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The Best American Single Malt Whiskeys Of 2023, Ranked

Best American Single Malt Whiskey 2023
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One of the fastest-growing sectors of the American whiskey industry is American single malt whiskey. It feels like everyone in the distilling game is getting in on the style. Not only did 2023 see a surge in great American single malts from brands that focus on the malted barley-based style, but the biggest names in the business also threw their hats in the ring with excellent additions to the genre.

All of that makes calling out the 30 best American single malt whiskeys a fun and refreshing prospect as 2023 comes to a close. And I’m doing exactly that below.

For this end-of-the-year “best of” list, I’m calling out 30 American single malt whiskeys that made a splash this year. I’m including whiskeys that I’ve been lucky enough to taste in my day-to-day as a whiskey critic, judge, and consultant. And while I’ve tasted a lot this year (well over 2,000 whiskey pours), even I have blind spots. Still, these whiskeys represent brand-new releases of 2023 or 2023 batches of whiskeys that have become mainstays.

When it comes to ranking these whiskeys, it’s all about taste. That means that I’m focusing on the depth of the profile — since all of these whiskeys are well-made (that’s a sort of given since they’re already on this particular list). “Depth” simply means that that flavor profile goes beyond the basic and delivers that something more. These are the whiskeys that surprise, take you on a journey, and leave you wanting another pour.

Let’s dive in!

Also Read: The Top 5 UPROXX American Single Malt Whiskey Posts Of The Last Six Months

30. Jack Daniel’s American Single Malt Oloroso Sherry Cask

Jack Daniel's American Single Malt Oloroso Sherry Cask
Brown-Forman

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $99

The Whiskey:

Jack Daniel’s has been toying with American single malt for over a year and has finally pulled the trigger on a permanent expression for retail shelves (albeit just on travel retail shelves… for now). The whiskey in the bottle is a 100% malted barley juice (that’s charcoal filtered) that was aged in new oak for over half a decade before being transferred into huge Oloroso sherry casks (from Tonelería Páez Lobato) for even more mellowing.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose draws you in with a sense of plums, dates, and figs swimming in brandy next to toffee rolled in roasted almond and dipped into dark chocolate with a hint of spiced wine cut with molasses and fresh green chili pepper.

Palate: The dark chocolate attaches to the black-tea-soaked dates with plenty of nutmeg, cinnamon, and allspice next to malted chocolate spiced holiday cakes and a nice flourish of marzipan just kissed with pear oils.

Finish: The end has an almost woody dark chocolate vibe with the green chili making a comeback with a deep leatheriness and nice maltiness.

Bottom Line:

This is a legitimately tasty American single malt that leans into its Tennessee whiskey roots with a darker fruitiness. Overall, this is a nice sipper that will pleasantly surprise. The only reason it’s last on this list is that it’s Duty-Free only and a little harder to get for the average U.S. consumer (unless they travel internationally, of course).

29. Clermont Steep American Single Malt Whiskey

Clermont Steep
Beam Suntory

ABV: 47%

Average Price: $65

The Whiskey:

This new release from James B. Beam in Clermont, Kentucky is Beam’s foray into the world of American single malt whiskey. The juice was crafted from 100% American malted barley and fermented with Beam’s proprietary yeast strain. That whiskey was left for five years to mellow in toasted barrels that were barely charred. The final product was batched and proofed down before bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a toasted caramel maltiness that’s akin to a nice bowl of bespoke porridge cut with salted toffee syrup and a nice dollop of butter with a hint of chocolate-covered caramels in the background.

Palate: The palate is luscious yet light with a Kentucky winter spice bark vibe next to a bowl of Cream of Wheat with a hint of honey and nasturtium as a counterbalance.

Finish: The end leans into the Kentucky wood spice with a nice hint of pear orchards and soft chewing tobacco just kissed with chili pepper spice.

Bottom Line:

Beam’s first stab at American single malt whiskey is very crafty and very Kentucky Beam. There’s a nice dark fruity spiciness that’s bolstered by bold graininess. This is 100% its own thing and will lead you down a unique path compared to Beam’s bourbons or ryes. That path will be malty but just familiar enough to catch your attention though, especially in citrus-forward cocktails.

28. Broken Barrel Luciferous American Singel Malt Whiskey

Broken Barrel Luciferous
Broken Barrel

ABV: 61.3%

Average Price: $56

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is made from 100% Indiana single malt whiskey. Those barrels are then re-barreled into Amaro and French oak casks for final maturation. The final blend is a mix of 80% Amaro barrels and 20% French oak before and bottling at cask strength.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a sense of fresh squash with a good dose of winter spices, light caramel, and wet malts rounding things out.

Palate: The taste has a moment more of that fresh squash before hitting a note of intense chili pepper spiciness that buzzes hard on the palate with a sense of coconut and banana next to woody spice.

Finish: There’s a fair amount of spice at the end but the ABVs push past a pleasant buzz toward rich botanicals with lingering fruit, vanilla, and spice.

Bottom Line:

This was made for mixing up killer cocktails. That hefty spice and botanicals with some tropical fruit help this feel like a tropical cocktail base with a whiskey vibe in place of a rummy one. Plus, that high ABV will give your fruity and spicy cocktails a hell of a kick.

27. Yellowstone American Single Malt Whiskey 108 Proof

Yellowstone American Single Malt
Luxco

ABV: 54%

Average Price: $54

The Whiskey:

This new whiskey from Limestone Branch Distillery is a sourced single malt from Indiana. Four-year-old barrels of the malt whiskey were sent down to Kentucky where Stephen Beam masterfully blended and bottled this whiskey.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: A light sense of sweet Cream of Wheat opens the nose with a dollop of honey and peach next to stewed kiwi with nutmeg and a very fleeting sense of walking through a garden shop.

Palate: Spiced malts and stewed pears lead to more honey, dry dates, and a hint of fresh pear with a soft woody vanilla underbelly.

Finish: That woody vanilla drives the smooth finish with a hint of cinnamon bark, nut cake, and some pear cider.

Bottom Line:

This is a fruit-forward malt with a nice hint of nutty wood spice to give it a nice warmth. The earthiness up top helps this go beyond the ordinary while making it a nice candidate for citrus-forward cocktails.

26. Virginia Distillery Co. Scholar’s Craft American Single Malt Whiskey Coffee Cask

Virginia Distillery Co. Scholar's Craft
Virginia Distillery Co.

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $69

Whisky:

This new release from American single malt titan, Virginia Distillery Co., is more than just a coffee-finished whisky. The actual whisky in the bottle is a 100% malted barley whisky that’s aged in ex-bourbon casks. Those barrels are vatted and then re-barreled into ethically sourced, small-batch coffee barrels for a short final maturation.

