Yellowstone Bourbon Limited Edition, 2024 Edition

I’d like to thank ByrnePR and Limestone Branch Distillery for providing this review sample with no strings attached.

A bottle of 2024 Yellowstone Limited Edition Bourbon, finished in cognac and brandy casks, displayed outdoors with a rich amber color and gold-accented label.

I've been covering Yellowstone Bourbon since 2015, and it’s safe to say my relationship with this brand has evolved. My first experience with Yellowstone Bourbon was anything but positive—I found the initial product harsh and unpalatable, leading me to pour it out after I finished my tasting notes. Of course, this was pre-Limestone Branch involvement. However, over the years, Limestone Branch Distillery has made significant strides, turning Yellowstone into a bourbon I now enjoy and look forward to each year. What I especially appreciate is the brand’s commitment to giving back, particularly their partnerships with organizations like the National Parks Conservation Association, which help protect the beauty and integrity of Yellowstone National Park.

The 2024 release of Yellowstone Bourbon Limited Edition Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey marks the ninth Limited Edition release in Limestone Branch Distillery's care of the brand. This year’s edition features a blend of 7-year and 17-year aged bourbons that have been blended and then finished in both brandy and cognac casks from France. Bottled at 101 proof, the limited edition will hit shelves in September, with a suggested retail price of $99.99 for a 750 mL bottle.

Before we get into the tasting notes, let’s see what the company has to say about this year’s release:

In the 2024 release, Beam sought out spirits to complement the natural flavors in the extra-aged bourbon. Finishing the blended bourbon in brandy and cognac casks from France introduces nuances from different spectrums of distilled grapes within the same style of spirit. The result is a soft and approachable bourbon, perfect for Yellowstone Bourbon loyalists.

“The 2024 expression of Yellowstone Limited Edition represents my natural progression of experimenting with special finishes over the years,” said Beam. “Now, finished bourbons have become sought after by fans who want to push the flavor profile. I love experimenting and exploring new opportunities, and using a double finish with brandy and cognac casks created a more complex and nuanced bourbon, opening a whole new experience for consumers to enjoy.”

Well, let’s see how it tastes.

Yellowstone Bourbon Limited Edition, 2024 Edition

Purchase Info: This sample bottle was provided to me at no charge for review purposes. The suggested retail price is $99.99 for a 750 mL bottle.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $6.67

Nose: Ginger, molasses, cinnamon, and oak with just a hint of mint underneath.

Mouth: Spicy and warm with notes of oak, cinnamon, and caramel.

Finish: Medium-long and warm, with notes of cinnamon, ginger, caramel, oak, and a hint of molasses.

Thoughts: This is delicious. It's probably the tastiest sample I've received in the last month (yes, even better than the post before this one, and this is less than half the price…). It feels like it was created with my particular palate in mind. I love all the spice and sweetness. It's very, very good. I really like it.


If you want to support our work at BourbonGuy.com, please consider a one-time donation at ko-fi.com/bourbonguy or paypal.me/BourbonGuy. Or you could buy some merch that I’ve designed and/or built (tasting journals, t-shirts, stickers, pins, signs, posters, and more) at BourbonGuyGifts.com. Use code BOURBONGUYREADER at checkout for 5% off any order of $50 or more.

Four Roses 2024 Limited Edition Small Batch

I’d like to thank Four Roses for providing this review sample with no strings attached.

Well, the Autumn Release season is finally here. When Four Roses says there's just over a month left until their annual release, you know that summer is almost over. It doesn’t matter what the calendar says or what society says. The official start of autumn is the day I get my hands on a bottle of Four Roses Limited Edition Small Batch.

Or at least it used to be. They got too expensive for me to even consider buying them quite a while ago. Unfortunately, I have bad news on that front. This year’s release is the most expensive yet, with a suggested retail price of $220. So, even though I’ve been tasting and covering these releases since the 2009 edition, not all of you may have my level of experience and knowledge of the product. Let’s go over that a little first.

What is the Four Roses Limited Edition Small Batch bourbon?

