth, mellow palate. The two remaining distillers in the state continue this tradition, which a distiller at the Jack Daniel’s Distillery once described as being "same church, different pew."