The ripple here is that 100% of the proceeds from the sales of this whisky go to support the newly endowed Angela H. Moore Women In Distilling Scholarship at Appalachian State University. The $100,000 endowment is from a women-owned and operated distillery to help bring more women into the industry, which makes this a must-buy on that merit alone.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a creamy bourbon buttercream with deep vanilla next to sour yet creamy espresso bitterness countered by cinnamon-spiced dark chocolate

Palate: Soft mocha lattes drive the taste toward sharp winter spices — clove, allspice, and nutmeg dominate — next to salted dark chocolate and a hint of malted biscuit dipped in vanilla syrup.

Finish: The end leans into the espresso bitterness with a nice note of dark chocolate and cinnamon gingersnaps.

Bottom Line:

This is a wonderfully balanced whiskey that nails the finish. Try this over a rock first to get a nice creaminess to the coffee-forward finish and then mix this into a cracking espresso martini.

25. Lost Lantern 2023 Single Cask #2 Westland Distillery American Single Malt Finished in Red Wine Cask 8 Years Old

Lost Lantern Single Cask #2
Lost Lantern

ABV: 53.8%

Average Price: $139

The Whiskey:

Cask #2 of Lost Lantern’s first 2023 releases is a Washington state single malt made from 70% Great Western “Pure WA” Pale malt, 13% Briess Extra Special malt, 9% GW Munich malt, 4% Thomas Fawcett & Sons Brown malt, and 4% TF&S Pale Chocolate malt. That mix of malts is fermented, distilled, and aged in lightly toasted/heavily charred ISC Cooper’s Select barrel. After five years, the whiskey was re-barreled in a first-fill Washington Cabernet Sauvignon cask for an additional three years of mellowing before bottling 100% as-is in only 185 bottles.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Dried cherries and sultanas mingle with spiced red wine-soaked oak and a hint of old leatheriness on the nose.

Palate: Dark berries and leather lead to clove and allspice woody spice with a hint of pine dank and vanilla cookies.

Finish: Those woody spices and dark berries drive the finish toward soft vanilla and moist nuttiness with a hint of sweet vermouth.

Bottom Line:

Lost Lantern has a knack for picking exemplary single barrels from deeply devoted distillers around the nation. This is a prime example and a great place to dive into 2023’s single malt single-barrel picks. Yes, this will be hard to find now, but worth seeking out for a pour in a good whiskey bar as a slow sipper.

24. Westward American Single Malt Whiskey Single Barrel Selection Grand Cru Sauternes Cask

Westward Whiskey Single Barrel Select
Westward Whiskey

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $99

The Whiskey:

This is Portland’s classic American single malt taken up a level. After years of resting, a single barrel was re-barreled in a sauternes cask from France’s Grand Cru Classé estate. 14 months later, Westward bottled that whiskey with a kiss of local water.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This has a deep nose that takes you on a journey through green chili, soft caramel, burnt orange peels, grilled peach, summer flowers, and danish filled with vanilla cream and red fruit compote.

Palate: There’s a sharp cherry soda on the palate with a hint of grapefruit, pineapple, and ripe peach next to bright ginger, soft coconut, and a hint of honeyed malt with a whisper of nuttiness.

Finish: That orange comes back on the finish with a soft fresh floral edge next to light cedar bark braided with chewy fresh tobacco dipped in honey and dusted with citrus zest.

Bottom Line:

Westward Whiskey is really coming into its own and this 2023 release is a prime example of that maturity. This is just good sipping whiskey with a great depth that balances fruity malt with great aging. Sip it slowly over a rock to let the creaminess and nuttiness of the whiskey shine.

23. Old Line American Single Malt Whiskey Finished in Caribbean Rum Casks

Old Line American Single Malt Whiskey Finished in Caribbean Rum Casks
Old Line

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $99

The Whiskey:

This Maryland whiskey starts as a great craft beer made with Premium 2 Row Malt and C-120 Malt. That beer is distilled and then aged for 4.3 years in new white oak. Those barrels are batched and the whiskey is re-barreled into Caribbean rum white oak casks for another eight months of mellowing.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a rush of woody vanilla and rich butterscotch with a hint of brown-sugar-spiked tobacco wrapped around Meyere lemons and bitter oranges.

Palate: That spice orange drives the palate with a matrix of winter spices — think cinnamon, star anise, allspice, and nutmeg — before moving toward soft vanilla-heavy spiced nut cakes.

Finish: The end leans into the dryness of the winter spice with the lemon and orange going slightly bitter with a tobacco chewiness.

Bottom Line:

This is another nice example of quality distilling and finishing done right. The rum comes through in all the right ways, making this a great candidate for mixing with fruity and spicy tropical cocktails.

22. Root Shoot Whiskey American Single Malt Bottled in Bond Aged 4 Years

Root Shoot Whiskey American Single Malt
Root Shoot

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $60

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is made from barley grown, harvested, and malted on a 5th generation family farm in Colorado. The whiskey is aged in new American oak for four years before batching and bottling at 100 proof.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This opens with a fresh honey-laced granola bar with a hint of nuttiness and chocolate next to earthy cherry bark, old cinnamon sticks, and whispers of clove (maybe even anise).

Palate: Poppy seed danishes and mocha lattes drive the palate with a sense of wildflowers and apple orchards while a flutter of old leather tobacco pouches and old whiskey cellars sneak in.

Finish: The end leans into the woodiness of the tobacco and oak with a nice touch of malted spice cakes and orchard fruit.

Bottom Line:

This is a classically hewn Colorado malt that’ll feel familiar for bourbon drinkers with a hint of craftiness (malty sweet grains). The overall vibe is sippable over rocks but shines best in a cocktail with a simple set of ingredients (think old fashioned).

21. Wolves The Malted Barley Series California Single Malt Whiskey Lot No. 2

Wolves The Malted Barley Series California Single Malt Whiskey Lot No. 2
Wolves

ABV: 55%

Average Price: $305

The Whiskey:

Lot 2 of this California Single malt just dropped and it’s an instant classic. The whiskey was made with imported Irish malts fermented with California ale yeasts. That juice was aged for 11 years before very small batching, which yielded only 2,010 bottles.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Nostalgia drips from the nose with oatmeal raisin cookies, old wicker porch furniture, lemon pepper, and dried red fruit leather next to spicy oak and soft apple cider.

Palate: Soft salted caramel and bruised apricot drive the palate with a sense of honeyed oats, old tobacco pouches, and rich malted vibes.

Finish: The end leans into the malted chocolate with a dried fruit feel with brandied pears and old oak staves leading to soft pipe tobacco and hints of floral honey.

Bottom Line:

This whiskey feels like a slow Irish single malt with a hint of American whiskey layered in for a deep and delicious effect. Overall, I’d use this for classic whiskey-forward cocktails or as a table whiskey for everyday sipping.

20. New Riff Sour Mash Single Malt Kentucky Single Malt Whiskey Cask Strength

New Riff Sour Mash Single Malt
New Riff Distillery

ABV: Varies

Average Price: $69

The Whiskey:

This new whiskey from New Riff is years in the making. The whiskey in the bottle is a blend of single malt whiskeys made with 100% barley mash bills (Golden Promise, Maris Otter, Chevallier heirloom barley, and Scottish peated barley malt) that are aged for seven to eight years in a combination of new charred oak, de-charred toasted oak, red wine casks, Portuguese brandy casks, classic sherried oak casks, and a few others.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Rich malted winter spiced cakes lead the nose toward chili pepper spice, old dried fruits (dates, prunes, figs) all dipped in floral honey, and a light sense of citrus (both candied and dried) before old oak, orchard bark, and fall leaves arrive with a sense of fermented fruit laying on the ground of that orchard.