Every fall, Four Roses releases a bourbon that showcases their ten bourbon “recipes.” They have two mash bills and five yeast strains, which gives them a huge advantage when it comes to blending bourbons (don’t let them hear you call it blending, though; they’re still smarting over being forced to be a Blended Whiskey brand by corporate overlords for decades). They use all ten recipes for their main bourbon, one recipe (OBSV) for the Single Barrel, four (OBSK, OBSO, OESK, and OESO) for the Small Batch, and six (OBSV, OBSK, OBSF, OESV, OESK, OESF) for the Small Batch Select. The yearly Limited Edition Small Batch allows them to experiment with recipes and combinations not used in the main product line. In the past, releases have even used the Q yeast, one of my favorites, though not one that many people prefer. They also tend to use much older products than their mainline bourbons.

Ok, you listed a lot of codes in that last explanation. What do they mean?

The codes are a legacy of being part of the Seagram’s family before it disintegrated at the turn of the millennium. Each code corresponds to a specific combination of mash bill and yeast. Every code starts with "O," the old Seagram’s designation for the current Four Roses Distillery (they had a lot of distilleries). The second letter designates which mash bill is being used: "B" for the 35% rye mash bill or "E" for the 20% rye mash bill, the only two that Four Roses still uses. The third letter will always be "S" because it stands for “Straight Whiskey,” another legacy of Seagram’s diverse product portfolio. The final letter indicates the yeast strain: "V" for delicate fruit notes, "K" for slight spice, "O" for rich fruit notes, "Q" for floral notes (which I love), and "F" for herbal notes. Now, F and Q yeasts tend to make my favorite Four Roses bourbons. I love the herbal and fruity ones. If it tastes like JuicyFruit gum, I’m on board.

Great. So, which recipes are used in the Limited Edition Small Batch this year?

Great question. Brent Elliott used four batches of three different recipes this year: 39% of the product is a 16-year-old OESF, 31% is a 12-year-old OBSV, 23% is a 15-year-old OESK, and the final 7% is a 20-year-old OBSV. All barrels used in this batch were from the bottom three levels of Four Roses’ single-story warehouses.

This year’s release uses a 16-year-old batch of OESF, which I should love, but at that age, there’s a chance that the distillate influence has diminished. Barrels tend to take over in the double-digit ages. Master Distiller Brent Elliott backed this up during his media availability, noting that the OESF batch used "isn’t as typical of some of the ‘F’ strains." He continued that the barrel had taken over, with only echoes of the initial distillate left, and that it was included mainly for mouthfeel.

So, is it any good?

Let’s find out.

Four Roses 2024 Limited Edition Small Batch

Purchase Info: This sample was supplied to me at no cost for review purposes. The suggested retail price is $220 for a 750 mL bottle.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $14.67

Nose: Caramel apple, milk chocolate, oak, and vanilla. Reminds me of a cross between a Milky Way candy bar and apple cider.

Mouth: Cinnamon, cocoa, oak, caramel, vanilla and hints of fruit.

Finish: Medium to long in length and warm. Notes of Cinnamon, herbal anise, and cola.

Thoughts: Let me just state off the bat that this is a good bourbon (and if you thought there was a "but" coming, here it is), but I’m relatively disappointed—not in the liquid itself, but in the liquid compared to its predecessors. For me, the great thing about Four Roses is that they have the opportunity to make bourbon that’s well outside the stereotypical bourbon flavor profile, even if their flagship product, Four Roses Single Barrel, sticks fairly close to the vanilla/caramel/spice stereotype. To me, this tastes like the barrel took over too much. Some people love that; I don’t. If you’d given me this without a label, I couldn’t have told you who made it. It could have been an extra-aged bourbon from Four Roses, Heaven Hill, Diageo, or many others. Don’t get me wrong, I like it, but these used to “Wow!” me. This one doesn’t, and for almost $15 per pour, it should “Wow” everyone who tastes it. So even if I see this (I won’t; I live in a state that gets little and has even less that isn’t in a lottery), I’ll probably pass. $220 for a single bottle of whiskey is a bit too rich for my blood, even if I am a fanboy.

