PROOF120.4 (60.2% ABV) may vary
About Angel’s Envy Cask Strength Bourbon 2021 Release
Angel’s Envy Cask Strength Bourbon has them choosing the best barrels from their rickhouse each year and was named “Best Spirit in the World” in F. Paul Pacult’s Spirit Journal in 2013. 2021 marks the tenth release in the annual series that started with a first run of just 600 bottles and is now up to 14,760 for this year’s release. It’s a beautifully bold 120.7-proof bourbon with a shortened Portuguese ruby Port cask finish that features notes of toasted oak, vanilla, and leather.
Get your bottle of this cask-strength bourbon today!
About Angel’s Envy
After graduating college, Lincoln Henderson joined Brown-Forman as a grain chemist and was eventually promoted to Master Distiller. During his 40-year tenure at Brown-Forman, he honed his skills while developing new brands such as Woodford Reserve Bourbon, Jack Daniel Distillery “Gentleman Jack” and Jack Daniel Distillery Single Barrel Whiskey. In addition to being responsible for the development of new products, Henderson oversaw quality control, technical distillery supervision, and sensory evaluation. “I never regretted a day when I had to go to work,” says Henderson, who was awarded Malt Advocate’s Lifetime Achievement Award and was an inaugural member of the Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame.
After retiring from Brown-Forman, Henderson decided to go rogue and launched Angel’s Envy Bourbon. “Angel’s Envy is a lot of things,” said Henderson. “It’s my life’s work. It’s a whiskey of incomparable smoothness. It takes into account over 200 years of bourbon heritage and mingles it with over 400 years of port wine heritage.” The name is derived from the term “angel’s share” ― the portion of whiskey that evaporates as it ages in wooden barrels. After tasting the bourbon, Henderson realized that the angels might want a larger cut. The family operation is now run by his son Wes Henderson.
About Bourbon
There are not many things more American than bourbon, and although most of it is produced in Kentucky, it can be produced all over the USA.
It must be made with at least 51% corn and bottled at 40% ABV or higher. So why not give this American classic a try?
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