Palate: The funky fruit and fall leaves drive the taste back toward rich vanilla and spiced malted fruit cakes with a light sense of pipe tobacco and old leather boots before floral honey gives way to bright nasturtiums.

Finish: The floral spiced honey gets malty on the backend with a hint of salt and rock candy before hot tobacco and dried red chili build at the end.

Bottom Line:

This is a bold and deeply bourbon-forward malt that has great balance. Overall, sip this slowly over a big rock and find all the hidden paths that open up with a touch of water. You’ll be rewarded for your time and patience.

19. Pacific Coast Spirits American Single Malt Whiskey

Pacific Coast Spirits American Single Malt Whiskey
Pacific Coast Spirits

ABV: 57%

Average Price: $150

The Whiskey:

This crafty whiskey from California sounds a lot like the mash recipe for a craft beer. The mash is made with Golden Promise Pale, Munich, Crystal 60, and Chocolate malts. Once distilled, that whiskey is left in new American oak for four years before batching and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: That new oak shines through with rich and oily vanilla that leads to butterscotch and summer fruit orchards with a hint of stewed peach cobbler cut with buttercream, cinnamon, and nutmeg.

Palate: Malted cookies arrive on the taste with walnuts and pecans next to more cinnamon and nutmeg with a hint of clove and dark cacao nibs over more stewed peach and a whisper of orange marmalade.

Finish: The end gets silky smooth with the stewed stone fruit and soft vanilla as the mild spice slowly builds toward a malty crescendo.

Bottom Line:

This whiskey feels much older than a four-year-old, which is a testament to the quality of the process. Overall, this works wonders as a great cocktail base right now but after a few more years this will be a top-tier sipper.

18. Hinterhaus Distilling American Single Malt Whiskey Discovery

Hinterhaus
Hinterhaus

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $67

The Whiskey:

This Sierra Nevada, California, distillery is all about local craft. They use local mountain water to ferment their local malt. The blend in this expression is 69% from a first fill ex-American single malt barrel and 31% from a heavy toast and medium char new American oak barrel. Both were aged at least 18 months before batching, proofing, and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Soft caramelized malts lead on the nose with layers of rich toffee, sharp winter spices, fresh mint, and berry cobbler.

Palate: The toffee gets a little salt on the palate as rich vanilla and pear pudding move the taste back toward sharp winter spice that is so cinnamon-heavy that it starts to feel like Red Hots.

Finish: That sharp yet sweet hot cinnamon is countered by vanilla malt and salted caramel over apple pie filling cut with cranberry.

Bottom Line:

This is an incredibly young whiskey all things considered and still hits the mark as nuanced and tasty. In the end, I’d use this primarily for classic cocktails. In a few more years, this will be a show-stopping sipper.

17. Colkegan Unsmoked American Single Malt Whiskey

Colkegan Unpeated Malt
Colkegan

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $69

The Whiskey:

This high desert whiskey distiller is renowned for making boldly peated malt. This version is the unpeated expression that was made as an experiment over four years ago. The unpeated whiskey was left in the back corner of a warehouse in new American oak and used bourbon barrels. Once those barrels hit the right mark, they were vatted and bottled with a hint of proofing water.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with velvety fruit (think apples, grapes, peaches) next to a hint of spicy woody warmth cut with brown sugar and cinnamon butter with a hint of nuttiness.

Palate: That nuttiness gets creamy on the palate as cinnamon toast and leathery dried apricots lead to a try nutshell and spice bark vibe with a hint of vanilla wafer.

Finish: The finish is lush and dry with a toffee and butterscotch creaminess cut with plenty of dry winter spice and orchard barks.

Bottom Line:

You can feel the Colkagan teams’ confidence in this whiskey. They know what they’re doing and hit it out of the park. This is as nuanced and tasty as a sipper over a rock and will shine in a fruit-forward cocktail.

16. Tenmile Distillery Little Rest American Single Malt Whisky

Tenmile Distillery Little Rest American Single Malt Whisky
Tenmile Distillery

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $224

The Whisky:

This new American single malt from New York is a grain-to-glass experience that highlights slow cooking and aging. The malt is made with 100% New York-grown barley that’s slow-fermented for seven days (about twice as long as the norm). After distillation, the hot juice is left to rest in Francois Freres barrels from Williams Selyem. Those barrels are small batched and whiskey is just touched with local water before bottling in Wassaic, New York.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Floral honey brightens the nose with a sense of fresh vanilla pods with a light warmth that leads to cinnamon bark, apple orchards, malted grains, and a light moment of whole dried chamomile flowers.

Palate: The honey gets creamy and vanilla-laced on the palate with a medley of leathery apricots, more soft summer florals, and a touch of woody spice that’s both bright and just touched by dried fruits.

Finish: The end has a mix of rum raisin and creamed honey with apple blossoms and a touch of malted grains cut with winter spice and salted butter.

Bottom Line:

This is another solid all-around sipper that will remind you of a subtle Highland malt with that floral honey and soft orchard fruit. Overall, take your time with this one and enjoy the soft and subtle maltiness in either a neat pour or cocktail.

15. Boulder Spirits American Single Malt Whiskey 2023 Limited Edition The 10 Essentials

Boulder Spirits American Single Malt Whiskey 2023 Limited Edition The 10 Essentials
Boulder Spirits

ABV: 49.5%

Average Price: $64

The Whiskey:

This new limited release from Colorado’s Boulder is a blend of five single malt casks. Former armagnac, tawny port, PX sherry, and new American oak were batched for this release after five to 6.5 years of aging. The whiskey was then cut with El Dorado spring water for bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a medley of pear and apricot (both dried and candied) with spicy forest honey, old leather, and malty Graham Crackers dipped in dark chocolate and just flaked with sea salt.

Palate: The palate is lush with a sense of eggnog spices and creaminess that gives way to pear brandy-laced marzipan and more of that forest honey next to warm maltiness.

Finish: The warmth leans into fresh green chili, nuttiness, and dark chocolate on the end (almost getting into mole territory) before leaning back toward spiced malts with a woody tobacco finish.

Bottom Line:

This is where we get into the crazy good pours. This is just great sipping whiskey neat or on the rocks.

14. Lost Lantern Single Cask Series Andalusia Whiskey Co. Triple Distilled Texas Single Malt

Lost Lantern Single Cask Series Andalusia Whiskey Co.
Lost Lantern

ABV: 52.6%

Average Price: $99

The Whiskey:

This single cask from Lost Lantern’s Fall 2023 series is a three-year-old single malt from a very new Texas distillery. The whiskey in this case is made with 100% 2-row malted barley and triple distilled a la Irish whiskey. A single honey barrel was picked by the Lost Lantern team and bottled 100% as-is, yielding only 177 bottles.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Notes of fresh chili pepper and leathery spiced fruit drive the nose with hints of stroopwafel (those honey waffle cookies from The Netherlands) and candy cane.