I need to get my hands on some of those F or Q Four Roses batches again. Preferably around ten years old. That’s my happy place. Brent, if you’re reading…hook a guy up, will ya? 😉


If you want to support our work at BourbonGuy.com, please consider a one-time donation at ko-fi.com/bourbonguy or paypal.me/BourbonGuy. Or you could buy some merch that I’ve designed and/or built (tasting journals, t-shirts, stickers, pins, signs, posters, and more) at BourbonGuyGifts.com. Use code BOURBONGUYREADER at checkout for 5% off any order of $50 or more.

Penelope Rosé Cask Finish

I’d like to thank ByrnePR and Penelope Bourbon for providing this review sample with no strings attached.

Hello, my friends. I hope you all made it through another explosive holiday with all your fingers intact and a lot of barbeque in your belly (whether your preferred definition of that word is smoking or grilling). As I was watching a bunch of very large and frightened dogs, I had neither the ability to enjoy the explosions or some barbeque. Alas, such is the life of a dogsitter on a holiday weekend.

But one thing I did enjoy was a bit of bourbon. After all, it’d be a bit silly to celebrate the birthday of the United States without indulging at least a taste of its Native Spirit. I wasn’t, however, enjoying tonight’s whiskey, preferring something a bit more traditional while my wife was away. But once she got home, we got down to tasting the samples that came in while she was gone.

So, let’s talk about this bourbon from MGP’s Penelope brand. As always, this is a blend of different mashbills, some using rye as a flavoring grain and others using wheat. This is how they get to what they call their Four Grain bourbon. The composite mashbill works out to 74% corn, 15% wheat, 7% rye, and 3% malted barley. The component bourbons were aged between four and five years in barrels with a number 4 char level (number 2 on the barrel heads). According to the brand website, the blend was then finished for about four months in “French Grenache Rosé Wine Casks from the Southern Rhône region of France” before being bottled at a non-chill-filtered 94° proof.

Let’s see how it tastes.

Penelope Rosé Cask Finish

Purchase Info: This sample was provided for review purposes at no cost. The suggested retail price is $49.99

Price per Drink (50 mL): $3.33

Details: 47% ABV. A blend of three bourbon mash bills. Composite Mashbill: 76% corn, 14% wheat, 7% rye, and 3% malted barley. 4- to 5-year-old bourbon finished in Rosé casks for about four months.

Nose: Vanilla sugar, dried grains, and cherry.

Mouth: Fruity and biscuity with supporting notes of caramel, vanilla, and baking spice.

Finish: Medium length and warmth with notes of caramel cherries, buttermilk biscuits, and baking spice.

Thoughts: It took me a bit to warm to this one. I was fairly neutral at first as I processed the combo of red fruit and biscuits. But as I did the tasting, I ended up liking it more. My wife give it an unwavering like, I'm on the fence between like and neutral. So I'm giving it a smile. I like it, just not as much as my wife.


If you want to support our work at BourbonGuy.com, please consider a one-time donation at ko-fi.com/bourbonguy or paypal.me/BourbonGuy. Or you could buy some merch that I’ve designed and/or built (tasting journals, t-shirts, stickers, pins, signs, posters, and more) at BourbonGuyGifts.com. Use code BOURBONGUYREADER at checkout for 5% off any order of $50 or more.

Penelope Bourbon: Architect Build 10, Barrel Strength Batch 18, and Toasted Bourbon Batch 24-301

I’d like to thank the folks at Penelope Bourbon and their PR team for providing this review sample with no strings attached.

A couple of weeks ago, I got a fun package from the founders of Penelope Bourbon sharing the newest batches of three of their four core expressions. Two of which, we’ve never looked at before. And since we’ve got a lot to cover tonight, let’s skip the usual blathering and jump right into the bourbons, shall we?

