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The Absolute Best Bottle Of Whiskey From Each Of The 50 States

Best Whiskey in all 50 States
Shutterstock/UPROXX

I get asked all the time, “What’s the best whiskey in (insert state name here) that you’ve ever tried?” It’s a tough question to answer because, folks, there’s just so much out there. None of us can get to it all. That said, I get to a whole lot more than most in my job as a critic, awards judge, and bourbon presenter.

Today, I’m going to do my best to answer that question by naming the best whiskey that I’ve ever tasted from each of the 50 United States. But before we dive into this mammoth list of whiskeys, let’s put up some guardrails. They are as follows:

  • The vast majority of these whiskeys are hyper-regional and will not be available nationwide. That’s kind of the whole point.
  • New and small whiskey scenes — think Hawai’i, Nebraska, New Hampshire, etc. — aren’t going to have bottles that even begin to compete with Kentucky, Indiana, or Tennessee. But that’s not the point either. This is about the best of what exists right now, sometimes in places where whiskey isn’t that big (and may never be).
  • Price isn’t a consideration. There are $30 bottles on this list next to $10,000 bottles. Some whiskey regions aren’t big or old enough to warrant high prices. Some (like Kentucky) obviously are.
  • Yes, I’m biting the bullet and picking only one whiskey from Kentucky even though I can easily list 100 you should try.
  • This is the best of what I have tasted. As I said, I’m lucky enough to taste a lot (I’m already well over 2,000 pours this year). But even I have blind spots. There could be local whiskeys that are so new (or so small) that I haven’t even heard of them yet.
  • Perhaps most importantly, each of these whiskeys must be made with whiskey produced in their home state. That means a local bottler using MGP of Indiana juice in, say, Kansas, Nevada, or California will not qualify as a Kansas, Nevada, or California whiskey even if the brand is marketed as one. The whiskeys on this list have to be fermented, distilled, and aged in their home state. I am making an exception for whiskeys with partial out-of-state whiskey in a blend. Still, this rule removes a massive swath of blender-created bottles from the mix.

That’s as specific as I can make a list like this so… let’s dive right in!

Also Read: The Top 5 UPROXX Bourbon Posts Of The Last Six Months

Alabama — Dettling Single Barrel Cask Strength Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Dettling Single Barrel
Dettling

ABV: 55.4% (Varies)

Average Price: $79

The Whiskey:

This Alabama whiskey is all about that grain-to-glass experience. What really stands out, though, is that this whiskey aged for only four years yet has a deep profile. The whiskey takes on a dark hew thanks to it being stored at the top of the rickhouse in hot and balmy Alabama. The results are bottled from a single one of those barrels without any cutting or fussing.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose on this one starts with cornbread that’s been baked in lard in a cast-iron skillet with an almost burnt crust, plenty of salted butter, and a dollop of honey that’s been cut with orange oils.

Palate: The palate takes that cornbread, crumbles it up, and mixes in fresh cracked Tellicherry black peppercorns, dried roses, a touch of cedar, and a mild echo of orange-laced tobacco leaves.

Finish: Finally, the sip layers in a wintry spice combo that leans toward cinnamon sticks soaked in mulled wine and apple cider that leads towards a soft finish with a dried mint that’s… almost menthol tobacco.

Bottom Line:

Dettling is working hard to put Alabama on the bourbon map. They have some big advantages thanks to the warm and humid weather accelerating the aging process dramatically so expect to see more masterpieces like this bottle sooner rather than later.

Alaska — Port Chilkoot Wrack Line Rye A Blend of Straight Rye Whiskeys

Port Chilkoot Distillery

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $40

The Whiskey:

This 70% Alaskan rye focuses on organic grains, double distilling, and aging for four years in newly charred American oak. Those barrels expand and contract during warm summers and pause during severe Alaskan winters before batching, proofing, and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a brightness to the spice on the nose, kind of like peaches stewed in cinnamon and nutmeg with plenty of syrup.

Palate: The palate is light yet full of floral notes, oaky vanilla, and peppery rye spices.

Finish: That line of stonefruit sweetness comes in late which leads to a spicy warm finish.

Bottom Line:

Alaska is a fickle beast when it comes to aging whiskey, so finding anything aged from “The Last Frontier” is going to be very rare. Port Chilkoot is doing it right and producing a great mixing whiskey that pairs wonderfully with a basket of fish and chips.

Arizona — 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 apples dance 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 just really nice sipping malt and a great example of the excellent work Del Bac is doing down in Arizona.

Arkansas — Rock Town Single Barrel Cask Strength Arkansas Bourbon Whiskey

Rock Town
Rock Town

ABV: Varies

Average Price: $72

The Whiskey:

Rock Town is all about using Arkansas ingredients to make Arkansas whiskey. The mash is made with local corn and wheat that’s grown right outside of Little Rock (82% corn, 95 wheat, and 8% malted barley). Every step of the process happens on site from the milling of the grains to the aging of the juice. After four years, barrels are hand-selected for single-barrel bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a hint of minerality on the nose next to fresh honey, dark cherries, peaches, pie crust, and a touch of maple syrup.

Palate: The palate has a sense of tangerine next to bran muffins with a whisper of green grass and vanilla wafers.

Finish: The end is full of soft toffee and mild woody spiciness with a clear vanilla-orange foundation.

Bottom Line:

Rock Town is putting Arkansas on the bourbon map with easy-sipping bourbon like this one. This also works really well as a cocktail mixer.

California — Old Potrero Single Barrel Reserve Straight Rye Whiskey

Old Potero
Reserve Bar

ABV: 65.16%

Average Price: $86

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is a bit of a throwback with a West Coast vibe. The juice is 100 percent rye whiskey made at Hotaling & Co. in Potrero Hill, one of San Francisco’s most iconic spots for booze. As of this year, the spirit is being distilled on the waterfront in San Francisco but still carries that Anchor Brewing heritage. With that move, the bottle also got a brand new design that leans into San Francisco’s sea-faring history.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Molasses heavy bran muffins mingle with dry cinnamon sticks, Granny Smith apple skins, and Red Hots next to rum-raisin and a twinge of an old oak stave and craft grain porridge with a caramelized edge.

Palate: The palate leans into ginger snaps with plenty of cinnamon and nutmeg next to vanilla pudding right out of the cup and a dry sense of cedar kindling.

Finish: The end holds onto the dry woodiness with a layer of salted caramel raisins, sweet porridge, and vanilla candy on the very end.

Bottom Line:

There’s a lot of great whiskey coming out of California right now. Old Potrero’s rye is the top of the heap in late 2023. This is an excellent sipping rye that makes a killer cocktail with a unique vibe that feels local.

Colorado — 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 Whisky:

The second Diamond Peak release of 2023 is a 100% Colorado malt. The whiskey barrels were five to eight years old (all-new American oak) that was 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:

It’s hard to pick a single bottle from Colorado (again, there’s just so much happening there with whiskey). Still, this single malt is a great example of pushing boundaries while creating amazingly sippable whiskey.

Connecticut — Litchfield Distillery 5-Year Double-Barreled Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Litchfield Double Barrel Bourbon
Litchfield

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $60

The Whiskey:

Litchfield is one of those local Connecticut craft distilleries that do a little bit of everything. Their Double-Barreled 5-year-old is a highwater mark of the operation. The juice is made from locally grown Connecticut grains. That whiskey is then aged for a few years. Finally, it’s proofed with local water and re-barreled to add an extra layer of woody depth to the bourbon.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The sip starts with an almost vinous note that goes into sweet caramel and spice.

Palate: There’s a clear vanilla essence through the woody oak.

Finish: The aged-grape flavors come in again with a slight sweetness before a warm, woody, and spicy finale.

Bottom Line:

Connecticut’s scene is small but bold. Litchfield is the place to start your journey, especially if you’re looking for a classic bourbon that makes a solid cocktail.

Delaware — Dogfish Head Let’s Get Lost American Single Malt Whiskey

Dogfish Head

ABV: 51%

Average Price: $64

The Whiskey:

All whiskey starts off as beer so it makes a lot of sense when brewers start distilling. 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 own 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 really 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:

Thankfully, Dogfish Head started making whiskey, otherwise, this would have been a hard space to fill. Luckily, this is legitimately good sipping malt that’s worth the effort to track (especially if you’re a fan of the brand’s beer).

Florida — St. Augustine Distillery Port Finished Bourbon

St. Augustine Port Cask
St. Augustine

ABV: 51%

Average Price: $80

The Whiskey:

This Floridian bourbon rests for three years in new American oak, giving it a classic base. Then the booze goes into port casks from San Sebastian Winery next door to the distillery for up to six months (depending on the Florida heat). The end result is a unique bourbon that’s both enticing and refined.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a touch of woodiness but the star of the show is the red berries that are both tart and sweet next to a dusting of winter spices.

Palate: Vanilla and hints of mint show up on the palate with white pepper, mild florals, and a little bit of ripe cherry.

Finish: The end leans into oak, dark chocolate bitterness, and a whisper of ripe red berries with a touch of clove.