Palate: That candy cane turns to pure peppermint on the palate as subtle notes of clove and allspice mingle with creamy eggnog ice cream and malted honey crackers.

Finish: The finish is nice with a sweet spiciness akin to moist dark Christmas cookies with a touch of malted vanilla.

Bottom Line:

If you can find a bottle of this one, buy two. This is so unique and really leans into the holiday vibes of a good winter sipper (or cocktail base!).

13. Dogfish Head Let’s Get Lost American Single Malt Whiskey

Dogfish Head

ABV: 51%

Average Price: $64

The Whiskey:

All whiskey starts as beer so it makes a lot of sense when brewers start distilling. Beer industry darling, Dogfish Head, did just that with this expression. The base is 100% barley with a mix of Pale Malt, Crystal Malt, Coffee Kiln Malt, and applewood smoke Malt. That mash is fermented with Dogfish Head’s ale yeast before distillation, aging, proofing, and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Orange and honey mingle with a salted nuttiness next to vanilla pudding and a touch of dry cherry tobacco.

Palate: The palate has a touch of that fruity yeast next to a slight chili-choco vibe that leads back to the tobacco with a cinnamon Red Hot edge.

Finish: The finish leans into the dryness of the chili-chocolate’s bitter end — to the point of conjuring an espresso bean next to a touch of smoked cedar.

Bottom Line:

This is another whiskey that just works. It’s not overly wrought but delivers a deep and fun profile, especially as a dessert pairing pour. It’s kind of like a chocolate espresso for the end of your meal.

12. Stranahan’s Snowflake Colorado Single Malt Whiskey 2023 Batch #26: “Pyramid Peak”

Stranahan’s Snowflake Colorado Single Malt Whiskey 2023
Proximo Spirits

ABV: 47%

Average Price: $199

The Whisky:

This year’s Snowflake release from Stranahan’s is a small batch of great American single malts from the Colorado distiller. This year’s batch marries single malt finished in Islay quarter casks, rum, ruby port, sherry, and mezcal casks. Once those barrels were batched, the whiskey was proofed down with Rocky Mountain water and bottled otherwise as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Sharp white pepper and old oak drive the nose toward apple hand pies frosted in powdered sugar icing, rich salted caramel, and a sense of sweet grain porridge cut with molasses and butter.

Palate: The apple takes on a rich and spiced cider vibe on the palate as vanilla bean and caramel drive the taste toward soft herbs, smudging sage, and a moment of dried sweetgrass dipped in that spiced apple cider.

Finish: Dark and apple-laced tobacco drives the finish toward dark and sharp cinnamon bark, clove buds, and allspice berries before leading into a fresh sense of sweet apples off the tree and rolled in caramel.

Bottom Line:

Stranahan’s has really come into its own over the last couple of years, peaking this year in my humble opinion. This year’s Snowflake release (the brand’s most coveted single malt) is a richly built slow sipper that’s worth the effort to add to any bar cart.

11. Del Bac Arizona Single Malt Normandie Finished in French Calvados Casks

Del Bac Arizona Single Malt Normandie
Del Bac

ABV: 48.5%

Average Price: $90

The Whiskey:

This yearly limited release is a Whiskey Del Bac classic. The unpeated Arizona malt is pot distilled and then the juice ages in new American oak for a few years under the hot AZ sun. Those barrels are then batched and the whiskey is re-barrelled into ex-Calvados (French apple brandy) barrels for a final rest.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Salted caramel apple dances with sour cherry dipped in dark chocolate on the nose before a deep and rich dulce de leche with a light airiness arrives with hints of chili pepper-laced hot chocolate.

Palate: Freshly grated orange zest and more of that spiced hot chocolate drive the palate toward rich toffee with a touch of pear and maybe some peach.

Finish: Apricot jam and marmalade drive the finish toward more salted caramel apples and dark chocolate brandied cherry with a lush vanilla backbone.

Bottom Line:

This is a whiskey that knows what it is and delivers a great profile. Sip this slowly and add water as needed to let it bloom toward stewed apple and deep creaminess.

10. Westward Whiskey Milestone American Single Malt

Westward Whiskey Milestone American Single Malt
Westward Whiskey

ABV: 43%

Average Price: $249

The Whiskey:

Westward Whiskey has been patiently making some of the best American single malt in the country for years now. This is the culmination of all that work. The whiskey in the bottle is a batch of 21 barrels from their Solera system and includes the team’s absolute favorite whiskeys that they’ve produced over the years.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Notes of roasted almonds soaked in fresh piney honey drive the nose toward candied orange peels and candied cherry with a rich and salted toffee creamy underbelly.

Palate: Rum raisin and brandy-soaked plums lead on the palate toward apple cider spiked with real cinnamon bark and whole nutmeg next to black walnut cake, mincemeat pies, and a deep butterscotch candy vibe.

Finish: The cinnamon and nutmeg kick up on the finish as more prune, date, and fig lead to sticky toffee pudding and a lush vanilla foundation.

Bottom Line:

This feels like the end of a chapter for Westward Whiskey and the beginning of a new chapter all at the same time. This whiskey slaps and is a promise of great things to come, wherein Westward becomes one of the true top-tier American single malt distillers in the country.

9. Stranahan’s Diamond Peak Colorado Single Malt Whiskey Extra Anejo Tequila Cask 2023

Stranahan's Diamond Peak
Proximo Spirits

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $78

The Whiskey:

The second Diamond Peak release of 2023 is a 100% Colorado malt whisky. The whiskey barrels were five to eight years old (all-new American oak) and were batched and re-barrelled into Jose Cuervo’s Reserva de la Familia Extra Añejo Tequila for two more years of resting. Finally, those barrels were batched, proofed, and bottled.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This pops with a deep pink peppercorn next to floral honey (think wildflowers and mountain sage) next to soft salted toffee rolled in roasted almond and dipped in lush vanilla caramel.

Palate: That wild sage and lush toffee drive the palate toward a sense of old cedar planks, deep and dark berry leather, and a lush sense of vanilla over salted caramel and marzipan.

Finish: That creamy and lush vibe drives the end with more salted caramel, marzipan, and vanilla cream with a hint of honey-soaked dates and salted cinnamon candies with a whisper of rose-hued tobacco.

Bottom Line:

Again, Stranahan’s had a great year. This is a wonderfully nuanced and fun sipper that really blooms with a single big rock or a little water. This will also make a killer holiday whiskey-forward cocktail.

8. Lost Lantern Gentle Giant Balcones Distilling Texas Single Malt

Lost Lantern Gentle Giant
Lost Lantern

ABV: 57.6%

Average Price: $100

The Whisky:

This rare blend from Balcones via Lost Lantern is a batch of five-and-a-half super rare casks. The batch is made from single malts aged in a four-year-old double cask apple brandy cask, a three-year-old large European cask that dried outside for three years, another one of those casks but just a little older, a four-year-old ex-bourbon cask, and a half-full European oak cask that was exactly three years and 56 days old when it was dumped.

