Showing posts with label Old Grand-Dad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Old Grand-Dad. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Review: Old Grand-Dad Bonded 100 Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Think of your Granddad.  What kind of a man was he?  He was probably a lot like mine.

My Grandfather was James "Jimmy" Mooney and he was a professional boxer from 1940 - 1960.  He was tough and principled (more about the prinicipled part later).  His record was 185 fights, 175 wins (151 KO's), 8 losses, 2 draws.  With a record like that he drew the attention of the American boxing scene.  In the 1940's he moved his family from New Brunswick to Boston and signed with a promoter of some note, Angelo Dundee.

In Boston he fought a number of boxers, but there was one named Beau Jack, that proved to be a turning point for my Grandfather's career.  Jimmy Mooney defeated Jack in a bout that everyone thought would go the other way.  The victory for Jimmy attracted New York promoters who wanted him to go to NYC.  Bigger fights and bigger purses.  One NYC promoter offered him a $12,000 purse for one fight.

Granddad wanted to go to NYC and make the big money, but his promoter, Dundee, had him under contract.  Dundee would not let him go (probably because it would mean Granddad would sign with another promoter).  Jimmy didn't go to NYC.

I asked my mother why and she said because in those days, "A deal was a deal.  Your Grandfather felt he had signed a contract that prevented him from going to NYC."

"He probably could have broken it and there was little they could have done about it," I replied in typical lawyerly weasel speak.

But, then I imagined how my Grandfather would have reacted to such advice.  He wouldn't say anything.  Just silently dismiss the idea, as he leaned back in his brown leather lazy-boy, and stared out the picture window with his piercing blue eyes.  His silence would speak more than any words could.  I know he would have ignored any such advice from a lawyer.  Matter of fact, he did not consult one.

Needless to say, he and Dundee had a falling out and he moved his family from Boston back to New Brunswick.  His boxing career petered out pretty much after that.  However, Beau Jack would go on to become  a world champion, and headline at Madison Square Garden 21 times, a record that still stands to this day.  Sadly, Beau Jack's post-boxing career life would be one of poverty, and because of such meager circumstances, he decided to lobby hard for a pension scheme for retired boxers.  He was also a principled man.

When I drink Old Grand-Dad Kentucky Straight Bourbon whiskey, the above thoughts preoccupy my mind.  Old Grand-Dad is truly old school.  The dominant trend in bourbon, as of late, is to be smooth, gentle, and flavored, but above all, approachable/easy-drinking.  Bourbon is becoming a drink raised by frat boys and used as a base in cocktails for college girls.  Not necessarily a bad thing, but far from where bourbon once started.  If you are at all nostalgic or want a taste of what it once was, I think Old Grand-Dad is a good place to start.

Nose (undiluted)
Rich corn, rye, oranges, subtle vanilla.

Palate (undiluted)
Sweet corn quickly chased by very spicy rye, which turns to cinnamon and cloves.

Finish (undiluted)
Drying yet there is an element of limestone water.  Some heat too.  That's the old school burn coming through, but it is somehow pleasant.  The final and lasting flavor is distinctly ginger and slightly acrid.  Medium length.

100 Proof
At 50% alc/vol you can well imagine there is quite a bit of kick to this bourbon, and you would be right.  So, adding a little water is by all means understandable.  In fact encouraged.  Ice is an option too.

Adding water will tame the heat, and make it more palatable to those accustomed to a smoother whisky.  The judicious use of water will bring out vanilla notes.

Ice?  Yeah, I have done it and I do not have hair on my palms.  Do not be embarrassed.  Everyone does it.  Toss a couple of ice cubes in a tumbler with a good measure of Old Grand-Dad and you have a drink that becomes very pleasant as the ice melts.

I have had this bottle open for several months and the flavor profile has been completely unaffected by oxidation.  I find that a lot of high ABV whiskeys are more resilient than their lower ABV counterparts, and Old Grand-Dad is no exception.

Price Point
Regular price hovers around $20.  I stole a bottle in New Hampshire for the fire sale price of $14.95!  Value for money here in a very big way!

Criticisms?
The mashbill of this bourbon is reportedly 27% rye.  Most mashbills of bourbon have a rye component of nearly 50% less.  A high-rye mashbill makes for a bourbon that will be spicy.  In the case of this particular bourbon, the high-rye mashbill makes it very gingery on the finish.  I am ok with it, but some readers may find it a bit too much and off-putting.

