Ben Holladay "Seelbach's BH #1" 124.7 proof - Selected by Seelbach's
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$84.99
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Age: 7-years 6-months
Mash Bill: 73/15/12 Corn/Rye/Malted Barley
Source: Holladay Distillery; Weston, MO
Proof: 124.7 proof
Tasting Notes: The nose is sweet toffee, sugared almonds, vanilla powder, damp soil, and grassiness.
The palate is vanilla extract, new leather, tobacco, raw almonds, black tea leaves and cinnamon spice.
Medium finish with notes of leather, tobacco, and black tea.
Bottle count: 132 bottles
About the product: Bourbon is by definition American-made. The spirit can only be made in the United States and it can be made in any state, but the finest bourbon results from an ideal combination of climate and geology that is rare outside of Kentucky but is found in the rolling hills of Weston, Missouri.
The Holladay Distillery was founded in 1856, making it both the oldest distillery in the state of Missouri and the oldest distillery west of the Mississippi still operating on its original site. The property sits on active limestone springs that were first charted by Lewis and Clark in 1804, more than fifty years before Ben Holladay purchased the land that would later become his legacy.
Age: 7-years 6-months
Mash Bill: 73/15/12 Corn/Rye/Malted Barley
Source: Holladay Distillery; Weston, MO
Proof: 124.7 proof
Tasting Notes: The nose is sweet toffee, sugared almonds, vanilla powder, damp soil, and grassiness.
The palate is vanilla extract, new leather, tobacco, raw almonds, black tea leaves and cinnamon spice.
Medium finish with notes of leather, tobacco, and black tea.
Bottle count: 132 bottles
About the product: Bourbon is by definition American-made. The spirit can only be made in the United States and it can be made in any state, but the finest bourbon results from an ideal combination of climate and geology that is rare outside of Kentucky but is found in the rolling hills of Weston, Missouri.
The Holladay Distillery was founded in 1856, making it both the oldest distillery in the state of Missouri and the oldest distillery west of the Mississippi still operating on its original site. The property sits on active limestone springs that were first charted by Lewis and Clark in 1804, more than fifty years before Ben Holladay purchased the land that would later become his legacy.