All of that whisky was vatted and bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This opens with Granny Smith apple skins over winter spice barks dipped in floral honey and dried next to orange wheels and Graham Crackers as a subtle hint of high-desert sage and mesquite lurk in the background.

Palate: The orchard-iness drives the palate with a sense of soft salted toffee cut with vanilla oils and dipped in dark chocolate orange sauce with a touch of roasted pecan and almond leading to a woody hint of old smudging sage and cedar bark.

Finish: Those orchard and desert woods mingle with soft caramelized malts that round out the finish with a hint of honeyed toffee and spiced apple fritter covered in buttery cinnamon icing.

Bottom Line:

Lost Lantern and Balcones is a perfect match and this is a wonderful sipper. The “gentle” moniker is taken very seriously, making this one of the easiest sipping whiskeys on the list that also delivers deep flavor notes that never feel like homework. Take it slowly with this one and you will be handsomely rewarded with a good time.

7. Virginia Distillery Co. American Single Malt Whisky Courage & Conviction Double Cask Reserve

Virginia Distillery Co. American Single Malt Whisky Courage & Conviction Double Cask Reserve
Virginia Distillery Co.

ABV: 48%

Average Price: $71

The Whiskey:

This new fall release from Virginia Distillery Co. features double asking. That means that the whiskey was aged a minimum of five years in first-fill bourbon casks and European red wine Cuvée casks before slow batching with a touch of water.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with deep honey and candied orange next to apricot jam over scones with a hint of malted spice and brandy-soaked oak staves.

Palate: Black Forest cake by way of honey-pear-floral malted crackers drives the palate toward winter spice barks, soft milk chocolate sauce, and a dash of lemon malt meringue.

Finish: Fresh gingerbread and soft oak round out the finish with a nice dose of spice, chocolate, and malt.

Bottom Line:

This is one of the best Scotch-style American single malts available today. If you’re already into subtle and fruity dark Highland malt, then this is going to be your jam. It also makes a hell of a whisky cocktail.

6. Triple Eight Distillery The Notch Nantucket Island Single Malt Whisky 12 Years Old

Triple Eight Distillery The Notch
Triple Eight Distillery

ABV: 48%

Average Price: $399

The Whiskey:

This is classic The Notch single malt made with Maris Otter barley. In this case, the barrels are left seaside for 12 years before batching, proofing, and bottling in slightly larger runs than the famed eight-year-old expression from the brand.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Creamy toffee with a flake of salt leads to red berries and stewed apples with a hint of floral honey, old oak staves, and cellar funk.

Palate: The taste is immediately pure silk and lush with a sense of creamy yet floral honey, creamed berries stewed in a pie, and malted vanilla wafers layered with nougat next to a fruit orchard on a bright summer day.

Finish: That orchard drives the finish toward a soft honeyed sweetness with a touch of apple and raspberry cobbler with a soft dollop of vanilla ice cream that’s just kissed with salt and caramel.

Bottom Line:

The Notch releases these whiskeys periodically. If you do come across them, this is the sweet spot of the lineup. Pour it into a Glencairn with a drop of water and enjoy the deep profile.

5. Westland Solum Edition 1 American Single Malt Whiskey

Westland Solum
Westland

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $183

The Whisky:

This special release from awards and industry darling Westland is made from a small batch of barrels. The whiskey — made from Skagit Valley Malting peated malt — is built from two new American oak barrels blended with a first-fill ex-bourbon cask. The barrels were 41 months old when they went into the bottle with a hint of local water.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Apple and strawberry pie drive the nose with a nice dose of soft and sweet cinnamon powder and a touch of tart rhubarb, smoldering cedar, and burning apple tobacco.

Palate: The taste leans into the herbal vibes with chamomile, wild sage, and a touch of white flower next to rye bread crusts, vanilla cream, and pound cake with poppy seeds.

Finish: The rye bread goes full pumpernickel on the finish with a hint of sourness next to creamy maltiness and floral honey.

Bottom Line:

This is a funky and fresh single malt from a now classic American single malt distiller. This is the bottle you grab when you’re looking for something that’s 100% terroir-driven from a specific region to the point of having its own vibe through and through.

4. The Macklowe American Single Malt Whiskey 6th Edition

The Macklowe American Single Malt Whiskey
The Macklowe

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $1,699

The Whiskey:

This is a super rare American single malt that’s filtered through a masterful Scotch whisky POV. The barrel was chosen by Master Blender Ian MacMillan and American beauty entrepreneur, socialite, and whiskey master Julie Macklowe. MacMillan and Macklowe chose a seven-year-old toasted barrel single malt aged in new American white oak in Kentucky. That whiskey was cut with local water and bottled as-is otherwise, creating only 237 bottles.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose is all about sweet oak sugars (think brown sugar and rock candy) with a sense of burnt orange, marzipan, and salted caramel next to this moment of spicy honey with a twinge of dried florals and pecans.

Palate: Bitter yet sweet orange drives the taste toward soft stick toffee pudding with good salted caramel, orange zest, and walnut next to real maple syrup and old woody holiday spice barks.

Finish: Those holiday spices blend with the marzipan and dried orange for a cake vibe that’s accented by soft malted whisky with a sense of bourbon cream.

Bottom Line:

This is a clean yet deep pour of American single malt meant for slow sipping. The best part is that while this feels very Highland malty, it still has this distinctly American whiskey vibe that takes this further than your average malt pour. Sip it slow and enjoy the ride.

3. Lost Lantern Single Cask #1 Westland Distillery American Single Malt 7 Years Old

Lost Lantern Single Cask #1
Lost Lantern

ABV: 52.8%

Average Price: $129

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is all about Washington state terroir. The mash is a local five-malt recipe that Westland is known for. This whiskey then spent seven years resting in one barrel from ISC Cooper’s Select line before Lost Lantern bottled the whole barrel 100% as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This opens with a bright sense of dark citrus oils and tropical fruits next to wet brown sugar, subtly spiced malts, and a hint of woody oak spices cut with dark chocolate powder.

Palate: That dark chocolate powder welcomes you on the palate with white pepper, eggnog spices, and dark espresso beans counterpointed with bright tropical citrus and starfruit next to caramel and vanilla buttercream.

Finish: That caramel and buttercream drive the finish toward a hint of sweet oatmeal cookie dough cut with clove and sharp cinnamon and just kissed with nuttiness and chocolate chips.

Bottom Line:

This Lost Lantern single barrel from Westland narrowly edged out Westland’s own release, but only barely. This is just delicious whiskey with a more American whiskey-forward feel that still holds onto that hint of fresh funkiness from the distiller.