Bottom Line:

There’s a lot happening in Florida but it’s still very stuck in sourcing out-of-state juice (for now). St. Augustine’s whiskey remains the best place to start your Floridian whiskey journey.

Georgia — Doc Holliday Straight Bourbon Whiskey Aged 10 Years

Doc Holliday Bourbon
World Whiskey Society

ABV: 56%

Average Price: $184

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is distilled in Georgia from a mash of 80% corn, 10% malted corn, 5% rye, and 5% malted barley. The whiskey then rests for 10 long years in Georgia before batching, a touch of proofing, and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Sour cherry and peach pie mix with classic oily vanilla pods, deep caramel, and soft cedar planks just touched with apricot and dates.

Palate: The sip is warm yet balanced with burnt orange, apricot jam, and soft marzipan next to black-tea-soaked dates, old figs, and brandy-stewed prunes all cut with Christmas spices and dipped in dark chocolate.

Finish: That chocolate takes on a Nutella vibe at the end with a nice mix of mincemeat pies and sticky toffee pudding.

Bottom Line:

Georgia is low-key becoming a hot spot for bourbon. You’re seeing the juice pop up in amazing blends from Bardstown Bourbon Company and Barrell Craft Spirits out in Kentucky, which is a huge seal of approval. So grab a bottle of this award-winning bourbon to see what all the fuss is about.

Hawai’i — Ko’olau Old Pali Road Whisky

Ko

ABV: 43%

Average Price: $75

The Whisky:

Ko’olau’s Old Pali Road is a special whiskey for the state. The spirit is made from local Hawaiian-grown corn and mineral water straight from a volcanic spring. Then the booze is aged for a short spell before being blended with five-year-old mainland whiskey to create a balanced pour.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a clear sense of banana fruit and dried plums upfront on the nose with a layer of creamy winter spices.

Palate: Vanilla cookies and winter spice kick around on the palate with a light sense of banana bread and pineapple upside-down cake.

Finish: The end leans into the winter spice, vanilla, and banana with a very short finish.

Bottom Line:

Hawai’i’s distilling scene is still in its infancy so pickings are slim. This is the best you’re going to get for now. Brasstacks, this is very much a mixing whiskey.

Idaho — Grand Teton Private Stock Straight Corn Whiskey

Grand Teton Private Stock
Grand Teton

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $80

The Whisky:

This high-altitude whiskey is made with 100 percent Idaho-grown corn. That corn is mashed with pure Rocky Mountain water, which is also used to proof the juice before bottling. But first, the whiskey spends 6.5 years resting in oak before single barrels are picked for a bottling run.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Maple syrup and clove-studded oranges lead on the nose with rum raisin, mild sour butter, and a hint of old cellar beams.

Palate: The palate is lush with a warm sense of mulled wine spices and sour cherry next to cinnamon buttered toast and soft yet sweet corn muffins.

Finish: The end has a smooth vanilla base with a hint of date and black tea next to buttery cornmeal with a hint of brown sugar.

Bottom Line:

This is pretty damn good corn whiskey that’s worth checking out the next time you’re hitting up Idaho’s Rocky Mountains.

Illinois — FEW Bottled-in-Bond Straight Bourbon Whiskey

FEW Bottled-in-Bond
FEW Spirits

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $55

The Whiskey:

This expression from Illinois’ FEW Spirits marks the 125th anniversary of the Bottled-in-Bond Act of 1897. The juice is made from 70% corn, 20% rye, and 10% malted barley. That whiskey spends four years resting before it’s proofed down to 100 proof and bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a sense of vanilla cream pie with an extra thick vanilla pudding next to dry cedar bark with a touch of white moss, a touch of black licorice, and a hint of barrel smoke.

Palate: The palate leans into cherry bark with a light cherry tobacco spiciness that melds with the vanilla pudding, a pan of fresh sticky buns with plenty of cinnamon and walnuts, and a hint of black pepper and more of that dry cedar bark.

Finish: The finish has a bit of an oatmeal cookie vibe that leads back to the spicy cherry tobacco and white moss.

Bottom Line:

FEW remains the whiskey to drink if you’re in Illinois. Their Bottled in Bond Bourbon is a great all-around pour that works over some rocks or in any whiskey-forward cocktail.

Indiana — Starlight Distillery Carl T. Huber’s Bottled-In-Bond Indiana Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Starlight Bourbon Bottled In Bond
Starlight Distillery

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $62

The Whiskey:

This new release from Huber Farm’s Starlight Distillery (the distillery to know if you’re in the know) is made from their high-corn mash with a sweet mash method (each batch is fresh) in their old copper pot still. The whiskey is barreled in Canton barrels and left to age on the farm for four years before it’s batched (only 20 barrels) and proofed down to 100 proof for bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with dark stewed cherries and spiced prune compote next to cinnamon waffles with a hint of maple syrup and dark chocolate chips.

Palate: The palate is pure silk with notes of Cherry Coke next to clove-studded oranges dipped in dark chocolate with a flake of salt with whispers of apple fritters, eggnog spices, and singed cherry bark with maybe a hint of apple wood in the background.

Finish: The end has a subtle warmth thanks to wintry mulled wine spices that lead to fresh pipe tobacco kissed with dates and chocolate and packed into an old cedar box for safekeeping.

Bottom Line:

Starlight Distillery is the most important distillery working in Indiana today (besides MGP naturally). The small family-run operation is producing some of the best bourbons and ryes full stop, and this is the best place to start your Starlight journey.

Iowa — Cedar Ridge Distillery The QuintEssential American Single Malt Whiskey

Cedar Ridge The Quintessential
Cedar Ridge

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $59

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is all about a grain-to-glass experience. The juice is made with 100% 2-Row Pale Malted Barley (the same stuff used in some of the biggest craft beers) from up in Saskatchewan. The whiskey is matured in ex-bourbon barrels for an undisclosed term. That whiskey is then finished in a combination of brandy, rum, wine, port, and sherry barrels before it’s vatted. The whiskey’s blend is then made using the solera method — where the vat is never fully emptied before the next barrel is added.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose is immediately full of bright fruit with a peach and pear vibe that leans into a malty banana bread with plenty of butter, cinnamon, and walnut next to a touch of Almond Joy (but the good ones from a high-end shop).

Palate: The palate is soft and subtle with hints of spiced malted gingersnaps, light cream soda vibes (maybe a light sasparilla), and a mellow and creamy base of chocolate that’s not dark but not milky either.

Finish: The mid-palate has a nice sweetness that’s slightly apple adjacent with an apricot hint that mellows into a final note of chewy toffees with rum-raisin lurking on the very backend.

Bottom Line:

Not only is the best whiskey coming out of Iowa, it’s one of the best American single malts in the game. This is a great sipper.

Kansas — Union Horse Distilling Co. Reserve Straight Bourbon Whiskey Small Batch

Union Horse Distilling Co. Reserve Straight Bourbon
Union Horse Distilling Co.

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $24

The Whiskey:

This Kansas whiskey is a neo-classic sour mash recipe of just corn and rye (no barley). The whiskey is distilled on copper pot stills before aging for over five years in Kansas’ rolling green hills and harsh winters. The final batch is touched with local water before bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Hint of butterscotch and old oak pop on the nose with a dash of maple syrup and vanilla-forward pancakes with margarine (it weirdly works).

Palate: There’s a light nuttiness on the palate that’s akin to peanut shells that turn into a buttery peanut brittle on the palate before vanilla and cinnamon hot chocolate pop up.

Finish: That butterscotch comes back in full force on the end with more peanut and maybe some walnut shell with a hint of milk chocolate powder and vanilla pudding cups.

Bottom Line:

Union Horse is putting Kansas on the map as a contender in the bourbon and rye whiskey world (kind of for the first time). Start with this easy-going bottle and then go deeper into the brand’s wide range of whiskeys.

Kentucky — Eagle Rare 25 Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Eagle Rare 25 Bourbon
Sazerac Company

ABV: 50.5%

Average Price: $22,999

The Whiskey:

Eagle Rare Straight Bourbon is made from Mash Bill #1 at Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort, Kentucky. That’s their low-rye mash bill, and that’s all that’s known about the juice. That whiskey was then left to rest for nearly two decades in a warehouse before being moved into Buffalo Trace’s new state-of-the-art Warehouse P facility. When the whiskey hit 25 years old, something magical happened to the barrel and it was ready for bottling.

The single barrel was proofed down to Eagle Rare’s 101-proof and otherwise bottled as-is, yielding only 200 bottles. The bottle is also a collectible with a hand-hammered sterling silver eagle wing wrapped around a hand-blown crystal decanter. That striking bottle comes in a custom display box that opens like an eagle’s wings.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose hints at old oak staves resting in a musty warehouse before veering toward stewed cherries with hints of clove and nutmeg next to salted dark chocolate shavings and rich powdered sugar icing cut with bourbon vanilla and light pipe tobacco essences with a whisper of fall leaves and orchard barks.

Palate: The rich vanilla gets buttery and creamy with an almost eggnog vibe thanks to the spice on the lush palate has dried cranberry, brandy-soaked cherry, and dried figs lead to rich toffee rolled in dark chocolate and anise before getting cut with a touch of earthy tobacco pulled from fresh black dirt.

