Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It is made with a traditional mash bill of corn, malted barley and approximately 10% rye. Once in Oregon, it is steeped with Oregon oak, then finished with glacier-fed spring water from Mount Hood and bottled at 90 proof. Trail's End is non-chill filtered. [2]
Town Branch Bourbon uses a mashbill of 72 percent corn, 15 percent malted rye, and 13 percent malted barley. [4] [not specific enough to verify] The mash is fermented in large cypress wood fermenting containers in Town Branch Distillery's glass, front room. Town Branch distills in two large, copper pot stills imported from Scotland.
Fighting Cock is a brand of Kentucky straight bourbon whiskey produced in Bardstown, Kentucky by Heaven Hill Distilleries, Inc. It is sold in 16 oz (1 pint or 375 ml), 750 ml, and 1-liter glass bottles. The mash bill for Fighting Cock bourbon includes corn, barley and rye, [1] and the product is aged for six years. [2]
What the Kentucky Vintage Distilled Spirits bill would do to bourbon sales. House Bill 439, filed by Rep. Matt Koch, R-Paris, would make it a Class A misdemeanor crime for a first offense ...
Rock Hill Farms is a single barrel bourbon whiskey produced in Frankfort, Kentucky, by the Sazerac Company. The brand is sold as a straight bourbon. It comes from Buffalo Trace Distillery's mash bill #2. [1] Similar Buffalo Trace Distillery bourbons that come from mash bill #2 are Elmer T. Lee, Ancient Age, and Blanton's. [2]
Most producers of so-called small batch Bourbons do not clarify exactly what they mean by the term. The producer of Maker's Mark says that the traditional definition is "A bourbon that is produced/distilled in small quantities of approximately 1,000 gallons or less (20 barrels) from a mash bill of around 200 bushels of grain". [26] [27] [28]
Proposed tax relief for Kentucky's bourbon makers was fast-tracked Monday in advancing in the state House, but local leaders living near some of the world's best-known distilleries were in no mood ...
US taxpayers paid for $1,000 of luxury booze drunk by White House aides at Mar-a-Lago, State Department emails obtained by a pro-transparency group show.