Midwinter nights dram8/30/2023 I often times go as far as reaching for the rye as soon as the autumn sunsets turn the days golden just after dinner time. I couldn’t wait to compare them.įew things speak to me, as a whiskey drinker, the way a bottle of rye whiskey does on a frigid Maine winter night. When rating the 2020 MWND (Act 8 Scene 3) I was immediately teleported a year into the past. I loved the darker rye profile and how fruity it was (that Port wine finish clearly does good things). Over time in the glass, this one seems to grow richer and a touch sweeter, with the fruitiness growing ever clearer and rounder.I reviewed the 2019 release of High West’s Midwinter Nights Dram (often abbreviated as simply MWND) and was very happy with it. Ethanol heat is present in a measured way appropriate to the proof, while trailing oak makes itself felt on the back end. You also get some charred oak, along with punchy spice evoking pepper and chile flakes, along with hints of licorice. The fruit notes evoke plum and cranberry, certainly giving this the festive vibe that is often associated with the brand, and over time the fruitiness becomes increasingly vinous and wine-forward. The texture is smooth and slick, almost slightly syrupy, though that doesn’t necessarily translate to a lot of residual sweetness-it’s only moderately sweet in fact, and that sweetness is balanced mostly by spice and heat rather than the drying effect of oak. On the palate, though, this one is quite fruity and expressive. Overall, though, it doesn’t immediately strike me as the most assertive nose. It’s a significantly earthy profile, with a grain character the evokes something like a hayloft, combined with the more expected vinous notes and concentrated fruitiness, clearly byproducts of the port barrels. There’s a molasses-like caramelization with a suggestion of a little bitterness, and also a tea-like maltiness, perhaps indicative of the brand’s own distillate with malted rye. On the nose, I’m getting musty rye and earthy tones, supporting by stewed and dark dried fruit. As an expression of Rendezvous Rye, it contains both 95% rye whiskey from MGP and High West’s own, in-house 80% rye, 20% malted rye distillate. ![]() This is the brand’s Rendezvous Rye Whiskey, finished in ruby and tawny port barrels, and bottled at 49.3% ABV (98.6 proof). So with that said, let’s get to tasting A Midwinter Night’s Dram Act 10 (Scene 4). Suffice to say, you’re not likely to run across that one in the wild. Regardless, I don’t have a sample of Encore to taste anyway. It carries the same $150 MSRP, but the secondary market is likely to be orders of magnitude more ridiculous. Like the original version, Encore is likewise rye whiskey finished in port barrels, but the considerably more limited Encore is finished only in barrels that previously contained white port, as opposed to the ruby and tawny ports features in the standard MWND. This year, High West is also celebrating the brand’s first decade with an even more limited edition version of “MWND,” (whiskey geeks love acronyms) dubbed Encore. This year’s release, meanwhile, is Act 10, commemorating a decade of Midwinter Night’s Dram releases.īut wait, there’s more. Though it boasts a pretty luxe MSRP (which has risen as of late) of $150, it’s not uncommon to see whiskey hunters offering $300-400 for this one on the secondary market. This bottle is certainly a boon for High West, giving the company a legit, blue chip “hype brand” that whiskey collectors frequently go far out of their way to acquire. There are a handful of “finished” brands, however, that the whiskey world really embraces with the full-on hype usually reserved solely for Buffalo Trace products, and one of those is definitely High West’s A Midwinter Night’s Dram-a port barrel-finished rye whiskey. ![]() Although many of the most hyped, premiere products in this space simply feature big age statements and big proofs, finishing a spirit in fortified wine or alternate spirit barrels can also confer “prestige” status in some cases … though not all. When it comes to limited release bourbon and rye whiskey, the “finished” corner of the market is an interesting little fiefdom.
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