These 7 Great Wheated Whiskeys Share a Vital Quality With Pappy

“Wheaters” like Old Elk are more enjoyable when you can actually buy a bottle

InsideHook | Kirk Miller | October 2, 2020

Excerpt…

You don’t need to hunt down an impossible release of Pappy or W.L. Weller to enjoy a wheated whiskey experience. 

There are plenty of distilleries — big, small and up-and-coming — that produce these gentler, fruitier and immensely sippable takes on our favorite spirit, and they won’t involve three- or four-figure payouts. Maker’s Mark might be the most mainstream (and they’re repped in our Best Of list below), but Old Elk is the most interesting of the distilleries tackling wheated product.

By definition, a wheated whiskey is one where at least 51% of the mashbill is wheat, and a wheated bourbon has wheat in high proportion as a secondary ingredient in the mashbill (behind corn). 

“I think wheat whiskey is primarily an untapped market,” says OE’s Greg Metze, a forty-plus year vet of the whiskey world. Metze spent 14 of those years as the Master Distiller for MGP/LDI, where most new and celebrated whiskey brands source their product before they can get their own distilleries going. Along the way, he made a name for himself for crafting some award-winning high-rye mashbills. 

Now the Master Distiller at the Fort Collins, Colorado-based Old Elk, Metze has been able to use his prior experience to branch out into two new wheat-forward tipples: a Straight Wheat Whiskey that’s 95 percent soft red winter wheat and five percent malted barley, aged for five years, and a Wheated Straight Bourbon that’s 51 percent corn, 45 percent wheat and four percent malted barley, aged for five years.

“We actually started thinking about this category seven years ago,” Metze admits. “We were thinking, what’s next? And we also wanted it to be different from other wheated products on the market. We wanted to get the wheat content higher than anyone else and take the category to the max.”

And it turns out that high-content wheat mashbills have similar issues to high-rye mashbills when it comes to fermentation, so Metze had the advantage of experience. 

As a general rule, wheated whiskies (and wheated bourbons) are a bit gentler and milder, with a little drier and smoother finish and some fruitier notes. According to Metze, they can probably age longer than a bourbon or a rye — meaning the five-year releases now may not even compare to the eight- or 10-year releases down the road

Below, a profile of Old Elk’s new releases, plus five other wheated whiskies and bourbons you should try. 

Old Elk Straight Wheat Whiskey

I’ll let Metze describe his own work: “I think pineapple, some honey, stone fruit. The finish is a little drier and smoother, a touch milder.”  

Old Elk Wheated Bourbon

There are the usual notes of vanilla, caramel and oak you’d expect here in a bourbon, but also hints of toffee, leather and amaretto. 

See the full article at insidehook.com