I bought this bottle in the same trip as last week’s Wathen’s and I can’t say it wasn’t because they use the same bottle. Elmer T. Lee Single Barrel is named for the Master Distiller Emeritus of the Buffalo Trace distillery – supposedly having selected the barrels for this bottling himself. This alone sets the expectations pretty high (especially considering the price), let’s see if it lives up.
Stats:
-$25ish
– Made by Buffalo Trace
– 90 proof
Presentation:
As previously noted, the bottle is the same fat-upright rectangle of the Wathen’s bottle with slight indents on the side for grips. Elmer T. Lee, however accentuates the bourbon inside with a fully clear front label that contains on the the basic descriptive text. Through the contents, one can see a line-portrait of an old man – one who I would guess to be Mr. Lee himself.
The back label has only a very short description, telling us that Mr. Lee has fifty years of experience and that he selected the bourbon for this bottle. Nice and simple.
Tasting:
Sweet and smooth to the nose: grape juice, dried leaves, and a bit of pine resin. Very pleasant.
On the tongue, that pine resin with a bit less of the dried leaves and a different sweetness – almost a tart blackberry. ETL starts quiet, then bursts into a bright climax with that berriness, and smoothly descends into a medium strength vanilla finish.
Over all:
I could imagine I’ll reach for this with some frequency given the low price and high availability, traits that don’t often accompany a bourbon of this quality. I’m not saying this is the best I’ve had, but it’s interesting enough, easy enough, and definitely tasty.
I haven’t tried this yet, but I may pass it on to my dad. If it’s readily available, relatively cheap, and tastes pretty good, it sounds like something we would enjoy together. I appreciate the recommendation.
-Sylvia
americanhooch.com, how do you do it?