Woodford Reserve
Kentucky Straight bourbon, Official Bottling | 43.2% ABV
A Wee Trip Down Memory Lane
Can you remember when whisky became more than just a drink? When it became more than something you just considered a strong spirit that sat in the drink’s cabinet at home? When did you drink for taste and experience rather than a social catalyst while with friends? When did you notice and differentiate the aromas and flavours a dram could contain?
Sometimes it’s good to stop for a moment amid the many bottles and drams we enjoy these days, to pause and retrospectively look back at when that moment finally came about. What got me on to this miraculous liquid that’s merely crafted from water, barley (or other grains) and yeast? How can it be that distilling this grain mash, putting it into a wooden barrel and storing for several years can yield different results each time? It blows my mind and yet keeps me wanting more. To explore new flavours and experience new sensations with each dram.
The first drop of whisky that passed my lips was on the same night I tried my first alcoholic beverage. I remember it vividly: sipping a bottle of Rolling Rock American lager, watching live performances of Metallica with friends. Then, someone popped out a bottle of The Famous Grouse. I’ll admit now, I could just about stomach the beer I was having that night, so you can imagine my reaction when we were all passed, in turn, a shot of Grouse into the bottle lid. Just the one was enough for me that night. I didn’t fare too well after.
A few years passed and I was still listening away to Metallica. I began to develop a strong preference for Jack Daniel’s or Jim Beam and cola with a wedge of lime and a lot of ice. At this stage I liked whisky flavoured drinks but not whisky itself. At family gatherings someone would always break out a bottle of Jameson or Powers Irish whiskey, which I’d happily mix with some ginger ale for a refreshing drink. So branching out ever so slightly here, and answering yes to the question: “Hamish you drink whisky, don’t you?” Oh how little I knew back then.
Fast forward a few years, when I was a little older and arguably a little wiser. I came across a video that would have such an impact on my relationship with whisky than I ever could have imagined. The BBC ran the six-part series Stephen Fry In America which followed the English actor, broadcaster and comedian as he travelled through all 50 of the US states driving a London taxi.
There was one episode that immersed me greatly. Travelling into Kentucky and met with an intense downpour of rain, Fry felt he needed some “internal central heating” and what better place to find this than the Woodford Reserve distillery near the town of Versailles. This three-minute scene was so profound to me that it sparked a curiosity toward whisky. We were shown some of the distillery grounds, given a lovely shot of the Cyprus wood fermentation vats before a quick look at one of the three pot stills situated at Woodford Reserve. A quick side note here, the stills look much as they do in any Scottish distillery, but with quite a dull finish to them. I found this to look quite unique.
The best part, however, was the commentary from Master Distiller Chris Morris. Coupled with some background piano music from a 1915’s American saloon, it really set the scene and I was hooked. They entered a large warehouse displaying racks of wooden barrels of whisky. It then cut to a distinctive Woodford Reserve bottle being filled straight from the cask. It was almost picturesque, what an experience. It just got even better when Chris spoke about the whisky in a language “familiar with a wine or whisky connoisseur”. The description was indeed like a poem as Fry exclaimed, and I was hanging on every word. Could whisky really contain all these flavours or was he talking absolute nonsense? Surely, he added vanilla, caramel and cinnamon flavours to the spirit when bottling? Yes, I was clueless, but I wanted to know more, and taste these flavours for myself. I had to get a bottle of Woodford, or anything remotely related.
I touched on it briefly there, but Woodford Reserve is a Kentucky straight bourbon whiskey, owned by the Brown-Forman Corporation, who also own Old Forester Kentucky straight bourbon, Jack Daniel's Tennessee whiskey and Scotch distilleries such as GlenDronach, BenRiach and Glenglassaugh.
The distillery was originally founded in 1812 by Elijah Pepper. Known at the time as the Oscar Pepper Distillery, it was under the watchful command of Scotsman James C. Crow. Inverness born Crow is somewhat loosely credited as the originator of the sour mash process. The Pepper family sold the property to Leopold Labrot and James Graham in 1878. The pair owned and operated the distillery until it was sold to the Brown-Forman in 1941. Brown-Forman continued operations until the late 1960s, before selling the property to a local farmer. Brown-Forman then re-purchased the property in 1993, launching the Woodford Reserve brand to the spirits market in 1996. It celebrated landmark sales in 2021, surpassing one million cases.
On to the review!
Review
Label batch: 0948. Bottle no: 0259, 43.2% ABV
£27-£32 and widely available
Nose
Quite a nice touch of spice at first. A little spirit forward too, maybe some young distillate in here. Sugar sweetness presents itself. Think of maple syrup with some creamy custard. Weirdly, there’s a little trace of chocolate cherry liqueurs, which I’m not overly fond of. I’m getting loads of caramelised brown sugar and it’s quite wooden. It reminds me of my garden shed on a warm day. It’s quite distinct.
Palate
Welcoming sweetness on the first sip. It’s a thin taste however which is worrying. From the nose the syrup sweetness comes on to the tongue and coats the mouth. A touch hot, slight prickle on the tip of the tongue. That woody element on the nose is much more prominent when sipping. It takes over and dominates the palate. It’s pleasant. It turns quite astringent with a medium-ish finish of that wood. Going in for a second sip you get more of the brown sugar, with a much drier finish. I wouldn’t dare add water to it. It would drown being already thin enough.
The Dregs
You can pick this up on offer in the UK on occasion for £20, and it’s a great price for the experience you get from each pour. Although the price creeps over £30, I’d hesitate before purchasing again. It’s not something that is going to blow you away, but I feel it delivers in what a bourbon is. I do have a soft spot for Woodford as you can imagine from my ramblings above, but I won’t allow that to sway my verdict on this whiskey. Those staple notes of vanillas, creams, brown sugars welcome you with each sip and this is an expression you can enjoy without needing to examine in detail. It does mix nicely within cocktails or over ice on those hotter days (albeit few and far between in the UK). This is a bottle I’d happily keep stocked in my own opened collection and it’ll scratch that sweet tasting bourbon itch I have from time to time.
Check out the Stephen Fry In America scene I mentioned above, especially the ending. The whole series itself is very good.
Score: 5/10
What got you hooked into exploring more whisky flavours? What was your pivotal moment in enjoying this fantastic liquid? Share with us all in the comments below. HF
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