Chicken Cock Double Oak Kentucky Whiskey Review & Tasting Notes


If you hopped in a time machine and set it for 1856, you'd stumble on a brand new whiskey called Chicken Cock. Distilled in Paris, Kentucky, it had a rich history. Fast forward about 64 years, and you'd find Chicken Cock in speakeasies around the country during Prohibition, including the famous Cotton Club in Harlem.

 

“During the prohibition period, you could always buy good whiskey from somebody in the Cotton Club. They used to have what they called Chicken Cock. It was a bottle in a can, and the can was sealed. It cost something like ten to fourteen dollars a pint.” - Duke Ellington

 

Then, in the 1950s, the distillery in Paris burned down, and the brand vanished into history. That is until it was resurrected in 2011 by Matti Anttila while he was researching older distilleries, and he purchased the rights to the brand. His company, Grain & Barrel Spirits, entered into a collaborative distilling agreement with Bardstown Bourbon Company in 2017.

 

The 13-year-old boy in me adores the name. It is the holy grail of immature jokes.

 

“You can’t have great whiskey without great wood and this expression is the perfect marriage of age and wood. That’s why we aged our eight-year-old whiskey in American oak barrels twice. This process allows us to extract all the great flavor within the oak to create a robust and intriguing sipper that’s likely to not last long on the shelves.” – Matti Anttila

 

Today, I’m exploring Chicken Cock Double Oak Kentucky Whiskey. You’ll notice it isn’t a Rye or Bourbon, and that’s because it involves the use of used barrels. While the mashbill is undisclosed, the recipe would have qualified as Bourbon.

 

Double Oak carries an eight-year age statement. That comes from spending seven years resting in vintage cooperage before being transferred to new, white American oak barrels for another year. The finishing barrel was housed on the top floor of one of Bardstown Bourbon Company’s rickhouses.

 

A 46% ABV (90°) 750ml bottle costs about $99.99. It enjoys wide distribution across the United States.

 

Before I continue, I thank Grain & Barrel Spirits for providing me with a sample of this Kentucky whiskey in exchange for my no-strings-attached, honest review. Let’s #DrinkCurious.

 

Appearance: I drank this whiskey neat from my trusty Glencairn glass. Inside, it was a dark, brassy amber. A medium rim formed slow, wide legs.

 

Nose: As I sniffed this whiskey, I smelled oak, berries, toffee, dark chocolate, and nuts. I tasted mocha when I inhaled the vapor into my mouth. The nosing was an enjoyable experience and had me wondering if the palate would keep up.

 

Palate: The texture was oily, but a solid punch hit my tongue. After the palate shock, the second sip opened things up. Charred oak, vanilla, and nutmeg were on the front. Flavors of cinnamon and rye spices joined mocha to create the middle. The back featured oak tannins, clove, and leather.

 

Finish: Very long and leaving my tongue a bit tingly, the finish consisted of dry oak tannins, clove, barrel char, cinnamon spice, nutmeg, and something slightly bitter that I couldn’t identify. I repeated the sipping process to figure it out but couldn’t.

 

Bottle, Bar, or Bust: If you like extensive wood notes, then Chicken Cock is sure to please. I liked the spiciness, but the char seemed, for whatever reason, out of place. It is comparatively priced to Chicken Cock 8-year single barrel Bourbon that I reviewed in 2020.

 

I’ve had several double-oaked whiskeys, both American and not, and I mostly found them tasty and worthwhile. Chicken Cock Double Oak is off-beat, especially with that bitter note. Most of my interactions with Chicken Cock have found it to be decidedly different. That’s not bad, but you’ll want to try this one at a friend’s house or a good whiskey Bar before committing. Cheers!

 

My Simple, Easy-to-Understand Rating System

  • Bottle = Buy It
  • Bar = Try It
  • Bust = Leave It

 

Whiskeyfellow encourages you to enjoy your whiskey as you see fit but begs you do so responsibly.

 


 

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