Wheated
bourbon
Swap rye for wheat and bourbon gets gentler, softer, and sweeter — the style behind some of the most sought-after (and hyped) bottles in the world.
Wheat instead of rye
Wheated bourbon
- Wheat replaces rye as flavoring grain
- Soft, gentle, rounded
- Corn sweetness and oak lead
- Maker’s Mark, Weller, Pappy
High-rye bourbon
- Rye as flavoring grain
- Spicy, dry, assertive
- Pepper and clove lead
- Four Roses, Bulleit
The wheated lineage — and the hype
The Maker’s Mark / Weller / Pappy Van Winkle family defines the wheated style: soft, rounded, corn-and-caramel forward, with many arguing it ages especially gracefully. Because wheat is gentle, there’s nowhere for flaws to hide — a well-made wheater is seamless.
Wheated bourbon is also where price detaches from the glass. Pappy Van Winkle and certain Weller bottles trade on the secondary market at many multiples of retail — driven by scarcity and reputation far more than blind-tasting superiority. Excellent whiskey, often; worth 10x a standard wheater, rarely. Hold that thought for Session 19.
Questions
Flashcards
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From memory:
- Which grain does a wheated bourbon swap in, and for what?
- How does wheat change the flavor versus rye?
- Name the defining wheated lineage.
- Why are wheated bourbons often said to age gracefully?
- What does Pappy’s secondary price mostly reflect?
Rye
whiskey
Cross the 51% line with rye instead of corn and you’ve left bourbon for its spicier sibling. Rye is the category the craft-cocktail world brought back from near-extinction.
Rye whiskey vs bourbon
Rye whiskey
- ≥51% rye
- Spicy, dry, herbal/mint
- The bridge to the wider whiskey world
- Rittenhouse, MGP 95/5 brands
Bourbon
- ≥51% corn
- Sweet, round, caramel
- The American baseline
- Buffalo Trace, Maker’s Mark
The key distinction to keep straight: a high-rye bourbon (Session 9) is still majority corn with a lot of rye seasoning; a rye whiskey is majority rye. The latter is drier, spicier, and more herbal — corn sweetness recedes and pepper, clove, and mint take over.
MGP and the cocktail revival
Rye nearly vanished after Prohibition, then came roaring back with the craft-cocktail renaissance — bartenders needed its spice for classics like the Manhattan and Sazerac. Much of that revival was fueled by sourced rye from MGP in Indiana, whose 95% rye / 5% malted barley mash bill appears under dozens of brands (Session 18).
Rye is the natural bridge from bourbon to the wider whiskey world — same American roots and production logic, but a different dominant grain. Once rye makes sense, Scotch and world whisky (Session 20) are a smaller step.
Questions
Flashcards
Lock it in
From memory:
- What mash bill percentage defines rye whiskey?
- How does rye whiskey differ from a high-rye bourbon?
- What is the famous MGP rye mash bill?
- Why did rye whiskey nearly disappear, then revive?
- Name a classic rye cocktail.
Tennessee
whiskey
It meets every rule for bourbon — then does one extra thing. That single step, charcoal-mellowing, is why Tennessee whiskey insists on its own name.
The Lincoln County Process
Click through what sets Tennessee whiskey apart:
Technically, Tennessee whiskey meets every federal bourbon requirement. But by state law and trade agreement it must also be charcoal-mellowed (the Lincoln County Process) and made in Tennessee — so producers market it as its own category. It’s the clearest case in American whiskey of a legal definition and a marketing identity diverging.
Questions
Flashcards
Lock it in
From memory:
- What is the Lincoln County Process?
- Does Tennessee whiskey technically meet the bourbon definition?
- Name the two dominant Tennessee producers.
- What does charcoal-mellowing do to the spirit?
- How does George Dickel’s method differ from Jack Daniel’s?