Spirit Review: 2003 Evan Williams Single Barrel Vintage

Originally published at Tiki Bar Online

EW1Although there are many different drink choices to enjoy, bourbon seems to be a favorite for many around here at the blog. And with Bourbon County, Kentucky celebrating it’s 228 anniversary on October 17th, I thought “Why not review said drink?” And so I chose something from what is acknowledged as Kentucky’s first commercial distillery, Evan Williams. (To learn a little more about the history of bourbon, look no further than David’s own review of Elijah Craig 12 Year here.)

EW3For this review, I procured the 2003 Evan Williams Single Barrel Vintage from a recent tour of Heaven Hill Distillery. I even picked up a couple of Glencairn glasses while there to try something different than using the usual old fashioned or snifters I usually use. The whiskey inside the black waxed top bottle was oaked in 2003 and stored in the rickhouse for just under 10 years. These barrels are hand-picked from father and son master distillers Parker and Craig Beam. (Yes, I said Beam. Parker is grandnephew to Jim Beam.) My bottle is from barrel number 418, and was barreled on 5-15-03 and bottled on 5-8-13. Now, on to the notes!

  • Color: Nice golden amber
  • Nose: Molasses, oak, bit of vanilla and corn
  • Palate: Immediate honey with nutmeg, cinnamon and apricot, followed by some pepper and orange
  • Finish: Long warm spicy orange finish

EW1I first tried it neat and the bourbon seemed a little constricted. I then added a few drops of water to help open it up. That was when the fruit really started to present itself. More than a splash might dilute it too much.

EW2I enjoyed the bourbon and will definitely enjoy it again in the future. It’s something I would enjoy when getting together for the evening with friends, paired with a chocolaty dessert, or even by myself with a cigar. Find it in the mid $20 price range and you’re golden. I paid $32.99 at the distillery and that is a bit more than it should be, but then again I was in the gift shop.

The Hippie

Having grown up in the South, The Hippie was no stranger to tobacco. Although a city boy, his farming cousins were anything but, and visiting them frequently allowed him to watch the process of tobacco grow from seedling to harvest to curing in the barns. Both grandfathers enjoyed a pipe, and that opened up a new door to a more fragrant and sophisticated way to smoke. The smell was intoxicating. Then in the 90s, prominent athletes and actors really started to endorse cigar smoking. Just like pipe tobacco, the smell was unique and enjoyable, and promoted a more cultured way to enjoy tobacco. Remembering Michael Jordan and Scotty Pippen smoking cigars after winning another championship for the Chicago Bulls, or seeing actors like Jack Nicholson made cigar smoking mainstream. Friends, too, were enjoying cigars and the passion had started. Everything else is, as they say, history. He was a regular contributor to Tiki Bar Online before being a founding member of Leaf Enthusiast.

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