Introducing Kentucky Nectar, Old Commonwealth Distillery's Second Premium Whiskey Expression
Relaunching a 57-year-old brand as honey-tinged dessert in your glass
Reviving Kentucky Nectar
Founded in 1865, Mellwood Distillery (so named for the street it resided upon) would evolve into General Distillers Corporation of Kentucky, and become the birthplace of Kentucky Nectar, decades ago. After a period of dormancy, Kentucky Nectar was last produced by Heaven Hill, as a private label brand for
While Kentucky Nectar wasn't produced within any prior iteration of Old Commonwealth Distillery, the new owners of the
While Joseph and partners
Kentucky Nectar Batch 1: Crafting the ideal honey-finish bourbon
"Finished bourbons shouldn't be too sweet," says LeBlanc. "We created a whiskey that's tailored to the premium whiskey drinker but still approachable to category neophytes. The honey is subtle; more refined than gimmicky." Most honey-finish bourbons use a high-rye mashbill, but wheat imparts a softer note that compliments the
Kentucky Nectar uses no artificial sweeteners, just real organic honey, placed within a new charred oak barrel. That presented a little problem when filling the barrels with the actual nectar. "Bees are attracted to the smell of honey," LeBlanc recalls, "so we're in the middle of getting the barrels filled with the honey and a colony of thousands of bees showed up and swarmed us all over the production facility."
Further, the large volume of honey used in each barrel added significant weight. For optimal finishing, the barrels then had to be hand-rotated on a regular basis. "That was a real labor of love, turning each barrel daily, just to get the honey in all the right surface area," says Joseph, who personally wrestled much of the lot.
Fending off bee swarms and manhandling barrels paid off. As part of market research, Old Commonwealth conducted a blind tasting, pitting Kentucky Nectar against several market-leading honey-finished whiskies. Seeking opinions on premium quality, proof point, and which dram consumers would recommend most, Kentucky Nectar won unanimously, across all categories. "Every participant commented they believed Kentucky Nectar to be the lowest proof," says Joseph. "At cask strength, it was actually the highest."
The SRP for Kentucky Nectar Batch 1 is
Kentucky Nectar Batch 1 // Tasting Notes
Nose: Charred oak, honey, crème brûlée, nutmeg, peaches steeped in brown butter. The charred oak, more prominent when first poured, softens over time, allowing the honey and sweet wheat notes to push forward.
Palate: It's char first, then a pop of sweet honey, baking spices, then cinnamon crumb cake drizzled with honey
Finish: Sweet cream vanilla arrives first, then a fast dry down, and the lingering note is honey graham crackers.
Kentucky Nectar // Overview
Classification: Kentucky Straight Bourbon Finished in a Honey Cask
Distiller: Undisclosed
Age: NAS
Proof: 106
Mashbill: 64% corn, 24% wheat, 12% malted barley
SRP:
Release date: Online OC VIP sale begins
For additional information, please email [email protected]
For press images, please click here.
About Old Commonwealth Distillery
Originally built in 1889, in
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/introducing-kentucky-nectar-old-commonwealth-distillerys-second-premium-whiskey-expression-302293455.html
SOURCE Old Commonwealth Distillery
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