2. Cedar Ridge Distillery The QuintEssential American Single Malt Whiskey Special Release “Portside”

Cedar Ridge Distillery The QuintEssential American Single Malt Whiskey Special Release "Portside"
Cedar Ridge Distillery

ABV: 58.6%

Average Price: $99

The Whiskey:

This new special release of Cedar Ridge’s now-iconic Quintessential American Single Malt takes that whiskey to new places. The base is the same 100% 2-Row Pale malted barely base that’s aged for six years in ex-bourbon barrels. Prime casks were then batched and then re-barreled into first-fill Ruby Port casks, first-fill Amontillado sherry casks, and new French oak casks. Those barrels were then vatted and the whiskey was bottled 100% as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose draws you in with a sense of pecan waffles with a sharp candied orange rind vibe next to sugar cookies frosted with almond and lemon oil-infused frosting, a touch of creamy chocolate, and a sharp slice of ginger soaked in maple syrup.

Palate: That candied orange takes on the ginger with a rock candy sharpness and sweetness before Nutella enters the equation over buttermilk biscuits with a deep butteriness that leans toward toffee and brandy-soaked cherries dipped in dark salted chocolate.

Finish: The pecan and chocolate combine on the finish with a deep woody winter spice, soft vanilla pancake, and candied orange feel before stewed pear and soft marzipan kick in with a mildly warming finish that leans into rich tobacco spice just kissed with dried red leathery chili.

Bottom Line:

This is one of the greats of the year, not just American single malt. It’s such an easy-going sipper that delivers deep flavor notes. If you’re looking for a wonderful dessert-adjacent pour, this is a great option.

1. Balcones Cataleja Texas Single Malt Whisky

Balcones Cataleja
Balcones

ABV: 59%

Average Price: $125

The Whisky:

This new release from Balcones down in Waco, Texas celebrates the distillery’s 15th anniversary. The whisky in the bottle is built from 100% Golden Promise malted barley. That whisky was then aged in a variety of old sherry puncheons that held Moscatel, Amontillado Dulce, Oloroso, and Palo Cortado sherries for decades. Once batched, the whisky was bottled as-is with a drop of proofing water.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Brandy-soaked dates, figs, and prunes pop on the nose with a hint of apricot jam, clove-studded oranges, cherry hand pies, and a note of soft pecan wood with this fleeting sense of … I swear … venison backstrap frying in butter in a cast iron skillet.

Palate: Those dates go hard on the palate as marzipan and salted cashews add a deep nuttiness with more of that clove-studded orange, a touch of lemon zest, and maybe some smoldering sandalwood next to eucalyptus and sage aromatic sticks.

Finish: A touch of smudging sage drives the finish toward grilled pineapple and peach with a touch of absinth herbs before a deeply creamy mocha latte leads to a scoop of black cherry ice cream.

Bottom Line:

This is another whiskey that could easily be one of the best overall whiskeys of the year. It’s that goddamn delicious. It’s also a hallmark of the great work Balcones has done with American single malt over the years and a promise of a bright and delicious future of American single malt from the Texas distillery. This is iconic whisky, folks.

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Glen Powell Was Sydney Sweeney’s Knight In Shirtless Armor After A Spider Bit Her While Filming ‘Anyone But You’

Glen Powell probably thought making a romantic-comedy like Anyone But You was going to be easy after working with Tom “That Guy Almost Died” Cruise. But that was before the rumors that he and Sydney Powell were more than just co-stars, not to mention the venomous spiders.

During an interview on Monday’s episode of the Today show, host Hoda Kotb asked Powell and Sweeney about a scene from Anyone But You where Sweeney is freaking out after she got bit by a spider. Not a prop spider, either, but a real one. “Well, the spider actually bit me in the middle of this scene but nobody called cut because they thought I was just making a very dramatic, interesting choice in this scene, and Glen was the only one who finally caught on,” Sweeney explained. “They thought I was acting but it actually bit me.”

Powell confirmed it was “a huge huntsman spider,” which First Aid Pro tells me is “one of the more harmless spider species you’ll find in Australia” (where Anyone But You was filmed), but the bite is painful, as “they’re big spiders with big jaws, after all.” A big spider is bad enough? But a big spider with big jaws? Absolutely not. No wonder Sweeney freaked out.

You can watch the Today interview above.

(Via Today)

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Despite Repeated Promises Of Sex And Violence, Zack Snyder’s ‘Rebel Moon’ Director’s Cut Will Be ‘Cleaner,’ Somehow

Rebel Moon Zack Snyder
Netflix

Because Zack Snyder is going to Zack Snyder, the filmmaker has been touting his new movie Rebel Moon: Part One – A Child of Fire and its inevitable R-rated director’s cut. While most director’s cut are an attempt to offset studio meddling to present a more auteur version of a film, Snyder was given carte blanche to create a separate version while making the sci-fi film for Netflix. In essence, he went into the production of both Rebel Moon films knowing he could present two different versions for each.

Snyder has repeatedly touted that the director’s cut will be R-rated and feature way more sex and violence, but ironically, he recently told Collider that it will be a “cleaner” experience:

“I think that’s one thing that you’ll see in the director’s cut that is different from the PG-13 version is the irony of a super hard R-rated sci-fi movie at this scale is cleaner in the R-rated version. In the PG-13, we push. It’s a hard PG-13. We push them to the ragged edge.”

Using Snyder logic, the PG-13 version will be rougher because he apparently tried to push the envelope on the rating before treading into R territory. As for how he went about that: Dog-man sex, apparently.

“The sort of sex and violence aspect of it, being able to understand that, like, for instance, when they go into the bar, it’s a brothel, right? It’s like a real brothel, and the dog-faced man wants to f*ck them. That’s what he wants,” Snyder said. “And so that wouldn’t happen in a Star Wars movie, you know?”

Was that a dig at Chewie? Because that really feels like a dig at Chewie.

Rebel Moon: Part One – A Child of Fire starts streaming December 22 on Netflix.

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Here Are The Musical Guests For ‘The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon’ This Week

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The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon returns this week with a slate of guests including Mark Wahlberg, Elle Fanning, Hugh Grant, Sydney Sweeney, Timothée Chalamet, Billie Eilish, Jessica Chastain, and Alanis Morissette. The musical guests include include Dogstar, Gracie Abrams, and Tate McRae. You can check out more on the musical guests for the week of December 11 – 15 below.

Carin León — Monday, December 11

Mexican singer-songwriter Carin León, whose music runs the gamut from from banda to country, released his most recent album Colmillo de Leche on May 19, 2023. He’s recently completed a tour of Central and South America and he’s promoting his single “Alchi Si” with Grupo Frontera.

Tate McRae — Tuesday, December 12

The former Uproxx cover star has had her big breakout in 2023, making her debut on SNL just ahead of the release of her new album, Think Later, which is out now via RCA Records.

Dogstar — Wednesday, December 13

Primarily known as “Keanu Reeves’ band,” the alt-band has been around since the early ’90s, but experienced a resurgence as the actor entered a career renaissance in the wake of becoming everybody’s favorite chill guy meme. They released their third album Somewhere Between The Power Lines And Palm in October.

