While in Austin, Texas, last February, I drove to Waco to visit Balcones for a distillery tour. I tasted their flagship lineup and stayed for a whiskey flight for some of their other releases. Balcones isn’t a locally available brand for me, so this was the best opportunity to sample their lineup. Until this visit, the only whiskey I had from Balcones was Cataleja, which I reviewed last December.
While visiting Balcones, I saw the largest Forsyth Scottish pot stills I’ve ever seen. Two are used for wash distillation with a capacity of 3,200 gallons, and two for spirit distillation with a capacity of 2,200 gallons. The season of this rye production had distillate coming off the stills around 137 proof, with a barrel entry proof of 124.5. The cask-strength proof was 127 before being proofed down to 100 for bottled-in-bond. For this batch, 98 225-liter casks were aged for 4 years, and is non-chill filtered. The Balcones Texas Bottled in Bond Rye mash bill is also something I’ve never seen before, which consists of 91% Texas-grown Elbon rye, with the other rye grains from a specialty grain company in Germany called Weyermann, providing 5% Cara Rye, 2% Chocolate Rye, and 2% Roasted Rye. Let’s get started!