The Rickhouse Rant, Vol. 7 β Old Forester 1920: Bourbon So Good It Should Be FSA Eligible
Old Forester 1920 might just be the best $60 you can spend in bourbon. Itβs bold, rich, and unapologetically spicyβlike the bourbon equivalent of a brown bear hug. But before we dive into tasting notes, letβs talk about the man who bottled trust, rebranded a doctor, and helped create one of the most enduring whiskey legacies in America. This rant has history, heat, and more cinnamon than your grandmaβs spice rack.
Rickhouse Rant, Vol. 4 β Buffalo Trace: Soup, Cigars, and Cowboy Coats
What would a bourbon rant be without Buffalo Trace? This isnβt just a bourbonβitβs an entire lifestyle brand, bottled, labeled, and slapped on soup cans, cologne, and (checks notes)β¦ Wrangler jackets? Urban cowboys unite. But behind all the scent-infused marketing and nostalgia-laced mystery lies a $26.99 bottle that actually delivers. Smooth, low-rye, sweet, and shockingly versatile for the price. Itβs not wheated, itβs not rare, itβs not revolutionaryβbut damn if it isnβt reliable. Just donβt pay more than $35, and donβt call it a buffalo. Theyβre bison. So yeahβBison Trace.
The Rickhouse Rant, Vol. 3 β Knob Creek 9 Year: The Blue-Collar Brawler of Bourbon
Knob Creek 9 Year isnβt here to win any fashion contests β itβs here to work. In a bourbon market drunk on limited releases and experimental finishes, this 100-proof, 9-year-aged bruiser from Jim Beam punches in daily and pours out classic Kentucky character. Toasted oak, roasted nuts, and a hint of dark cherry ride shotgun through a palate thatβs more grit than glamour. It may not be Bakerβs 7, but itβs the blue-collar brawler of the Beam family β and it deserves more respect than it gets.