Penelope Toasted Series Batch 24-301

Description from the Producer: Our Toasted Series is a testament to the power of serendipity. When we began to explore toasted finishes, we weren’t expecting each barrel to be so different — so we decided to embrace this variety of chars and toasts that make every bottle in our Toasted Series truly one-of-a-kind. After full maturation in charred new American oak barrels, Penelope Bourbon is finished in a new, hand-toasted barrel. While it can be hard to predict the flavor profile of each bottle in our Toasted Series, the deep notes of vanilla imbued by the toasting process add another dimension to our signature flavor profile. Whether you’re into a Heavy Toast or Medium, our Toasted Series truly offers something for everyone.

Purchase Info: This sample was sent by the producer for review purposes. The retail price on their website is $69.99 for a 750 mL bottle.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $4.67

Details: Mash Bill: 75% Corn, 21% Rye, 4% Malted Barley, 50% ABV. Char Level: 5. Toast Level: Heavy. 4 years old.

Nose: Bubblegum, honey, and a faint note of nutmeg.

Mouth: Cinnamon, nutmeg, honey, and bubblegum.

Finish: Medium in length and warmth with sweet notes of honey, bubble gum, and cardamom.

Thoughts: If you are a fan of bourbons that are bubblegum/almond forward you will love this one. I'm reading it as bubble gum and honey with various baking spices. It isn't hot but has a nice flavor. I like this one.


Penelope Barrel Strength Batch 18

Description from the Producer: Penelope Barrel Strength is bourbon in its purest form. Completely uncut and non-chill- filtered, our barrel strength bourbon is just as delicious and even more powerful than our signature Four Grain blend. Each batch of our Barrel Strength is blended from three bourbon mash bills and aged in hand-selected new American oak barrels, imparting notes of caramel syrup and subtle barrel char and pushing the boundaries of our Four Grain’s balanced flavor profile.

Purchase Info: This sample was sent by the producer for review purposes. The retail price on their website is $65.00 for a 750 mL bottle.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $4.33

Details: Mash Bill: 80% Corn, 8% Rye, 9% Wheat, and 3% Malted Barley. Blend of three straight bourbon mash bills distilled in Indiana. 57% ABV. Aged 4 to 6 years.

Nose: Strong caramel notes start you off. Followed by notes of oak, vanilla, red fruit, and cinnamon.

Mouth: Whoo that's warm! Follows the nose though the emphasis is different. This starts with hot cinnamon candies followed by sweet caramel, vanilla, and oak.

Finish: Warm and on the longer side of medium with notes of cinnamon red hots and honey.

Thoughts: This is a nice, hot bourbon. Though not nearly as hot as you'd expect a 114° proof bourbon to be. You could drink this neat with little trouble if you are comfortable with triple digit proofs. I really like it. When we looked at this last year, it was batch 14. I was a big fan then and I still am. I’d buy a bottle of this without hesitation.


Penelope Architect Build 18

Description from the Producer: Architecture is defined as the the art or practice of designing and constructing buildings. Using those same principles, we wanted to build new and distinct flavor profiles that same way an Architect creates new innovative structures. Working in collaboration with Tonnellerie Radoux of France, the market leader in oak barrel manufacturing and innovation, we use French oak staves and their their state-of-the-art OakScan® process to build a truly precise flavor profile within every bottle. After all, the best architecture leaves no room for error. (Editorial note: OakScan is a process used to measure the tannin level of a particular piece of wood that was developed by Tonnellerie Radoux.)

Purchase Info: This sample was sent by the producer for review purposes. The retail price on their website is $65.00 for a 750 mL bottle.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $4.33

Details: 75% Corn, 15% Wheat, 7% Rye, and 3% Malted Barley. Straight bourbon whiskey finished with two different types of French Oak Staves. Delicate Stave (low tannin content) and Intense Stave (medium tannin). 52% ABV. Aged 5 years with 6 weeks of finishing.

Nose: Dried grains, toffee, bubble gum.

Mouth: 1980's Baseball card bubblegum, floral vanilla, allspice, and oak tannins.

Finish: Medium in length and warmth. Notes of baking spice, toffee, vanilla, and oak.