Finish: The finish hugs you gently with warmth tied to winter spice barks soaked in apple cider cut with black cherry as the dirt takes on a warehouse must with gently sweet oak staves mingle with a whisper of whole black pepper and clove buds over creamy dark orange spice cake.

Bottom Line:

This was a hard choice. There’s just so much great whiskey coming out of Kentucky right now. But this whiskey feels as important as it is delicious. Buffalo Trace has really done something special with this one.

Louisiana — LA1 Louisiana Whiskey

LA1 Louisiana Whiskey
LA1 Louisiana Whiskey

ABV: 47%

Average Price: $61

The Whiskey:

Donner-Peltier Distillers out in Thibodaux has been distilling and aging award-winning whiskey for years now. The spirit is a unique one that incorporates locally grown rice into the mash bill alongside the classic ingredients of corn, rye, and barley.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a clear sweetness from the rice that accents the corn leading to classic hints of caramel and orchard fruit with a woody base.

Palate: A funky rye note comes in with an almost pumpernickel essence on the palate followed by a brown sugary sweet winter spiciness.

Finish: The finish is bold and brings the peppery rye spice with notes of oaky vanilla next to buttery toasted rye bread and hints of deeply roasted cacao nibs.

Bottom Line:

Louisiana isn’t on the whiskey map just yet but this whiskey is helping open the doors. Check it out if you’re drinking in New Orleans and looking for a solid cocktail base.

Maine — Fifty Stone Single Malt Highland Style Whiskey

Fifty Stone

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $49

The Whiskey:

This is a Scottish-style single malt made in Portland, Maine. The distillers take 100% locally grown barley and malt it with locally sourced peat and seaweed. This imbues a clear and unique smokiness you won’t find in any other single malt.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This one opens up with a clear sense of the barley via a warm scone covered in salty butter and honey before a very subtle smoked orchard fruit vibe comes in.

Palate: There’s a briny nature — like you’re about to enjoy a crab boil off a campfire right on the beach — that dominates the palate with smoked orchard fruits and even smoked honey.

Finish: Finally, you do sense the sea spray through the smokiness on the finish alongside the honey with salty butter and a faint whisper of smoked salmon chowder.

Bottom Line:

This is a lovely peated malt that leans into seaside vibes. It’s perfect for pairing with a seafood feast.

Maryland — Sagamore Spirit Reserve Series 8-Year-Old Straight Rye Whiskey

Sagamore Spirit Reserve Rye
Sagamore Spirit

ABV: 55.7%

Average Price: $86

The Whiskey:

This newest spring reserve release from Sagamore Spirit is an eight-year-old rye made from locally grown Maryland grains. The whiskey was batched and bottled as-is to highlight the deep maritime aging in Maryland.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose draws you in with dried cherries dipped in dark chocolate and sprinkled with ground clove and allspice and then dipped in old vanilla syrup made with burnt pods and orange peels.

Palate: A soft cherry sweetness plays with a classic winter spice mix — think cinnamon sticks, anise, clove, orange rind, holly — next to ginger rock candy, peanut butter cookies, and a hint of rum-raisin.

Finish: That sweet/rummy-dried fruit drives the finish toward clove-laced plum jam, peanut brittle, vanilla oils, and a whisper of pine resin layered into rum-raisin tobacco.

Bottom Line:

Maryland’s best whiskey is made at Sagamore. Sip it, mix it, pour it over some rocks — you’ll be in for a treat either way.

Massachusetts — Triple Eight Distillery The Notch Nantucket Island Single Malt Whisky 15 Years Old

Triple Eight Distillery The Notch 15 Year
Triple Eight Distillery

ABV: 48%

Average Price: $569

The Whiskey:

Like many of the single malts on this list, this hinges on the quality of the beer brewed as the base. They use the much-coveted Maris Otter barley that’s processed on-site at the brewery before being sent to the distillery to start this whisky. The hot juice is then barreled and stored next to the sea. This expression is a blend of whiskies aged in former sherry barrels, Cognac barrels, wine casks, and Sauternes barrels (a sweet French wine).

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Ripe, dried, and stewed red and black berries mingle with rich marzipan and very dark salted chocolate with a creamy base, a whisper of chili pepper, and a twinge of clove before a subtle layer of old hay bales and what feels like … summer on a farm … kicks in. It’s almost an ineffable feeling that arises from the nose of this whiskey.

Palate: Dark and woody spice barks arrive after a sense of old vanilla and nougat wafers but before dried dark berries take on a hint of tartness and almost espresso bitterness with a creamed vibe.

Finish: That creamy espresso leads back to the salted chocolate with a faint whisper of red chili pepper, cinnamon bark, and fresh allspice next to luxuriously creamy honey and berry cake.

Bottom Line:

This is arguably the best single malt in the U.S. It’s a great neat pour that delivers a truly deep profile.

Michigan — Journeyman Distillery Corsets, Whips, and Whiskey

Journeyman Whiskey
Journeyman Whiskey

ABV: 66.25%

Average Price: $60

The Whiskey:

This Michigan whiskey is 100% wheat whiskey. The grains are 100% organic and grown locally around Michigan. The whiskey then ages for an undisclosed amount of time before it’s blended into a final product that looks to Irish whiskey for inspiration.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a clear sense of toffee and vanilla cake on the nose with a dash of woody winter spices, eggnog creaminess and nutmeg, and a light whisper of smudged sweetgrass.

Palate: The palate leans into the smoldering grassiness while warm dark spices add a sharpness before stewed pears and plums mingle with clove, anise, and cinnamon bark.

Finish: Next, oily vanilla pods arrive with a whisper of old leather and tobacco wrapped in dry sweetgrass on the warm and buzzing finish.

Bottom Line:

Michigan is another spot that’s blowing up with good whiskey and Journeyman is leading the pack. This is a solid sipper that also works wonders in a cocktail, making it a great table whiskey to have on your bar cart.

Minnesota — Heaven’s Door Cask Strength “Homesick Blues” Minnesota Wheated Bourbon Whiskey

Heaven's Door Cask Strength "Homesick Blues" Minnesota Wheated Bourbon
Heaven

ABV: 61.35%

Average Price: $79

The Whiskey:

This whiskey from Bob Dylan’s brand celebrates the singer’s home, Minnesota. The whiskey is a Minnesota bourbon made with Minnesota grains and distilled in the Land of 10,000 Lakes. The massive temperature swings — up to 116F in the summer and -80F in the winter — make for a very unique aging experience. Still, this whiskey was ready after seven years of rest and bottled in a small batch as cask strength.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Creamed honey and salted caramel draw you in on the nose with a sense of prunes and dates mixed with rum raisin and brandy-soaked pears kissed with rich vanilla and freshly ground nutmeg.

Palate: That creamy vibe remains on the palate as creamy vanilla buttercream cut with equally creamy honey dances with soft sweetgrass and smudging sage next to a hint of old oak staves soaked in brandy and just touched with old cellars.

Finish: The musty old cellar vibe accents the sweetgrass and sage with rich pipe tobacco laced with marmalade and brandied pears before the lush vanilla takes back over on the very end.

Bottom Line:

Heaven’s Door has a penchant for releasing superb limited editions and this is no different. This whiskey is a wheated bourbon superlative. Sip it neat and enjoy the long and lush ride.

Mississippi — Cathead Old Soul Blended Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Cathead Distillery

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $45

The Whiskey:

This is a blend of two bourbons. The base is a five-year-old high-rye mash bill bourbon from MGP. That juice is cut with a four-year-old bourbon distilled in Mississippi that also has a high-rye mash bill. Once batched, the juice is proofed with local water and bottled.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with classic bourbon notes of caramel, vanilla, cherry, and oak before veering toward old leather and a faint hint of grilled tropical fruits.

Palate: The palate leans into that old leather with a faint wisp of pipe tobacco, Cherry Coke, and spicy gingerbread cake.

Finish: The cherry becomes leathery by the end with cinnamon bark and clove buds next to vanilla cream and a light sense of wood.

Bottom Line:

Mississippi is another state that’s only just starting to make a mark on the whiskey map. Mix with this one.

Missouri — Still 360 Missouri Straight Bourbon Whiskey Single Barrel

Still 360 Missouri Bourbon
Still 360

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $52

The Whiskey:

“Missouri” straight bourbon has to be made with corn grown in Missouri only while also being fermented, distilled, aged, and bottled in the state. The juice from Still 360 has a pretty standard mash of corn, rye, and barley all things considered. In this case, the barrels are five years old before they go into the bottle only slightly cut with local water.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose is like opening a can of creamed corn that leads towards a vanilla husk, cherry tobacco, and a note of egg nog spice.

Palate: Those cherries carry through to the palate with a sense of brandy-soaked cherries dipped in dark chocolate next to a spicy tobacco leaf and a touch of butterscotch hard candy.

Finish: The tobacco leaf drives the dry-yet-warming finish through dried cherry, soft vanilla husks, and a twinge more butterscotch.

Bottom Line:

Missouri is one of the states to watch as the American whiskey boom heads toward the 2030s. There’s a lot of great stuff happening thanks to the massive craft brewing scene already there.