Gracie Abrams — Thursday, December 14

Although Billie Eilish is billed as a guest on Thursday, she’s likely just coming on to discuss her Barbie soundtrack single “What Was I Made For?”‘s many, many award nominations. She’s ceding performance duties to Gracie Abrams, who’s still promoting her debut album Good Riddance.

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Netflix’s Era Of Streaming Dominance Might Be Coming To An End

murders
HULU

For a while, “Netflix” was almost synonymous with “streaming” and it became the standard for online watching and binging. It was, for a while, the only site out there (and the only place that had new episodes of Degrassi for a few years) but over the years, many other streamers began popping up. Almost too many! And now, Netflix is losing steam. Maybe they should have kept up those little red envelopes after all.

Hulu, Netflix’s cooler but bratty younger cousin with a slight attitude, is on track to beat Netflix, thanks to its combined power with Disney. According to new stats, (reported by Deadline) 35 of the 100 most popular streaming titles in Q3 were on Disney+ and Hulu, compared to just 29 Netflix titles. Max came third with 18, while Amazon clocked in with 11 titles. Maybe they need some more Bosch spinoffs.

But that’s not the only triumph: next year, Hulu/Disney is expected to surpass Netflix’ library with 9,578 combined titles. That’s about a thousand more than Netflix, though those numbers are subject to change as more and more shows disappear from streaming. It’s like a fun game trying to watch your favorite shows! But it isn’t fun.

Disney+ is currently in the process of buying out Comcast’s stake in Hulu and becoming its full owner. For those of you not interested in combining your Only Murder rewatch and your Loki marathon, it should be noted that the two will also exist separately.

It’s not that confusing when you realize that it’s just one of six verticals that Hulu/Disney have whipped up. Soon you’ll have a Hulu tier for every day of the week. Meanwhile, Netflix is still just Netflix.

(Via Deadline)

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Here Are The Musical Guests For ‘The Late Show With Stephen Colbert’ This Week

olivia rodrigo 2023
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The Late Show With Stephen Colbert has been enjoying a bit of a break, but the program is back in full force this week. New episodes resume tonight (December 11), so here are the musical guests for this week’s shows.

Olivia Rodrigo — Monday, December 11

Rodrigo has been all over late-night TV in the past, but this week will mark her first time doing Colbert. Her Late Show debut comes after a massive year that saw her serve as Saturday Night Live musical guest this past weekend and release her new album Guts earlier in the year.

The show’s interview guest will be Former United States Representative and potential presidential candidate Liz Cheney.

Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit — Tuesday, December 12

Isbell, meanwhile, has been on Colbert a handful of times since 2016. He and his 400 Unit released their latest album, Weathervanes, this June.

Also appearing on the episode will be The Color Purple star Taraji P. Henson.

Beyond Monday and Tuesday, no musical guests are currently scheduled to appear on The Late Show this week. On Wednesday the 13th, Colbert’s guests will be DC cinematic universe mainstay Jason Momoa and Leo co-writer and co-director Robert Smigel. Then, on Thursday the 14th, he’ll chat with Barbie director Greta Gerwig and All Of Us Strangers star Andrew Scott. There is no new episode of The Late Show set to air on Friday the 15th.

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Meryl Streep Just Broke A Notable Golden Globes Record Previously Held By, Uh, Meryl Streep

Meryl Streep Only Murders in the Building
Hulu

Meryl Streep just shattered a Golden Globes record previously held by, well, herself. The actress already held the record for the most Golden Globe nominations when she locked down her 30th nom for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy for Florence Florence Jenkins in 2013.

With her latest nomination for Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role on Television for Only Murders in the Building, Streep is now up to 33 nominations, according to the Golden Globes official website. However, it should be noted that Streep has only won eight times at the Golden Globes, so even though it’s Meryl we’re talking about, a win isn’t always in the bag.

Streep joined the hit Hulu series in Season 3 as Loretta Durkin, an aspiring Broadway actress and a love interest for Martin Short’s Oliver Putnam. During her time on the murder mystery show, Streep belted out a song called “Look For the Light” that racked up accolades for the actress, including from one of the song’s writer Sara Bareilles.

“It’s always nice when you know who you’re writing for because you can sort of tailor something to play to someone’s strengths,” Bareilles said in a press release promoting the song’s digital release. “There was so much tenderness in her vulnerability. She let that speak through her singing.”

Only Murders in the Building Seasons 1-3 are available for streaming on Hulu.

(Via PEOPLE)

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Nicki Minaj’s ‘Pink Friday 2 World Tour’: Important Info & Details

nicki minaj performance
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Nicki Minaj has announced her upcoming Pink Friday 2 World Tour. Here’s everything you need to know:

What Are The Dates For The Pink Friday 2 World Tour?

03/01/2024 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
03/03/2024 — Denver, CO @ Ball Arena
03/08/2024 — Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena
03/10/2024 — Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena
03/13/2024 — Phoenix, AZ @ Footprint Center
03/15/2024 — Inglewood, CA @ Rolling Loud California*
03/18/2024 — New Orleans, LA @ Smoothie King Center
03/20/2024 — Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena
03/22/2024 — Orlando, FL @ Amway Center
03/26/2024 — Charlotte, NC @ Spectrum Center
03/28/2024 — Newark, NJ @ Prudential Center
03/29/2024 — Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
03/30/2024 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
04/01/2024 — Washington, DC @ Capital One Arena
04/02/2024 — Baltimore, MD @ CFG Bank Arena
04/04/2024 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
04/05/2024 — Hartford, CT @ XL Center
04/07/2024 — Raleigh, NC @ Dreamville Festival*
04/10/2024 — Boston, MA @ TD Garden
04/12/2024 — Columbus, OH @ Schottenstein Center
04/13/2024 — Milwaukee, WI @ Fiserv Forum
04/17/2024 — Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre
04/18/2024 — Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
04/20/2024 — Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena
04/24/2024 — Chicago, IL @ United Center
04/27/2024 — Minneapolis, MN @ Target Center
05/02/2024 — Oklahoma City, OK @ Paycom Center
05/09/2024 — Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
05/11/2024 — Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center
05/12/2024 — Austin, TX @ Moody Center
05/25/2024 — Manchester, UK @ Co-Op Live
05/26/2024 — Birmingham, UK @ Resorts World Arena
05/28/2024 — London, UK @ The O2
06/01/2024 — Paris, France @ Accor Arena
06/02/2024 — Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Ziggo Dome
06/05/2024 — Cologne, Germany @ Lanxess Arena
06/07/2024 — Berlin, Germany @ Mercedes Benz Arena

When Do Tickets For Pink Friday 2 World Tour Come Out?

Tickets will be available for presale beginning Tuesday, December 12, with general sale beginning Friday, December 15.

How To Buy Tickets For The Pink Friday 2 World Tour

You can purchase tickets on Minaj’s website.

How Much Are Tickets For The Pink Friday 2 World Tour?

Ticket prices for the Pink Friday 2 World Tour have not been confirmed, but tickets for Nicki’s last tour in 2019 averaged $74.33 (expect to see that number increase a lot).

