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The exact mash bill is kept a secret but word on the street is that it’s a fairly low-rye mash bill with 12 to 15 percent rye. #4 barrel char. Entry proof is 125 proof/62.5 percent. This is ...
This Maryland whiskey (though part of it is still sourced from Indiana) is two rye mash bills that are put together for maximum ryeness. The low and high rye whiskeys are aged four to six years ...
The new BTAC entry will be 100 proof, aged longer than the standard E.H. Taylor Small Batch, and built on Buffalo Trace’s low-rye mash bill, though final tasting notes and age details remain under ...
The core rye expression is a blend of two mash bills, high rye and low rye, aged from four to six years. There are also a slew of cask-finished expressions, and this fall’s release docket is ...
There's whiskey with relatively low amounts of rye in the mash bill, often somewhere just above the legally required 51 percent, and then there's whiskey with 95 percent rye grain and 5 percent ...
its rye whiskey is a blend of a high rye and a low rye whiskey. The specific mash bill is not disclosed. Since the original whiskey was crafted at MGP, however, it is likely a blend of MGP’s ...
However, they have confirmed that the whiskey is made from Buffalo Trace’s low rye mash bill #1 and will be aged longer than E.H. Taylor Small Batch. Gear Patrol Buffalo Trace hasn’t revealed the ...
This initial low-rye whiskey was blended with additional ... year old barrels of Willett straight rye whiskey with a 74% rye mash bill. The barrels were pulled from Willett warehouse A, South ...