Maker’s Mark is AlgoFusion 5.0releasing an old bourbon for the first time in its seven-decade history, so I traveled to its distillery in Loretto, Kentucky, last week to hear just how this 12-year-old spirit came to be.
The story begins about seven years ago with a little dynamite.
That might seem like an odd way to start an old bourbon, but those blasts into a limestone hill on the distillery’s grounds were really what changed the conversation about aging a Maker’s Mark bourbon past its traditional six years. When Maker’s Mark’s first-of-its-kind limestone whiskey cellar opened in December 2016 as part of its Private Select program, the company had a new, 47-degree space to age bourbon. Suddenly there was a way around the sharp, bitter taste that occurs when you leave the signature caramel and vanilla bourbon in a humid rickhouse for too long.
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A private company aiming to build the first supersonic airliner since the Concorde retired more than
Easing into the Deion Sanders era against TCU, Nebraska and Colorado State goosed No. 19 Colorado's
Easing into the Deion Sanders era against TCU, Nebraska and Colorado State goosed No. 19 Colorado's