Montana — Glacier Distilling North Fork Rye Whiskey

Glacier Distilling North Fork Rye Whiskey
Glacier Distilling

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $38

The Whiskey:

North Fork Rye won gold at the 2017 San Francisco World Spirits Competition, which helped put it on the map. The whiskey uses a mellow mash of rye and corn, charred American white oak aging, and local water for proofing to create a wonderfully balanced and easily drinkable sip.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The sweetness from the corn meets you upfront on the nose with a salted caramel creaminess, a touch of cherry vanilla, and dry sweetgrass.

Palate: The taste opens with a clear sense of oaky vanilla and mild caramel that’s cut by a mellow rye peppery nature and smudging sage.

Finish: Hints of orchard fruits and whispers of the corn marry that rye spice to propel the finish towards sweetgrass and peppery end.

Bottom Line:

There isn’t a whole lot happening in Montana with distilling but what is happening tends to be solid. Case in point, this local rye whiskey is a good table whiskey if you’re looking for something local before a trip into the mountains.

Nebraska — Cooper’s Chase Bourbon American Whiskey

Cooper's Chase Bourbon American Whiskey
Coopers Chase

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $25

The Whiskey:

This is one of the few craft bourbons coming out of Nebraska these days. The juice is a bit of a sphinx though, the distiller doesn’t publish the mash bill or aging process besides that it’s all done in-house in Nebraska.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose has a classic mix of vanilla, caramel, and spice with a slight oaky edge.

Palate: The palate delivers on that while adding in apple cores, cinnamon tobacco, and a touch of buttery toffee.

Finish: The end is short and sweet with a slight mineral water vibe cutting through the warmer end of the sip.

Bottom Line:

Nebraska has a very small distilling scene. So this is the best of what you’ll find when you’re in the Cornhusker State.

Nevada — Frey Ranch Cask Strength Straight Bourbon Whiskey Farm Strength Uncut

Frey Ranch Cask Strength Straight Bourbon Whiskey Farm Strength Uncut
Frey Ranch

ABV: 62.15%

Average Price: $79

The Whiskey:

This new release from Nevada craft farm distillery, Frey Ranch, is a true grain-to-glass experience. The mash is Frey Ranch’s classic four-grain mash of 66% non-GMO corn, 12% Two-Row malted barley, 11.4% Winter rye, and 10% Soft White Winter wheat — all grown on the ranch. After almost five years of aging in the mountains of Nevada, the whiskey was batched and bottled 100% as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose bursts forth on this one with deep cinnamon candy, nutmeg-heavy eggnog, creme bruleé, salted caramel, and buttery croissant next to old cedar kindling, dark boot leather, and a hint of dusty old wine cellar.

Palate: There’s a Black Forest cake vibe on the front of the palate that leads to clove-studded oranges, leathery apricot, black-tea-soaked dates, and rich and moist pound cake just kissed with poppy seeds and vanilla oils.

Finish: The end leans into black cherry with a flake of smoked salt, dark orange, and fresh cacao with a return of that cedar kindling and old boot leather next to this faint note of old rickhouses full of well-aged barrels of whiskey.

Bottom Line:

Frey Ranch is making some of the best grain-to-glass whiskey in the whole country. You really can’t go wrong with any of their releases. But if you’re looking for the purest example of their prowess, start with this whiskey.

New Hampshire — Tamworth The Old Man of the Mountain Bottled-in-Bond Bourbon

Tamworth Distilling & Mercantile

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $70

The Whiskey:

This New England bourbon is all about grain-to-glass with a local mash bill of 82.4% organic yellow corn, 11% organic rye, and 6.6% malted barley. The juice is then aged for five years in medium-charred Kentucky barrels before it’s bottled according to bottled-in-bond regulations.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose is all about that rich Christmas cake brimming with candied and dried fruits, dark spices, and nuts soaked in brandy topped with a dollop of vanilla-infused brandy butter.

Palate: The palate delivers on those promises of the nose while adding hints of dark chocolate-covered cherries, cedar, spicy tobacco, and a hint of Tellicherry black peppercorns.

Finish: That dry spiciness drives the finish to an end that’s warm yet sweet with that cherry.

Bottom Line:

Tamworth is very hit-and-miss so tread carefully with their releases. This is in the hit column and worth checking out if you’re traveling through New England.

New Jersey — All Points West Malt and Grain Pot Still Whiskey

All Points West Malt and Grain Pot Still Whiskey
All Points West

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $64

The Whiskey:

This New Jersy whiskey leans into Irish whiskey traditions with a lower corn mash bill. The whiskey is fermented in a pot still with German and Irish malts alongside corn and water from New Jersey’s mountains. The juice is then aged for 24 months before proofing and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Cedar and cherries mingle with vanilla and toffee on the nose with a very distant whisper of campfire smoke.

Palate: Cherry blossoms, honey, cedar, and spicy tobacco lead the palate with a hint of dried roses and a touch of cream soda.

Finish: The finish is longish with a sense of spice, fruit, and flowers lingering the longest.

Bottom Line:

This is a solid entry from New Jersey, which doesn’t have a ton to offer the world of whiskey yet. My advice would be to mix with this one.

New Mexico — Colkegan Single Malt Whiskey

Santa Fe Spirits

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $53

The Whiskey:

Colkegan is a combination of the Scottish Highlands and New Mexico’s ingredients. Instead of smoking their barley malts with peat, Santa Fe Spirits uses local mesquite logs in the kilning process, giving the base of this whiskey a clear New Mexico vibe. The juice is then aged at 7,000 feet above sea level in a climate-controlled warehouse that drops the temperatures to near freezing before amping them up extremely high while also lowering and heightening the humidity in the room.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a subtle balance of brisk desert smoke next to olive brine umami on the nose and then hints of rich and sweet marzipan arrive with white chocolate fattiness and whispers of vanilla blossoms.

Palate: The smoke carries through with a sense of dark, tart berries and rhubarb, and dry mesquite wood on the taste.

Finish: That berry fruit feel carries on into the mellow finish as the smoke dissipates.

Bottom Line:

New Mexico single malt is a thing and it’s really damn good. Colkegan is a great distillery to delve into if you’re looking for truly unique American single malt.

New York — Kings County Distillery Bottled-In-Bond Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Kings County

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $96

The Whiskey:

This crafty whiskey from New York is a grain-to-glass bourbon experience. The mash bill on this one eschews rye and wheat for 80% locally grown corn supported by 20% malted barley from England. The juice is then aged for four years in small 15-gallon barrels and treated according to the law and bottled in Kings County’s signature hip flask bottles.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This draws you in with a strawberry shortcake with a cornmeal base, topped with fresh berries, buttery vanilla whipped cream, and then dipped in a caramel sauce.

Palate: The palate veers away from all of that and touches on bitter black coffee syrup with brown sugar and butter notes next to oatcakes and vanilla sauce with a hint of spice lingering in the background.

Finish: The end is long and full of chocolate malts, leather, and more of that creamy and buttery vanilla whipped cream.

Bottom Line:

Kings County is unbeatable for true craft and truly New York whiskey. This bourbon remains an award-circuit darling and a whiskey bar favorite. Pour it neat or into your favorite cocktail and you’ll be set.

North Carolina — Southern Star Paragon Single Barrel Cask Strength Wheated Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Southern Star Paragon
Southern Star

ABV: 58%

Average Price: $103

The Whiskey:

This North Carolina bourbon is starting to make some serious waves. This very limited batch of single-barrel bourbon is made from wheated bourbon mash bill with 70% corn, 16% wheat, and 14% malted barley. The hot juice was left for around four years before the barrel was hand-pocked and bottled as-is at cask strength.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a sense of orange blossoms and an apple orchard with a hint of pear and plum next to walnut shells, old honey bottles, and rich vanilla sauce with a hint of poppy seed.

Palate: The palate has a touch of dark chocolate powder sweetness that melds with walnuts and honey to make a cluster before the brown spice kicks in with sharp cinnamon and a touch of root beer.

Finish: The end leaves the spice and warmth behind for smooth vanilla walnut cake with a hint of apple-honey tobacco wrapped up with old cedar bark.

Bottom Line:

This bourbon has helped put North Carolina on the map of great whiskey states (or at least great up-and-coming whiskey scenes). This is a wonderfully nuanced sipper or mixer for any whiskey-forward cocktail.

North Dakota — Proof Glen Fargo American Malt Whiskey

Proof Distillers

ABV: 47%

Average Price: $180

The Whiskey:

This American Single Malt from North Dakota is all about double barreling. The local juice is first aged in new American white oak. Then, that whiskey is moved into an ex-bourbon barrel for a finishing rest.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a clear sense of that bourbon barrel with notes of rich vanilla pudding next to mild spice and a green sense of malts.

Palate: The palate follows that lead while adding in apples, pears, and a touch of honey sweetness.

Finish: The end is long with a touch of oak and vanilla with a grassy finish.

Bottom Line:

This is a nice example from a very small whiskey scene up in North Dakota. It won’t blow your socks off but I’ll get the job done if you’re looking for something local on a road trip through the state.