I think this is not a bourbon for the novice whiskey enthusiast.  They will likely find the flavors and heat are too much, even with the addition of water.  For the whiskey newbie or the enthusiast who prefers a tamer flavor profile, yet experience the old time bourbon style, he or she should consider the standard bottling of Old Grand-Dad.  I reviewed it a year ago and really liked it.  It was not as hot, wild and gingery as the 100 proof version.  Unfortunately, Beam Global has has reduced the standard version's ABV from 43% to 40%, and so my review of a year ago is less of a guide than it could be.  I still hear it is a good drop.  It still, I am sure, has much of the unique character.

For those of you who like Knob CreekWild Turkey 101, and other high proof, powerful, robust style bourbons, then I think you will really enjoy Old Grand-Dad 100 proof.

My Recommendation?
Personally, I find Old Grand-Dad 100 proof, served neat, a little too powerful for my liking.  Frankly, it is a guilty pleasure that I enjoy best with ice.  Yes, ice!  I like to toss two good size ice cubes, give it a moment to melt, and then sip.

At $14.95 to $20 a bottle, it is well worth the money.  Is it the greatest of bourbons?  Of course not!  In spite of the great price and worthwhile drink experience, when shopping for even a $20 bottle of bourbon, I will probably gravitate to something a little gentler like the standard bottle version at 40% abv.  This probably reflects my affection for the easy-going, gentle bourbons like Four Roses and Basil Hayden's 8 yrs.  At least that is how I feel as of late.  Of course, when I wrote the Basil Hayden review, I was whining that it did not have enough kick.  Once again, I am a mass of contradictions.

Old Fashion Values?
My Grandfather rarely drank.  Usually at Christmas or other holidays only.  He would have a small tumbler of Black Velvet or other cheap Canadian whisky.  For him, it was a treat, and therefore, he sipped it neat or with a little water, but always sparingly.

Old Grand-Dad is a whisky that I think demands to be treated in the same way.  It is strong drink and insists of you to take the tiniest of sips.  You will be rewarded with an explosion of flavors that are at first spicy, mouthwatering before becoming quite dry on the finish.  I understand that in its infancy, bourbon was such a drink.  Powerful, rough, and not capable of being drunk like soda.  Grampa believed in moderation and Old Grand-Dad demands it from you from the very first sip!

Cheers!


Jason Debly

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Review: Old Grand-Dad Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey (43% ABV)

With my hand upon the wheel, a squeal of the Goodyears, a whiff of burnt rubber, I am now cruising my suburban neighborhood.  I am driving alone.

The music is spilling out the driver's side window, and I just took that turn a little too fast.  Got some Public Enemy thumping as the soundtrack to my life in the burbs, while moms are pulling their kids back from the street.  They clamp dishpan hands over their young ones ears and glare.  A dad pauses with his lawn rake, but not too long, just long enough for an almost imperceptible nod that only I recognize.  He knows.  He sees a brother on the outside of this bourgeois clink.

The music lifts my spirits, taking me from this maze of identical white houses, to a place where I am not 40 something years old.  I got no age, just a bad attitude, and a big black SUV.  I ain't the police.  Okay, maybe the whiskey police.  Yeah, dats better.  Uh-huh.  I break all dem rules.  Even grammatical and spelling ones.



As I listen to Chuck D tell it like it is (see above video - otherwise this post will not make any sense), I remember an interesting anecdote about his cohort in the band, Flavor Flav (the guy in the video who tells Chuck D "you gotta tell 'em just like dat" with a massive clock swinging from his neck).

In 1986, Chuck D's music career got its first big break in part by coming to the attention of Def Jam Records producer, Rick Rubin.  Rubin liked Chuck's politically charged, socially conscious, music and wanted to sign him to his record label (remember records?).  Chuck D insisted that Flavor Flav be signed too, as part of the same act.  Rubin was confused and didn't understand where Chuck D was coming from.  Flav wasn't the lead singer, composer or even playing an instrument.  Of course, the real problem was that Rubin didn't understand what a hype man was.  Flavor Flav was a great hype man and Chuck D knew it.

You see, a hype man is a guy who works the crowd, gets them pumped at live performances by way of his irrepressible enthusiasm.  That enthusiasm is not necessarily singing, but verbally interjecting at just the right moment and often using call and response chants.  Rubin wanted Chuck D, and if Flavor Flav had to be part of the package, then so be it.

Flavor Flav in fine form as the best 'hype man' out there.
This got me thinking that I am like Flavor Flav.  I am a hype man of great whiskey, and Old Grand-Dad Whiskey is in dire need of one, and I am happy to play the part.



















Old Grand-Dad Whiskey is a Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey that has been around for a very long time.  The advertising campaign for this whiskey seems to have died well before the arrival of the Beatles.

