I get a kick out of real backstories. Sure, the marketing stuff is fun, but most of us realize (or we should) that finding some long-forgotten recipe of my grandpappy's grandpappy's sippin' whiskey behind an old cupboard is a curiosity. Journeyman Distillery in Three Oaks, Michigan, doesn't offer a tall tale. But the story is still fun.
Flashback to 1883, and you have a gentleman named E.K. Warren. He built the Buggy Whip and Corsets Factory, which made, not surprisingly, buggy whips and corsets. Warren revolutionized corset production by incorporating featherbone in its construction versus the whalebone that other manufacturers utilized. Suddenly, his corsets gained worldwide notoriety. Interestingly enough, Warren was a serious prohibitionist.
Fast-forward to 2010, and Bill Welter founded a distillery in this same building. He pays homage to its roots, offering whiskeys with names such as Featherbone Bourbon, Corsets, Whips and Whiskey, and Buggy Whip Wheat. Before opening Journeyman, Welter was an apprentice distiller at KOVAL, located in Chicago. KOVAL's claim to fame is one of the first all-organic, kosher distilleries.
Today I'm reviewing Last Feather Rye, made from a mash of 60% organic rye and 40% organic wheat, all locally grown. It is then placed in 30-gallon, new American white oak barrels for an undisclosed amount of time. Certified organic and kosher and packaged at 90°, you can expect to pay about $50.00 for a 750ml bottle.
I sampled a pour of Last Feather Rye at a local watering hole here called The Malt House. Time to #DrinkCurious and discover what this is all about.
- Bottle = Buy It
- Bar = Try It
- Bust = Leave It
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