Jul 22, 2016 Red Cup Rebellion Red. Evan Williams black; Makers Mark; Jack Daniels No. The big surprise to me and clearly the real winner when considering cost to benefit is Evan Williams Black. Jan 09, 2014 The 10 Best Budget Bourbons. Cocktail 101. All the basics of the bar. Michael Dietsch. 87 Printer-Friendly Version. Evan Williams Black Label (86 proof, $14) Aged 5 to 7 years, Evan Williams is a solid bourbon, and it rightfully appears on most lists of the best budget whiskeys. I can usually get a 1.75L handle of it for about 25 bucks,. Bourbon drinkers around the world are very familiar with this brand because of its unique history and amazing flavor profile. Some whiskey lovers claim that Evan Williams is better than a bottle of Jack Daniels. Whether or not the Evan Williams Bourbon Whiskey Black Label is something more than just a long time brand is still being debated today.
Type | Bourbon whiskey |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Heaven Hill |
Country of origin | Kentucky, United States |
Introduced | 1957[1] |
Alcohol by volume | 43% |
Proof (US) | 86 |
Related products | Heaven Hill |
Evan Williams is a brand of Kentucky straightbourbon whiskey bottled in Bardstown, Kentucky,[2][3] by the Heaven Hill company.[4] The product is aged for a minimum of four years[4] (which is more than the two year minimum to be called 'straight' bourbon, but is the minimum requirement for a straight whiskey that does not have an age statement on the label).[5] It has been ranked as one of the world's best selling whiskey brands.[6]
Although bottled in Bardstown, the product is distilled at the Heaven Hill distillery in Louisville, Kentucky.
The 'standard issue' Evan Williams bourbon is sold as the mass-market 'Black Label' variety. The company also bottles several other varieties, including a 'White Label' that is bottled in bond,[7] an 'Evan Williams 1783' bourbon that is produced in more limited quantities, and a nine-year-old single barrel bourbon sold in vintage-dated bottles sealed with black wax. Occasionally available in some regions is a 'Green Label' variety that is 80 proof and represents a younger, lighter-bodied version of the bourbon found in 'Black Label' bottles at a more affordable price.
As of 2010, Evan Williams was the second largest-selling brand of Kentucky straight bourbon (following the market-leading Jim Beam brand) and had the fastest-growing market share among the top-volume American whiskey brands (with a 12.4% sales growth rate), according to a press release issued by the producer citing A.C. Nielsen Scantrack 2010 data.[8][9]
Evan Williams Black is 43% alc/vol (86 U.S. proof), unlike some popular whiskeys which are bottled at the statutory minimum of 40% alc/vol (80 proof).
Evan Williams was a Welsh immigrant, who was born in Dale, Pembrokeshire, but emigrated to the United States towards the end of the 18th century.[10] Williams settled in Kentucky and began distilling in 1783, in what is now Louisville, Kentucky.[11] A historical marker in Louisville (depicted in photo at right) says the site was Kentucky's first commercial distillery. Williams was elected to serve as the first wharf master of Louisville in 1797.[12]
This heritage is emphasized on the bottle label of the best selling variant, the black label, which bears the inscriptions 'Since 1783' and 'Kentucky's 1st distiller'. However, the inscriptions should not be construed as indicating that the brand has continuously existed since the time of the historic distillery. The modern whiskey brand was introduced in 1957[1] and has no direct connection to the historic distillery.[citation needed]
Moreover, historian Michael Veach of the Filson Historical Society has stated that key details of the historical claims about Williams appear to be false.[13] Veach said that the assertion that Williams was Kentucky's first distiller did not appear until an 1892 publication by Reuben Durrett, more than a century after the fact. He also said that the dating is disproved by a record of Williams traveling from London to Philadelphia in May 1794, showing that Williams could only have begun his distillery substantially later. Veach indicated that the true identity of Kentucky's first distiller may never really be known, since record-keeping about such matters was poor, and there are others that seem more likely as candidates for first distiller, including Jacob Myers and brothers Joseph and Samuel Davis. Records reportedly indicate that Myers and the Davis brothers both arrived in 1779.[13]
Varieties of whiskey using the Evan Williams brand name include the following:
Several liqueurs are also produced under the Evan Williams brand, including:
The whiskey and its history are featured in the 'Evan Williams Bourbon Experience', a tourist attraction in Louisville that is part of the Kentucky Bourbon Trail.
On February 16, 2011, the 'Black Label' expression tied with 100 proof Very Old Barton as 'Best Buy Whisk(e)y of the Year' in the 17th Annual Malt Advocate[23] Whiskey Awards.