Thoughts: Are you too young to know the wonderful flavor of baseball card bubblegum from the 1980s? Think hard bubblegum mixed with a little wax and cardboard. Sounds terrible, right? But weirdly I always enjoyed it. I've gotten this note on other whiskeys before but in this case, I'm not sure it is working for me. There is nothing wrong with the bourbon. It just isn't hitting right for me. I'm going to give this a neutral rating.


If you want to support our work at BourbonGuy.com, please consider a one-time donation at ko-fi.com/bourbonguy or paypal.me/BourbonGuy. Or you could buy some merch that I’ve designed and/or built (tasting journals, t-shirts, stickers, pins, signs, posters, and more) at BourbonGuyGifts.com. Use code BOURBONGUYREADER at checkout for 5% off any order of $50 or more.

Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond, Spring 2024

I’d like to thank Heaven Hill for providing this review sample with no strings attached.

I have been a hurtin’ unit the last couple of days. Spending nine hours shoveling mulch and moving it with a wheelbarrow will do that to an old guy like me. And speaking of wheelbarrows. I noticed something about myself as I was tiredly pushing that wheelbarrow on Sunday. I can’t actually say the word wheelbarrow. Instead, I say wheel-barrel. Even in my head, it’s more like a whiskey container with wheels than the yard and garden implement.

I don’t know if this is an Eric thing, a Northern Wisconsin thing, a redneck thing, or some combination of all three. But it was a weird thing to notice about myself. I’m guessing it is a family thing, which honestly would be a mix of all three. My family has a long habit of making up weird pronunciations for words. My dad would “trace” things instead of chasing them. His mom would ask me to make her a “hand sammich” when she went camping with us (instead of a ham sandwich). I guess I come by it naturally.

Anyway, let’s move over to tonight’s bourbon, shall we? Tonight we are looking at the most recent release in the Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond series. One of the few bottles that are over $100 that my wife would probably purchase just for the bottle. This is really weird to me as we have an empty bottle of the vintage design that these were based on. Of course, you don’t get really tasty whiskey with that vintage empty, either, so maybe that’s why.

Quoting from the press release now:

“Heaven Hill's stewardship of the Old Fitzgerald brand over the past quarter century has honored the legacy of John E. Fitzgerald," said Heaven Hill Master Distiller Conor O' Driscoll. "The Spring release showcases the premium quality and craftsmanship of Old Fitzgerald which has been cherished by fans, not just for decades, but for generations.”

These are usually really tasty, so let’s see if this one stacks up.

Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond, Spring 2024

Purchase Info: This 200 mL sample was provided at no cost for review purposes. The suggested retail price is $139.99 for a 750 mL bottle.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $9.33

Details: 50% ABV. 10 years old.

Nose: Oak, caramel, cherry, vanilla, and hint of mint.

Mouth: Caramel, vanilla, chocolate, nutmeg, and oak.

Finish: Warm and of medium length with a lot of baking spice notes.

Thoughts: This is delicious. It's warm and spicy all the way through with a lot of baking spice. It is sweet and tasty. It’s more than I’d want to spend on a bottle of bourbon, but I do like this. A lot.

Somebody get me a wheel-barrel full. Or not. I can’t even imagine what that would cost.


If you want to support our work at BourbonGuy.com, please consider a one-time donation at ko-fi.com/bourbonguy or paypal.me/BourbonGuy. Or you could buy some merch that I’ve designed and/or built (tasting journals, t-shirts, stickers, pins, signs, posters, and more) at BourbonGuyGifts.com. Use code BOURBONGUYREADER at checkout for 5% off any order of $50 or more.

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof, B524

I’d like to thank Heaven Hill for providing this review sample with no strings attached.

IMAGE: A bottle of Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, Proof: 130.6, Age: 12 Years, Batch No: B524, Alc/Vol: 65.3%, placed on a wooden surface outdoors.