Ohio — Whiskey War Double Double A Blend of Straight Whiskeys

Whiskey War Double Double Oaked
Whiskey War

ABV: 56.75%

Average Price: $99

The Whiskey:

This Ohio whiskey is hewn from a rye-heavy mash bill. That spicy juice is then rested in new American oak for a spell before being vatted and re-barreled into another brand-new American oak barrel, all adding up to five years of mellowing. Those barrels are then batched and bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a sweet sense of salted caramel on the nose that gives way to dried chili pepper, old wet leather sheets, pink peppercorns, and a hint of burnt orange rinds over cider-soaked cinnamon bark and raw waffle batter with a whisper of pecan.

Palate: The palate hits that burnt orange and caramel note harder as minor keys of winter spice, fruit cake, and rum raisin darken the taste.

Finish: The end has a sense of pitchy firewood and sweet oak next to smudging sage and spearmint-chocolate tobacco just dusted with lemon pepper from the 90s.

Bottom Line:

Ohio is making a lot of great whiskey right now. This is the mountaintop. This whiskey is a great sipper while also making a killer cocktail. This whiskey also just can’t stop winning awards, so there’s that.

Oklahoma — World Whiskey Society Class Collection Straight Bourbon Whiskey Finished In Port Cask Aged 10 Years

World Whiskey Society Class Collection Bourbon
World Whiskey Society Class Collection

ABV: 51%

Average Price: $164

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is distilled in Oklahoma but bottled in Georgia. The whiskey in the bottle is made from a mash bill (recipe) of 51% corn, 45% wheat, and 4% malted barley. That hot juice was then aged for almost a decade before going into a huge port cask for a final rest.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a sense of grape soda and orange zest on the nose with a hint of crafty bourbon grains, dry grass, and old oak.

Palate: The palate sort of leans into red fruit and dry grass with a light sense of orange and vanilla.

Finish: The end is short and has a touch of vanilla cake and holiday spice.

Bottom Line:

It’s pretty hard to find a good whiskey from Oklahoma at the moment. Case in point, this OK whiskey was bottled in Georgia. Still, this is a perfectly good cocktail bourbon that works over a lot of ice in a pinch.

Oregon — 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 is a damn-near-perfect sipper of single malt. It’s easygoing while offering a truly deep profile. If this is your first Oregon whiskey, you’re in good hands.

Pennsylvania — Bluebird Days Whiskey Straight American Whiskey

Bluebird of Days
Bluebird

ABV: 43%

Average Price: $49

The Whiskey:

Country Artist Jordan Davis partnered with Bluebird Distilling in Pennsylvania to create this American blend. The blend is a mix of Bluebird’s oldest barrels of wheat whiskey and bourbon that’s proofed down before bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with old oak and leather with a hint of winter spice and a can of corn — just a plain ol’ can o’ corn.

Palate: The old leather drives the palate with a soft vanilla base and a sweet but singed marshmallow sweetness next to more of that mild winter spice.

Finish: The end really leans into the sweetness of it all with a creamy butterscotch and vanilla sheet cake with white frosting that’s cut with cinnamon and clove tobacco.

Bottom Line:

This is a very nice standard whiskey that gets the job done. It’s versatile while feeling approachable. Sip it over rocks or in your favorite cocktail.

Rhode Island — Sons of Liberty Uprising American Single Malt Whiskey

Sons of Liberty Spirits

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $40

The Whiskey:

Uprising has its foundation in the local Providence craft beer scene. The malts used in the 100% malted barley mash bill are the same darkly roasted malts (Chocolate Malt, Crystal 45, and Biscuit) used to make a local stout. That beer is fermented with ale yeast, distilled, and then goes into charred American oak and toasted French oak to rest for a few years. Finally, the barrels are blended to create a unique American single malt.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Creamy vanilla and salted caramel enriched the nose with a sense of dark chocolate-covered coffee beans.

Palate: The dark chocolate creaminess drives the palate with a mild nuttiness and winter spice balance.

Finish: The end goes back to that creaminess with a bitter espresso bean vibe and plenty of salted dark chocolate cut with clove and cinnamon.

Bottom Line:

This is a good cocktail whiskey. It’s also one of the only whiskeys you’re going to find from tiny Rhode Island.

South Carolina — High Wire Distilling Co. Jimmy Red Straight Bourbon Whiskey Bottled in Bond

High Wire Distilling Co. Jimmy Red Straight Bourbon Whiskey Bottled in Bond
High Wire Distilling Co.

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $300

The Whiskey:

This bottled and bond release celebrates the 10th anniversary of High Wire out in South Carolina. The Jimmy Red corn bourbon is made with Jimmy Red corn grown and harvested by the Plumfield Farm in Darlington, SC from a single harvest before the corn is mashed, distilled, aged, and batched from a single distilling season. Once batched, the whiskey is proofed with local water to bottled-in-bond proof and bottled as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Earthy notes meet Graham Crackers on the nose with a hint of cinnamon apple and pancake syrup just kissed with dried chili flakes.

Palate: The earthiness goes full dry corn kernel on the palate (kind of like an earthy dry popcorn) next to vanilla-laced apple cider with a cinnamon stick bobbing in it.

Finish: The pancake syrup and vanilla get woody on the finish with a light sense of corn husks in fallow corn fields.

Bottom Line:

High Wire has been working hard to put heritage red corn bourbon on the map. They’ve truly succeded and this anniversary batch is a great place to see how beautiful that style of bourbon is.

South Dakota — BlackFork Farms Straight Bourbon Whiskey American Toasted Oak Finish

BlackFork Farms Straight Bourbon Whiskey American Toasted Oak Finish
Blackfork Farms

ABV: 46.5%

Average Price: $95

The Whiskey:

BlackFork Farms is a very new and small crafty whiskey distillery. Heritage corn (grown and smoked on the farm with apple and cherry wood) is mashed with Black Forest German rye, which they smoke on the farm as well. The juice is then aged for a couple of years before the whiskey is re-barreled into new toasted American oak for a final rest.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a sense of apple orchards next to piles of firewood, dry hay stacks, and soft toffee laced with winter spice.

Palate: The palate has a note of corn husk next to peppery rye and dried dill with a touch of sweetgrass braided with cedar bark and tobacco leaf.

Finish: The end layers in dark chocolate and chili spice with singed orchard wood and burnt chocolate tobacco.

Bottom Line:

South Dakota is another state with slim pickings. This whiskey is legit (it’s good over ice or in a cocktail) and worth checking out if you’re visiting the state.

Tennessee — Jack Daniel’s 12-Year-Old Tennessee Whiskey, Batch 1

Jack Daniel's 12 Year
Brown-Forman

ABV: 53.5%

Average Price: $84

The Whiskey:

Jack Daniel’s doesn’t hide any of its processes. The mash at the base of this whiskey is a mix of 80% corn, 12% barley, and 8% rye. Those grains are milled in-house and mixed with cave water pulled from an on-site spring and Jack Daniel’s own yeast and lactobacillus that they also make/cultivate on-site. Once fermented, the mash is distilled twice in huge column stills. The hot spirit is then filtered through 10 feet of sugar maple charcoal that’s also made at the distillery. Finally, the filtered whiskey is loaded into charred new American oak barrels and left alone in the warehouse. After 12 years, a handful of barrels were ready; so they were batched, barely proofed, and bottled.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose is creamy with deep notes of old boot leather, dark and woody winter spices, black-tea-soaked dates, plum jam with clove, and an underbelly of chewy toffee-laced tobacco.

Palate: That creaminess presents on the palate with a soft sticky toffee pudding drizzled in salted caramel and vanilla sauce next to flakes of salt and a pinch of orange zest over dry Earl Grey tea leaves with a whisper of singed wild sage.

Finish: The end leans into the creamy toffee chewy tobacco with a hint of pear, cherry, and bananas foster over winter spice barks and a deep embracing warmth.

Bottom Line:

A lot of whiskeys could have been in this spot. But this really is the best whiskey out of Tennessee this year. It’s just delicious and so deeply hewn. You cannot go wrong pouring this whiskey into a glass any ol’ way you like it.

Texas — Garrison Brothers Cowboy Bourbon Texas Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Garrison Brothers Cowboy Bourbon
Garrison Brothers

ABV: 70.45%

Average Price: $249

The Whiskey:

This year’s Cowboy Bourbon from Garrison Brothers is a blend of only 118 barrels of six-year-old Texas bourbon. 1,000 bottles of the crafty Texas whiskey will be available in mid-September at the distillery with an additional 8,600 bottles going out nationwide the first week of October.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a rush of sharp cinnamon bark wrapped up with old saddle leather, freshly fried apple fritters, walnuts, old cedar bark braids twisted up with dried wild sage, and a hint of dried yellow mustard flowers with an underlying sense of maple syrup over pecan waffles.

Palate: The palate leans into the spice with a hint of allspice and ginger next to apple pie filling with walnuts, brandy-soaked raisins, and plenty of brown sugar next to spiced Christmas cake dipped in dark chocolate sauce.