The orange label is cheap looking and the bottle cover is not a wood and cork cap, but rather a cheap plastic twist-off.  The label looks out of style, last in vogue maybe in the late 1940's.

I can well imagine Henry Fonda taking a slug of Old Grand-Dad as he sets at the bar in the must-see, 1943 classic film, The Ox-Bow Incident.  Anyway, that's purely my imagination and not based in fact.

Speaking of facts, let me tell you about this bourbon I picked up in Bangor, Maine, at a grocery store for the grand sum of $16.99.

This bourbon dates back to 1882.   It was created by Raymond B. Hayden, in honor of his grandfather (Basil Hayden Sr.), and named it in memory of him, a pioneer bourbon distiller, whose likeness appears on the label.   Grand-Dad liked to distill his bourbon with a higher percentage rye mash bill and his grandson preserves this preference in this bourbon.

Today, Beam Global owns the brand and does not promote it hardly at all from what I can tell.  The brand does not have its own website, nor does it get featured at whisky festivals much.  Beam Global seem to pour a lot more marketing dollars into other products in their portfolio like: Jim Beam, Maker's Mark, Knob Creek and Basil Hayden's to name but a few.

Enter me.  I am here to hype this bourbon!

Nose (undiluted)
Soft, corn, flowers, rainy evening air, some steak spice too.

Palate (undiluted)
Oranges, dry apricot, saddle leather and gentle spice of the rich/prickly rye that dominates very nicely. Old fashioned barley candy comes to mind.

Finish (undiluted)
Slight pepper, Kosher salt, and spiced rye, yeah that rye!  Taste of country stream water where you can see the fish.  Very clean finish with a hint of oak and thyme.

Value for Money!
Hell yeah!  I paid $16.99!  This is incredible value!  This bourbon really has no flaws.  At 43% ABV, it is sufficiently flavorful.

I am also astounded at the very dry flavor profile delivered for such a cheap price.  At this price point, many whiskies are horribly sweet.

I derive far more enjoyment and pleasure drinking this bourbon than I did with Blanton's single barrel (triple the price) that was the subject of my last review (click here).

Highly drinkable neat.  No need for ice or using as mix.  To mix this bourbon is to waste it.

One last point I have to make about the low price.  It's nice to know that there are a few great bargains to be had and this is one of them.  One caveat.  A reader has pointed out to me that Beam Global may reduce the ABV from 43% to 40%.  This may really take a lot of the wind out of the sails of the flavor profile.  We will wait and have to see if this comes to pass.

General Impressions
Besides being ridiculously reasonably priced, it is simply great bourbon.  Wanna learn what the big deal is about bourbon?  Old Grand-Dad is a great place to start.

This is a dry bourbon.  It doesn't taste young or overly sweet,  even though the ingredient whiskies probably are quite youthful.  Who cares?  The taste is great.  Nice clean finish too.

The flavor profile has some nuances that cannot be regarded as simple.  There's something going on here that requires another sip.

Drinking this bourbon, I can't help but think of my grandfather who grew up during the Great Depression.  He would have been very pleased with this bourbon because it is a solid, flavorful drink, yet reasonably priced.  I could see him sipping this with his "White Owl" cigars.

Don't miss out on this bourbon.  Give it a go.  You will not regret the decision.

Now go out and buy a bottle right now!  Do it!  I hope this hype gets you standing up, grabbing your wallet and headed to the nearest purveyor of fine spirits!

C'mon!  Do it!

Just like dat!

C'mon!  Do it! 

Just like dat!

C'mon!  Do it!

Just like dat!

C'mon! Do it!

Just like Dat!

(music and voice fade as I reach for the wife's grocery list and brake for the mall parking lot . . )

Cheers!


Jason Debly

Copyright © Jason Debly, 2009-2013. All rights reserved. Any and all use is prohibited without permission except for the following photo credits: (1) photo of steering vehicle taken by Jason Debly holder of all copyright; (2) "Harder than You Think" video by Public Enemy who hold all copyright; (3)  Photo of Flavor Flav credit: Wenn; (4) Old Grand-Dad print ad from the 1940's with no copyright as it is now in public domain; (5) image still from The Ox-Bow Incident copyright held by 20 Century Fox; (6) bottle of Old Grand-Dad Bourbon taken by Jason Debly; (7) Bottle of Old Grand-Dad bourbon taken by Jason Debly.  All images used are considered by the author to be significant in illustrating the subject matter, facilitating artistic/critical commentary, as it provides an immediate relevance to the reader more capably than the textual description.