Ok. So I use ChatGPT to write the Alt Text description for the cover images because I am always a bit amazed at what it pulls from the photo that I don’t think about mentioning. I don’t need to count the words, I just say “Summarize this photo in 150 characters or less” and it spits out something that works. (If you were unaware, Alt Text is the short bit of text that is included in the website code so that the image is adequately described for those who use a screen reader. I mean it’s an easy thing to include, why would I want to alienate someone from reading my writing just because they don’t see as well as I do?)

So I was doing that and, as I often do, I asked it to come up with something on the fly. I’m old enough that these Large Language Models are basically magic to me (much like VCRs, personal computers, the internet, and streaming video were before it). Because I will spend much of the weekend moving eight cubic yards of mulch from my driveway to our garden, I asked it to write something lamenting that fact that then transitions into the intro to this review. I didn’t expect the AI to write anything that I would use, but it was the thing on my mind. I learned a long time ago that as a creative person, sometimes you need to work through a bad idea so your brain can give up on it in order to move on to a good one. In my puny human brain, I thought that maybe I could outsource that step to the AI. But then the damn thing wrote a poem. And for some reason, I found that mildly amusing. And so, since we’ve been covering Elijah Craig Barrel Proof three times a year since 2019, I figured, I would share that poem. I mean, you guys know what is going on with this product by now.

A Mulch Mover's Lament

In the sweltering heat of June, I toiled,
Eight cubic yards of mulch, sweat-soaked and soiled.
With every shovel's lift and wheelbarrow's haul,
My weary muscles strained, yet stood tall.

The sun bore down, unyielding in its glare,
Each mound of mulch seemed a mountain to bear.
Blisters formed and my back cried out in pain,
Yet onward I pushed, again and again.

The scent of fresh earth filled the air around,
A bittersweet reminder of the task so profound.
As hours stretched on and shadows grew long,
My strength began to waver, though my will remained strong.

But as the final pile was spread and laid,
A sense of accomplishment gently stayed.
Exhaustion gave way to a quiet pride,
In the garden's transformation, far and wide.

A Well-Deserved Reward

After such a grueling day of laborious care,
A moment of respite was beyond compare.
I reached for a bottle, rich and profound,
Elijah Craig Barrel Proof, a treasure to be found.

With its deep amber hue and robust grace,
This bourbon promised a sensory embrace.
At 130.6 proof, it stood bold and tall,
A spirit to savor as evening began to fall.

Join me as I uncork this barrel-aged delight,
And journey through flavors, rich and bright.
From mulch to masterpiece, the day's work now done,
Let's explore this bourbon, sip by glorious sip, one by one.

Ok. See? This shit is weird. Which is why I like to play with it. I honestly didn’t even consider a poem. And by the way, because I drink a lot of bourbon, the pain it references will be there, but muscles standing tall? Not so much.

Anyway, let’s see if this beast of a bourbon is any good, shall we?

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof, B524

Purchase Info: This sample was provided at no charge by the producer for review purposes. The suggested retail price is $74.99.

Price per Drink (50 mL): $5.00

Details: 65.3% ABV. 11 years, 2 months.

Nose: Vanilla, caramel, cinnamon, cherry, chocolate, and oak.

Mouth: Vanilla, caramel, cinnamon, chocolate, nutmeg, oak, and a hint of mint.

Finish: Long and warm with lingering notes of nutmeg, allspice, and chocolate.

Thoughts/Comparison to last time: The noses are very similar with A124 showing the same notes, just more pronounced. B524 is sweet, spicy, and very hot. A124 feels almost cool by comparison and shows more cherry/fruit in the mouth. B524 is very "stereotypical bourbon” in the best possible way and I am loving it. Both are delicious but give me B524 if I get to choose.


If you want to support our work at BourbonGuy.com, please consider a one-time donation at ko-fi.com/bourbonguy or paypal.me/BourbonGuy. Or you could buy some merch that I’ve designed and/or built (tasting journals, t-shirts, stickers, pins, signs, posters, and more) at BourbonGuyGifts.com. Use code BOURBONGUYREADER at checkout for 5% off any order of $50 or more.