Finish: The end takes its time and meanders through salted caramel, stewed plums with star anise and sharp cinnamon, a hint of vanilla Dr. Pepper, and a mild sense of chocolate-cinnamon-spiced chewing tobacco buzziness with a warming Texas hug that’s part Hot Tamales and part chili-spiced green tea.

Bottom Line:

Garrison Brothers is firing on all cylinders right now, and they’re producing amazing Texas whiskey. This year’s Cowboy Bourbon is a grandiose whiskey and not for the faint of heart, just like Texas. You might want to pour this one over a single rock though. It’s hot. Again, like Texas.

Utah — High West A Midwinter Nights Dram Blend of Straight Rye Whiskeys

High West Distillery

ABV: 49.3%

Average Price: $140

The Whiskey:

Each year, this limited drop varies slightly. This release was a mix of MGP rye (95% rye) and High West rye (100% rye) finished in French oak barrels that held ruby and tawny port. The barrels picked for this batch were between four and seven years old with the older barrels coming from Indiana and the younger ones from Utah.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This is a pretty complex nose with sour berries next to dried apricot, woody and slightly sweet cinnamon, French toast, and a mild note of something umami (dried mushrooms perhaps).

Palate: The palate gets more savory with a rhubarb vibe as dark chocolate with a serious woody spiced edge meets old leather laced with years of tobacco, lush vanilla cream, and salted caramel.

Finish: The end is as silky as eggnog with a whisper of black tea bitterness and minty tobacco rounding things out.

Bottom Line:

This is the best whiskey from Utah by a country mile. It’s great over a single rock or in your favorite cocktail.

Vermont — WhistlePig PiggyBack 100 Proof Bourbon Whiskey Aged 6 Years

WhistlePig PiggyBack 100 Proof Bourbon
WhistlePig

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $49

The Whiskey:

This newer whiskey from WhistlePig mixes locally made Vermont whiskey with Indiana whiskey to create a bespoke bourbon. The mash bill leans into the corn with a good measure of rye in the mix. The whiskey barrels are left alone for six years before batching, proofing, and bottling on the farm in Vermont.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a soft leathery nose that leads to caramel corn and a nutty spiciness with a hint of old oak.

Palate: The nuttiness drives the palate toward fresh maple syrup that turns creamy with an almond vibe, plenty of winter spice, and a hint of black tea.

Finish: That tea calms down toward a wet chamomile with a dollop of honey, a twist of orange, and a pinch of sweet cinnamon with a lingering sense of oak in the background.

Bottom Line:

WhistlePig is finally folding its own farm-to-glass whiskey into its releases and it’s working pretty damn well. Make your favorite cocktail with this one.

Virginia — Virginia Distillery Co. Courage & Conviction Cuvée Single Cask American Single Malt Whisky

Virginia Distillery Co. Cuvee Cask
Virginia Distillery Co.

ABV: 59.2%

Average Price: $150

The Whiskey:

This whisky is made with 100% malted barley. That whiskey is then loaded into French red wine or Cuvée casks for a minimum of three years (each cask is hand-selected for its distinct flavor profile). These single casks were chosen for their beauty as a stand-alone whisky that doesn’t need any adulteration or cutting with water. The honey barrel is then bottled as-is at cask strength.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose is seriously buttery with a touch of brandy butter next to lightly salted caramel with a vanilla whipped cream that merges into a fruity backbone with hints of raisins, new leather, and maybe a whisper of damp straw.

Palate: Malts shine through first on the palate as hefty brown spices create a serious heat (from those ABVs) before a cherry tobacco chewiness kicks in with a hint of pear candy under all that malty spice and warmth.

Finish: The mid-palate really leans into the dark and stewed cherry tobacco vibe as a hint of dry hay, reeds, and umami (sweetish tomato paste maybe?) poke in very late on the finish.

Bottom Line:

I’d be willing to argue that this is the best American single malt right now. So if you’re looking for a bridge from, say, the Highlands of Scotland to Appalachia, this is the whiskey to drink.

Washington — Woodinville Ginja Cask Straight Bourbon Whiskey Finished in Portuguese Ginjinha Casks

Woodinville Ginja Cask Straight Bourbon
Woodinville

ABV: 47.5%

Average Price: $69

The Whiskey:

This new bourbon from Woodinville up in Seattle, Washington, is a crafty dream with a very unique finish. After about five years of aging, the bourbon is re-barreled into Ginjinha barrels (a Portuguese liqueur) with sour cherries for another maturation run. Finally, those barrels are batched, proofed, and bottled for this limited run.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a clear sense of sweet grits cut with molasses, honey, and salted butter that gives way to blackberries soaked in rum on the nose with a light sense of spiced cookies.

Palate: The sweet porridge continues on the palate as dark cherry jam mingles with spiced winter cakes, fallow orchards, fall leaves, and a light moment of soft woody cherry bark that’s just smoldering.

Finish: A touch of cinnamon bark drives the finish toward more of that smoldering cherry wood, mulled wine, and soft notes of blackberry pie covered in malted vanilla cream sauce.

Bottom Line:

Several Woodinville bottles could have slotted into this spot. But this new Ginja Cask release is just too good to ignore. This is Woodinville flexing some serious finishing prowess with great base bourbon underneath, making this a wonderfully soft sipper.

West Virginia — Smooth Ambler Founders’ Cask Strength Series Rye Aged 5 Years Batch Two

Founder's Cask Rye
Smooth Ambler

ABV: 61.6%

Average Price: $54

The Whiskey:

This 100% West Virginia whiskey is made from a mash of 88% rye and 12% malted barley — no corn needed here, folks. The barrels are left to age in the Appalachia hills for five long years before coming together in tiny batches and bottled as-is at cask strength.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: There’s a hint of leather and pine tar on the nose with a hint of tart red berry and burnt toffee.

Palate: The palate opens with a bourbon vibe with dark cherry, soft vanilla cream, and light old oak staves with a hint of bitter dark cacao.

Finish: The end leans into cinnamon bark and clove layered into a vanilla tobacco leaf that’s braided with wet cedar, dry leather, and old bouquet garni with a light sense of an old cheese cellar lurking on the very backend.

Bottom Line:

There aren’t a lot of options in West Virginia but what is there tends to be stellar. This is a prime example of the great work happening deep in the mountains of West Virginia right now, and a killer slow sipper to have on hand.

Wisconsin — Copper Crow 1560 Bourbon Whiskey Single Barrel Aged 4 Years

Copper Crow 1560 Bourbon Whiskey
Copper Crow

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $34

The Whiskey:

Copper Crow is from Indigenous distillers up in Wisconsin. The whiskey is made from a 70% corn mash bill and aged in new American white oak for four years. Those barrels are small batched and then the whiskey is cut with water from the local Lake Superior aquifer.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: A classic medley of dark vanilla pods, old oak staves, and rich salted caramel mingle with cherry cola and dry sweetgrass braided with cedar bark and pipe tobacco.

Palate: The palate follows along the path with measured notes of crafty sweet grains — like Cream of Wheat meets white grits cut with butter and brown sugar — next to woody winter spices and a touch of orange zest.

Finish: Sweet oak and porridge lead the way on the finish with a dark cherry leatheriness tied to winter spice barks.

Bottom Line:

Indian Country is starting to get back into distilling after a long break. This whiskey is a prime example of the great work coming out of this Indigenous-run distillery right now and a promise of greatness to come.

Wyoming — Wyoming Whiskey National Parks No. 3 Small Batch Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Wyoming Whiskey National Parks No. 3
Edrington Group

ABV: 52.5%

Average Price: $79

The Whiskey:

This year’s Wyoming Whiskey Fall 2023 release is the third edition of the National Park series. This year Grand Teton National Park is the star of the show with a minimum five-year-old batch of bourbon aged in the plains of Wyoming as they descend from the Rockies.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Wyoming Bourbon’s signature orange creamsicle opens the nose with a sense of wet brown sugar, fresh unsalted butter, and little cups of toffee pudding before a hint of dry black tea leaves arrives.

Palate: The orange attaches to floral honey on the palate with a sense of coffee cake, Nutella, and soft vanilla pudding swimming in caramel sauce.

Finish: Pecan waffles with pancake syrup sweeten the finish before that black tea sneaks back in with a mild sense of leathery tobacco and the stick from an orange creamsicle.

Bottom Line:

These limited editions remain Wyoming Whiskey’s best juice by far. This is just good whiskey, folks. It’s also the best whiskey coming out of Wyoming by a mile.

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Baby Keem Goes To A Place Where ‘You Feel More’ In His Eerie ‘Melodic Blue’ Trailer

In the trailer for Baby Keem’s film, The Melodic Blue, the title is given to a mysterious location described as “a place where all human sensitivities are heightened.” The trailer gets very abstract in a hurry, depicting some of the feverish, surreal imagery we’ve come to expect from the PgLang crew, as well as other Amazon Prime Video productions like Swarm.

Keem initially shared the trailer at Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival ahead of his and Kendrick Lamar’s headlining performance at the festival. The film’s premise was later described in a press release: “Keem’s internal battle leads us through fragments of memory and temptation as he navigates the depths of The Melodic Blue,” it said.