Will The Pink Friday 2 World Tour Have An Opener?

As of December 11, no opening acts have been announced.

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Here Are The Five Things You Have To Order At Taco Bell

Tacos
Uproxx/Shutterstock

Eating at Taco Bell is a truly unique experience. I’m not going to sit here and tell you it’s the greatest Mexican food your money can buy. That would be absurd. I’m also not going to proclaim it as the greatest fast food restaurant. But for what it is… well, it’s the most Taco Bell ever to Taco Bell in the history of Taco Bells.

If that last paragraph doesn’t make it epically clear — Taco Bell tastes like Taco Bell. All the time. It never doesn’t taste like Taco Bell, regardless of menu changes or tweaks. On some days, especially if you’re accustomed to it, that’s going to hit the spot like no other food can. But what happens when that special craving hits and you’re hitting the drive-thru for the first time in a minute?

This, it turns out, is a pretty hard question to answer, even for us — an outlet that has ranked the menu in several different iterations. At a place like McDonald’s, I can break that entire menu into a functional five-item meal, but at Taco Bell, any of what we consider the best dishes (except for one) could be considered a whole meal. So while this list won’t function as that perfect single meal of different menu items, we think you can’t go wrong with any combination of the picks below. Grab any combination of two, or three, or hell, get all five, and tell us we’re wrong!

We’re also going to take this time to plead with Taco Bell to bring back the Beef Mexi-Melt, the greatest discontinued item on the menu. We don’t want to have to keep making our own (even though ours is better). Anyway, here are the five most essential menu items from Taco Bell.

Crunchwrap Supreme

Tacos
Taco Bell

Why It’s Great:

If I had to choose a single dish to represent the entire Taco Bell experience, I’d choose the Crunchwrap Supreme. The dish is a greatest-hits collection of Taco Bell flavors: you’ve got the savory beef, the salty and satisfying nacho cheese sauce, and the crunch of fried corn tortilla, all wrapped in a giant warm grilled tortilla. Oh yeah, and there are some tomatoes and lettuce in there too.

Sure, the veggies seem like throwaway ingredients, but they provide an additional element of texture to this already very textural dish and sort of cleanse the palate from the more intense flavors.

The Bottom Line:

One single bite of a Crunchwrap Supreme should tell you everything you need to know about what makes Taco Bell a favorite for so many people.

Beefy Five-Layer Burrito

Tacos
Taco Bell

Why It’s Great:

Biting into a Beefy Five-Layer Burrito is incredibly satisfying. Each bite strikes a perfect balance between beefy flavors and cheese — it’s savory, delicious, and simple. It’s not the biggest or most substantial burrito, but that works in its favor because it means you can order something else, like a crunch taco!

The full burrito is loaded up with beef, beans, cheese, a layer of nacho cheese sauce smeared across the tortilla, and sour cream. It’s pretty easy to elevate this dish too — ask for it grilled and it’ll ensure all the shredded cheese inside melts and will add a nice crunch to the tortilla.

The Bottom Line:

A cheesy beefy masterpiece.

Crunchy Taco

Tacos
Taco Bell

Why It’s Great:

Considering I think this is the best single taco on the entire Taco Bell menu, it would be crazy not to include the Crunchy Taco on this list. For me, it is the menu item that comes to mind when someone says “do you want to go to Taco Bell?” whether or not I intend to order one. It simply is Taco Bell to me — it is to the brand what fries are to McDonald’s.

I love everything about this taco, it’s simple, consisting of a peppery fried corn tortilla, greasy ground beef, lettuce for texture, and cheese all in perfect proportion. Also, it serves as the perfect canvas for each of Taco Bell’s sauce packets, as well as the hot green and red sauces, which make for fantastic dips.

The Bottom Line:

Taco Bell at its most straightforward and glorious. You can easily order three to five of these and leave completely satisfied.

Doritos Cheesy Gordita Crunch

Tacos
Taco Bell

Why It’s Great:

The concept of the Doritos Cheesy Gordita Crunch is similar to the Beefy Five-Layer Burrito but executed way better. Think of this as a mini-Crunchwrap with better cheese in a less overwhelming form factor.

The build consists of a Doritos Nacho Cheese flavored taco shell loaded up with ground beef, a medley of three kinds of cheese including salty mozzarella, nutty Monterey Jack and sharp cheddar, spicy ranch sauce, and lettuce all wrapped in a thick flatbread. Each bite is wonderfully cheesy and beefy with a hint of very mild spice on the backend.

That flatbread wrap helps to make the dish come across as way. more satisfying than a single taco.

The Bottom Line:

A mini/ cheesier Crunchwrap.

Mexican Pizza

Tacos
Taco Bell

Why It’s Great:

If the Crunchwrap Supreme and Crunchy Taco are perfect representations of Taco Bell’s main flavors, the Mexican Pizza is an encapsulation of the brand’s innovative approach. It’s the sort of dish that you’re only going to find at Taco Bell and to this day, remains one of the most unique options.

Think of the Mexican Pizza as less of an actual pizza and more like a giant nacho chip. Between two thin fried tortillas sits a layer of beef and beans. The fried exterior is then topped with a sweet enchilada-like red sauce with a melted blend of cheeses, and diced potatoes.

Each bite is beefy, salty, and earthy with a mild spice on the backend. Unlike most dishes at Taco Bell, the tomatoes make a difference here — providing an occasional burst of fresh tomato flavor.

The Bottom Line:

A giant nacho that provides the perfect ratio of beans, meat, cheese, and sauce in every bite.

Find your nearest Taco Bell here.

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It’s Starting To Look Like Nobody Wants To Host The 2024 Golden Globes

golden-globes-fey-poehler.jpg
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In the great words of modern muse Kim Kardashian: Nobody wants to work these days! Sure, we’ve got doctors and teachers, but we need people who are willing to sacrifice themselves for the hardest job out there: hosting the Golden Globes.

Historically, it’s not an easy task. The Globes’ reputation has tanked over the years, and nobody wants to step up to the proverbial plate and tell a few stale jokes in front of Hollywood’s biggest and brightest. It wasn’t always so bad, but it seems like the golden years are behind us, and the award ceremony is scrambling to find a host.

According to CNN, Chris Rock declined to host the upcoming ceremony, which will take place in January. Rock famously has bad luck with award shows, so we don’t blame him for that. But it seems like the people behind the Globes are struggling to find anyone at all. Comedian/actress Ali Wong allegedly declined to host, meanwhile, Will Arnett, Sean Hayes, and Jason Bateman also turned down a hosting offer. Hopefully, Ricky Gervais has kept his promise to stay away from the broadcast. We’ve already been through enough this year.

Considering that the ceremony will be broadcast on CBS, it would make sense if a Paramount+ or CBS star steps into host. Maybe that’s how we can get Yellowstone’s Kevin Costner to make his reluctant return to our screens! Or maybe Matthew McConaughey wants to take over that, too.

(Via CNN)