The film, of course, borrows its title from the California-born, Las Vegas-raised rapper’s 2021 debut album. Since its release, Keem released a deluxe edition the next year, then teamed up with his cousin Kendrick to drop a single called “The Hillbillies.” Later, they teamed up as a duo — also named The Hillbillies — to headline Flog Gnaw, where the festival’s founder Tyler The Creator came out to join them during their performance.

Watch the trailer for Baby Keem’s film The Melodic Blue above.

The Melodic Blue premieres on Amazon Prime Video on December 5.

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The Surprisingly Wholesome Connection Between Dolly Parton, Keanu Reeves, And A Playboy Bunny Costume

Dolly Parton dropped by The Drew Barrymore Show on Monday where the legendary country star opened up about how she and Keanu Reeves go way back.

During the late 70s, Reeves’ mother Patricia Taylor designed a number of Parton’s most iconic outfits, including her 1978 Playboy Bunny costume, which she wore on the magazine’s cover.

“She did a lot of sewing for me, she did a lot of my clothes,” Dolly told Barrymore via PEOPLE. “But I remember Keanu when he was just little, and she would bring him over to my house when we were fitting or when I would go to the shop where she worked.”

However, Dolly never realized the little boy was Keanu Reeves until years later when the now-famous movie star came to one of her shows and knocked on her dressing room door.

“He said, ‘Do you remember me? I’m the little boy that used to sit at your feet when my mom was [working],’” Dolly recalled. “Of course I knew he had become a star but it didn’t connect to me that that was who that was.”

Barrymore then asked Dolly if she know that Keanu wore her Playboy Bunny costume for Halloween. The John Wick actor told Jada Pinkett Smith’s Red Table Talk that the country star left the outfit behind, so why not use it?

“Did he? Aw, that’s sweet,” Parton said. “He’s great. He’s the sweetest guy.”

You can see Dolly’s iconic Playboy outfit below:

Dolly Parton Playboy
Getty Image

(Via PEOPLE)

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Beyoncé’s Mother Tina Knowles Shot Down ‘Bozos’ Who Accused The Star Of Bleaching Her Skin

Beyoncé
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Beyoncé’s mom Tina Knowles has long been a protective force in her daughter’s life and this week, she once again stepped into that role to defend Beyoncé from a malicious rumor circulating online in the wake of the premiere event for Beyoncé’s Renaissance film.

After some fans observed that the star looked paler than normal in the photo of herself she posted from the premiere, Momma Tina clapped back, calling those critics self-hating “bozos” promoting a long-debunked, toxic narrative about her daughter.

Comments and gossip rags accused Beyoncé of lightening her skin with editing tools, with some going as far as speculating that she was bleaching it to look white. Knowles also noted that TMZ reached out to Beyoncé’s stylist for a comment about the responses to her premiere look, calling out the reporter’s “entitlement.”

For what it’s worth, Beyonce is a lighter-skinned Black woman at an event where many of the photographers likely had their cameras and lighting set up to capture a wide range of skin tones, including very dark ones which are frequently underlit in mass media. Combine that with Beyoncé’s wardrobe — a silver dress and complementary platinum blonde wig — and the way the photo turned out makes perfect sense.

This isn’t the first time Beyoncé has been the center of colorist/colorism comments online. A few years ago, her father Matthew Knowles told Ebony that at least some of Beyoncé’s success is due to colorism.

Beyoncé herself has made efforts to uplift Black women of all shades through songs like “Brown Skin Girl,” her previous film Black Is King, and the shout-out to her mom’s native Louisiana roots in “Formation,” among others.

You can read Tina Knowles’ full post below.

Came across this today and decided to post it after seeing all of the stupid ignorant self, hating racist statements about her, lightening her skin, and wearing platinum hair wanting to be white. She does a film called Renaissance, where the whole theme is silver with silver hair, a silver carpet, and suggested silver attire and you bozos decide that she’s trying to be a white woman and is bleaching her skin? .. How sad is it that some of her own people continue the stupid narrative with hate and jealousy. Duh, she wore silver hair to match her silver dress as a fashion statement clown. “ALIEN Superstar” duh! What’s really sad is that a white woman had the audacity to reach out to Neal, Beyoncé’s hairstylist, from TMZ to say that the fans are saying that she wants to be white and she wanted to get a statement about it from Neal. Well that made my blood boil, that this white woman felt so entitled to discuss her blackness.

What’s really most disappointing is some Black people — yes you bozos that’s on social media — lying and faking and acting like you’re so ignorant that you don’t understand that Black women have worn platinum hair since the Etta James days. I just went and looked at all the beautiful talented Black celebrities who have worn platinum hair and it has been just about every one of them at one time or another. Are they all trying to be white? I am sick and tired of people attacking her. Every time she does something that she works her ass off for, and is a statement of her work ethic, talent, and resilience, here you sad little haters come out the woodwork. Jealousy and racism, sexism, double standards — you perpetuate those things. Instead of celebrating a sister or just ignoring her if you don’t like her. I am sick of you losers. I know that she is going to be pissed at me for doing this, but I am fed up! This girl minds her own business. She helps people whenever she can. She lifts up & promotes Black women and underdogs at all times.

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We Tried All Of Shake Shack’s Trolls-Themed Milkshakes, Here’s The One You Need To Taste

Troll Shake
Shake Shack/Uproxx

Shake Shack just dropped new Trolls Band Together-themed shakes! Sorry — I tried to be excited about the Trolls part but… I can’t say I am. I’m not nine. Or six. Or whatever age Trolls is for. Also, I don’t know much about the Trolls cinematic universe (are we calling it that?).

Sadly (for me), I do know some things. That’s just how culture moves these days. You wake up one morning glad to know absolutely nothing about a franchise and then somehow that franchise creeps into your consciousness with a combination of advertising, celebrity alignment, and brand tie-ins before you hit the sheets that night. Here’s the sum of my Trolls knowledge, without using Google:

  • Somehow there is not one, but three Trolls movies.
  • Justin Timberlake is involved.
  • There’s a Trolls soundtrack that is quite successful. So I suppose that these trolls sing. Or are sung to.
  • Oh and also these all descend from an 80s-era toy with hair you could style and wow what a change of fortunes that toy has had, huh?

While I’m no Trolls expert, I do know fast food milkshakes. So when Shake Shack announced it was launching three new holiday milkshakes, I was pumped — IP be damned!

That said, I was significantly less pumped that I’d have to say to a living person, “Can I please get Poppy’s Sugar Cookie Shake,” or “One Brach’s Chocolate Peppermint Shake, please.” So I ordered from the app, instead. With all three shakes in hand, I set out to review them and rank them from least essential to the one you need to order ASAP.

Viva’s Cinnamon Roll Shake

Troll Shake
Dane Rivera

Thoughts and Tasting Notes:

Sorry to Viva but I’m going to declare this one the least essential of the three new shakes. Viva’s Cinnamon Roll Shake features a cinnamon roll-flavored custard base mixed with glittering gold frosting and topped with whipped cream and gold confetti.

The flavor is very similar to a cinnamon roll’s icing, it’s milky and vanilla-forward but, sadly, I’m not tasting very much of the cinnamon. I think an easy opportunity to get more cinnamon here would’ve been to dust the shake with real cinnamon rather than gold frosting. Compared to the other three shakes, this one also lacks texture.

It’s not bad by any means… but it feels way less inventive than the other two.

The Bottom Line:

A lack of cinnamon and a textural element hold this shake back from what it could’ve been.

Branch’s Chocolate Peppermint Shake

Troll Shake
Dane Rivera

Thoughts and Tasting Notes:

This shake didn’t need a Troll’s tie-in to sell — it would be a winner regardless of the branding. Branch’s Chocolate Peppermint Shake is a holiday classic — it is a mix of vanilla and chocolate custard mixed with mint fudge and topped with whipped cream and crunchy peppermint sugar shards.

Each sip is a mix of heavy chocolate and mint notes, with the slightest hint of vanilla that keeps it from becoming too rich. The peppermint candies will likely never find their way up your straw but if you’re the type that likes to dip your straw in, mix, and scoop, they add a nice textural element to the experience.

Overall It has a cool and refreshing quality to it, while simultaneously being warm and comforting. The jump-up in quality and flavor from the previous shake is huge.

The Bottom Line:

Even though this isn’t our number one choice, this is a must-order if you like the chocolate peppermint flavor profile. It’s textural, rich, sweet, and satisfying.

Poppy’s Sugar Cookie Shake

Troll Shake
Dane Rivera

Thoughts and Tasting Notes:

Poppy is that girl! Based on the look and description, I was certain this would be my least favorite shake of the three. Poppy’s Sugar Cookie shake consists of a sugar cookie flavored custard mixed with cookie dough candy topped with whipped cream and cotton candy. It sounds objectively like the sweetest thing you’ll ever taste in your life.

And don’t get me wrong it is sweet. But this flavor just works.

Imagine the flavor of the best sugar cookie you’ve ever had coming up a straw with every sip. The flavor is a mix of sweet and creamy butter and vanilla with the occasional burst of cookie dough flavor. As you drink the shake the cotton candy will start to melt adding another dimension of sweetness to the mix, or you can just pull some pieces off the top and eat it on the side. I did this once and I prefer the cotton candy to melt into the shake — but you do you!

The Bottom Line:

Don’t let the candy-colored look of this shake dissuade you, this sugar cookie shake hands-down Shake Shack’s best holiday shake. It’s super sweet and indulgent but in all the best ways.

Find your nearest Shake Shack here.

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Everything We Know So Far About ‘Fargo’ Showrunner Noah Hawley’s Upcoming ‘Alien’ Series

ALIEN
FOX

Things are moving quickly for Noah Hawley‘s heavily anticipated Alien series that’s heading to FX. Taking place in the sci-fi universe that first introduced the Xenomorphs in the 1979 film of the same name, Alien will serve as a prequel to the classic films while also showing a new kind of conflict with the Xenomorph. Hawley has also hinted that the series will explore the concept of AI as shown in the prequel films Prometheus and Alien: Covenant.

Here’s everything we know about the upcoming series:

Plot

While plot details for Alien are being kept closely under wraps, Hawley opened up to Vanity Fair back in July 2021 about when the FX series takes place in the franchise and why it will be set on Earth. According to Hawley, the series will be set 70 years before the first Alien film featuring Sigourney Weaver’s Ellen Ripley, a character the showrunner will not be touching.

“She’s one of the great characters of all time, and I think the story has been told pretty perfectly, and I don’t want to mess with it,” Hawley told Vanity Fair before revealing that his series will focus on a Xenomorph infestation on Earth.

“The alien stories are always trapped,” Hawley said. “Trapped in a prison, trapped in a space ship. I thought it would be interesting to open it up a little bit so that the stakes of ‘What happens if you can’t contain it?’ are more immediate.”

Cast

Timothy Olyphant was recently added to the growing cast of Alien and was quickly followed by Fargo Season 5 star Daniel Rysdahl. Here’s Deadline with the details:

Rysdahl joins a cast that includes Sydney Chandler as the meta-human Wendy, Alex Lawther as soldier CJ, Samuel Blenkin as Boy Kavalier, a CEO, Essie Davis as Dame Silvia, Adarsh Gourav as Slightly, and Kit Young as Tootles. Announced as joining prior to Rysdahl was Timothy Olyphant, and while his role has not been confirmed, Deadline hears he’ll be playing Kirsh, a synth who acts as a mentor and trainer for Wendy, a character with the body of an adult, but the brain and consciousness of a child.

Release Date

Alien is currently aiming for an early 2025 release date. After being shut down by the SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes, production is set to resume in January 2024.

Trailer

Considering Alien only shot a small amount of footage before the strikes, there is little in the way of promotional material as of this writing. Look for a trailer to possibly hit sometime in 2024. You can be sure we’ll update you whenever it drops.

(Via Deadline, Vanity Fair)

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Is ‘The Simpsons Movie’ Getting A Sequel?

simpsons movie
20th Century Studios

The length of time between The Simpsons premiering on Fox and The Simpsons Movie is only slightly longer (18 years) than the gap between The Simpsons Movie and now (16 years). Behold, the ravages of age, indeed. There’s been talk of a sequel pretty much since the U.S. Government borrowed Tom Hanks’ credibility, although nothing official. Is this about to change?

In The InSneider newsletter, Hollywood insider Jeff Sneider questioned why 20th Century Studios agreed to finance James L. Brooks’ upcoming film, Ella McKay. “Emma Mackey (Barbie) will star as the title character — an idealistic young politician who juggles work and family while preparing to replace her mentor as the state governor. Mackey may be a rising talent, but I’m not sure I see the 27-year-old actress as the governor of any state — even Florida — and she’s not a big star like the leads of Brooks’ past films,” he wrote.

One theory: Brooks has made the company billions from The Simpsons; also, he directed Broadcast News, As Good as It Gets, and Best Picture winner Terms of Endearment. He should be able to direct any film he wants.

Sneider pitched another possibility.

The studio wants Brooks to mount a sequel to The Simpsons Movie along with creator Matt Groening and the show’s talented writing staff. This is just a hot rumor for now — the first half of a “We’ll scratch your back if you’ll scratch ours” deal, the likes of which have powered Hollywood for decades. But it makes sense… The key is convincing Brooks, who produced The Simpsons Movie in addition to being one of 11 screenwriters credited.

If a Simpsons Movie sequel is going to get made with the original cast, it needs to happen soon. Harry Shearer is almost 80 years old, and who knows how much longer Julie Kavner will be able to do the Marge voice. But it’s a major time commitment for a writing staff that still puts out 22 episodes a year, every year, and Disney (which owns 20th Century Studios) might not be interested in releasing a 2D animated movie into theaters anymore.

For now, the closest The Simpsons will come to the big screen is the Disney+ shorts. Which Disney character will Hans Moleman meet next? I hope it’s Sassy from Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey!

(Via The InSneider)

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A Young Emma Stone Almost Played A Devious Little Troublemaker On ‘The O.C.’

Emma Stone 2022
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These days, you have teen shows like Stranger Things and Wednesday that follow groups of kids solving various supernatural mysteries and battling demons and such, but back in 2007, teen soaps were about real issues, like going to high school in Orange County, California, and everything that entails. Yeah, the teens on The O.C. never battled Vecna, but they did have Julie Cooper, who slept with her daughter’s ex-boyfriend while also dating her best friend’s dad (before he died of a heart attack) before getting back together with her ex-husband who also dated her best friend. This is what television should be.

The O.C. had its fair share of drama, and a lot of it was encouraged by Kaitlin Cooper, Julie Cooper’s youngest, portrayed by Willa Holland. But, as with most television shows, there were a lot of girls in the running to be Mini Coop. “We saw quite a few people for that,” executive producer Stephanie Savage recalled in the new book, Welcome To The O.C.: The Oral History, written by Alan Sepinwall.

This was the second time Marissa’s little sister Kaitlin had to be cast on the show. In the first season of the show, a young Shailene Woodley portrayed the character, though she did not appear in season two (the classic “boarding school” excuse was used). When season three rolled around and Kaitlin became more of a central character, she was recast. And it was almost Emma Stone.

“We saw Hayden Panettiere, we saw Britt Robertson. Lily Collins,” she added. Just think how the world would have turned out if we had Emily in The O.C. instead of Emily in Paris. Schwartz then revealed, “We had a meeting with Emma Stone,” which obviously didn’t end up happening, though Savage did agree that Stone looked a lot like her would-be TV mom, Melinda Clarke.

Holland ended up playing Kaitlin until the end of the series and then had a guest spot on Gossip Girl before leaving the teen soap circuit and moving on the the young adult superhero demographic with Arrow. And Emma Stone didn’t do too bad either, so it worked out for them both!

(Via EW)

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How Much Are Tickets For The 2024 Shaky Knees Festival?

noah kahan
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Next year’s music festival season is lining up to be yet another goodie. Today (November 28), the official roster for the 2024 Shaky Knees Festival was unveiled. Across the events billed dates of May 3 through 5 next year, Noah Kahan, Weezer, Queens Of The Stone Age, and Foo Fighters will serve as headliners.

How much are tickets for the 2024 Shaky Knees Festival?

Prices start at $310 and go upwards to $5,660. The 3-day general admission bundle will run you just above $310. Then, the 3-day general admission plus (GA+) starts at $515, followed by the 3-day VIP offerings (VIP at $800, platinum at $1,600, and ultimate at $5,660). Each 3-day pass has its own unique perks, so be sure to read through the ticket’s description for further details.

Single-day passes are up for sale as well. For single-day general admission passes, the price starts at $165, GA+ begins at $310, VIP for $490, and platinum is around $1,030 per ticket.

The 2024 Shaky Knees Festival will take place on May 3 to 5, 2024, at Central Park in Atlanta, Georgia. The presale begins on Thursday, November 30, at 10 a.m. ET. Based on remaining availability, a public sale will take place afterward. Find more information here.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Dad’s sincere texts while buying pads for his daughter are a hilarious attempt to get it right

Sadly, a lot of men go out of their way to avoid learning anything about a woman’s period.

(That could be why throughout most of the United States — where the majority of lawmakers are men — feminine hygiene products are subject to sales tax.)

So we should give some love to the guys who make an effort to learn a bit about the menstrual cycle so they can help their family members when they’re in desperate need of feminine hygiene products.

Personally, as a guy, the feminine hygiene aisle can be a little intimidating. There are multiple brands, styles of products, scents, absorbency levels, and they are all color-coded.

What do the colors mean?


Knowing there’s a lot I don’t know, I take a picture on my phone of the box I’m about to purchase and send it to my wife, asking, “Is this the right one?”

A dad in the U.K. is getting some love on social media for the hilarious way he navigated the world of feminine hygiene products while showing how much he loved his daughter in the process.

It all began when Tia Savva sent her dad to Tesco, a popular U.K. drug store, to pick up some tampons.

funny dad stories, Tia Savva, dads

feminine hygiene, mal hygiene, family

tampons, menstruation, comedy

For all the guys out there that need a solid primer on what goes on in the feminine hygiene product aisle, this quick tutorial from Mel magazine does a pretty great job.

This article originally appeared on July 2, 2019