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Deconstructing Black Maple Hill.


cowdery
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The attached memo just came into my possession and I knew it would be of interest here.

This illustrates my contention that although companies will rarely tell an outright lie, they will twist themselves into pretzels to mislead you or, at least, avoid telling you the whole truth.

Case in point. "Black Maple Hill has no connection whatsoever with Heaven Hill."

Let's review what we know. I'm not a big BMH guy, so please correct anything I might have wrong.

Black Maple Hill has always been owned and distributed by CVI Brands of San Carlos, California.

The first Black Maple Hill releases were bottled by Julian Van Winkle at the old Hoffman/Commonwealth Distillery outside of Lawrenceburg, Kentucky. That whiskey is believed to have been made at the Medley Distillery in Owensboro.

When Julian left Lawrenceburg the bottling -- and assumed business name -- for BMH went to KBD in Bardstown, where it remains to this day. Since neither CVI nor KBD is a distiller, the whiskey has to have been made somewhere else. Where? Who knows, really. Maybe they're still tapping those old Medley barrels.

Every BMH COLA approved since 2001 has been for DSP-KY-78, which is KBD.

Heaven Hill, of course, is right across the street from KBD and while the folks at KBD get pissy when someone says that all of KBD's whiskey comes from HH, I don't think they can plausibly deny that most of it comes from there.

Now "Black Maple Hill has no connection whatsoever with Heaven Hill" is not the same as saying "There is not one drop of Heaven Hill-made whiskey in any bottle of Black Maple Hill." But their denial would certainly be disingenuous if, in fact, it is Heaven Hill whiskey procured via KBD.

Is it?

If CVI wanted to be transparent and, therefore, credible in refuting "the Bloggers and Tweeters on the Internet" they wouldn't just deny a relationship with Heaven Hill, they would reveal who actually makes their whiskey. But in the absence of facts you inevitably encourage "pure speculation."

So, gang, what else do we know?

BMH Heaven Hill letter.pdf

BMH Heaven Hill letter.pdf

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Actually that memo is correct, or at least I logically assume.

CVI gets bottles from KBD.

KBD gets whiskey from HH.

Therefore CVI and HH are clueless about each other.

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So I get my whisky from a guy who gets it from a guy with whom I have no connection whatsoever. Well that statement ought to get the customers out in droves.

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Well, at least they didn't take the "eff you for asking" angle taken by their bottling partner.

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The first Black Maple Hill releases were bottled by Julian Van Winkle at the old Hoffman/Commonwealth Distillery outside of Lawrenceburg, Kentucky. That whiskey is believed to have been made at the Medley Distillery in Owensboro.

I thought the original was S-W? Not that it matters, but recall reading something about similarities to other VW.

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I thought the original was S-W? Not that it matters, but recall reading something about similarities to other VW.

Medley WOULD BE "something about similarities to other VW" -- the original VW ryes were from Medley stock (and probably still contain a modicum of Medley in the mix).

As to the topic -- and aside from the double-speak nonsense -- I wonder if CVI even knows where its whiskey comes from (don't the Kulsveens hide the barrel heads during barrel selections?). Which is a separate question than whether CVI knows its whiskey from a hole in the bung -- er, a bung in the a...; um, I mean a hole in the...Well, YOU KNOW WHAT I MEAN!:smiley_acbt:

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I thought the original was S-W? Not that it matters, but recall reading something about similarities to other VW.

Yes it was: padpadpadpadpadpadpad

I was at liquor store today that had bottles of 11, 14, 16, and 21 YO Black Maple Hill. These were all bottled in Bardstown. This means it was probably not Julian's bourbon, but from another source. The 14 and 16 YO have received good reviews on this site (despite my thoughts about some other of EK's bottlings).

They also had a 15 YO rye, but I did not check to see where it was bottled.

While doing a google search on Black maple hill, I came across a post from Julian with some history:

"I was crusing your site to see if you ever had ever writen anything about Van Winkle whiskey and noticed the questions about Black Maple Hill.

I indeed bottled this whiskey over the last few years for a distributor in Califonia. He sold it to several markets around the country, but not here in louisville. It was my Van Winkle whiskey under abother label. The ages bottled were 14, 16, 18 & even some 20-year. There was alos a rye whiskey which was mine. All the Van Winkle whiskey would have been in bottled dislaying the "Bottled in Lawrenceburg,KY" address. Since I now do all my bottling at Buffalo Trace in Frankfort, the Califonia distributor is now buying his whiskey and having the bottling done in Bardstown at KY Bourbon Distillers. The whiskey is quite differnt now. I am short of Van Winkle whiskey so I cold not acconodate the Black Maple Hill label anymore.

I hope this answers a few questions.

Julian"

Does HH have 21 YO bourbon available? I know they have exported a 21YO bourbon before.

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Not to get tooooooooo technical, but Julian says he used "Van Winkle" whiskey, not specifically SW. As we all know, he was sourcing some of his his early bottlings from other distilleries. His original Pappy 20yo was from the Boone Distillery and his 23yo was from ????????? (He won't say).

I do believe that most of those early BMH's done by Julian were SW whiskey. I brought a BMH 14yo to the Sampler in 2004 and it tasted like SW to me and everyone else that tried it.

Not knowing exactly what CVI is upset about from bloggers and tweeters, but my guess is that people on the net are opining "BMH tastes like HH whiskey and was probably distilled there".....and not "BMH is connected with HH". And if this is the "opinion" they are refuting, then saying they are disingenuous is being polite.

Randy

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Generally, though admittedly not always, when Julian said something was 'his' whiskey, that was code for SW wheated bourbon. It also meant whiskey he sourced, as opposed to whiskey his customer sourced and just hired Julian to bottle, so that he was functioning as both broker and bottler. But, of course, the vast majority of what he sourced was SW wheater, much like KBD where the vast majority of what they source is Heaven Hill.

I suspect what's getting back to CVI is "why pay $90 for Black Maple Hill when if you want an extra-aged Heaven Hill whiskey, you can buy Elijah Craig 18-year-old for less than $40?"

They obviously don't care what "Bloggers and Tweeters on the Internet" think, but if it's influencing their wholesale and retail customers, that's a problem, so they issue this seemingly definitive statement, with lots of bold-faced type, that's just dripping with weasel words and obfuscation. How can this be a good thing for them?

(I have a little more fun with it on my blog here.)

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They obviously don't care what "Bloggers and Tweeters on the Internet" think, but if it's influencing their wholesale and retail customers, that's a problem, so they issue this seemingly definitive statement, with lots of bold-faced type, that's just dripping with weasel words and obfuscation. How can this be a good thing for them?

It can't and I expect (or really hope) that it will continue as a big problem. The clock is not going to be turned back on all the whiskey information that is now so readily accessible to enthusiasts. Couple this phenomena with the marketing that has already happened with perishable foods in both restaurants and grocery stores. It's more than just where it's coming from but specifically what farms. The emergence of craft distillers and their need to market on methods of distillation or the color and place of the grains, is another influencing trend on the consumer and continuing pressure on the industry. It will probably still take some more time but the CVI letter might be a good indication that "the times they are a changing". For me personally, they should come clean or they and others like them just ain't going to get my business, which may not be as little as they think.

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Chuck or anyone else: Michter's is bottled by KBD as well. Does anyone know for certain where the Michter's juice comes from? If so, recently I've tasted a lot of it and BMH, particularly the small batch. There is a definite similarity between Michter's Unblended American Whiskey and Black Maple Hill Small Batch in terms of nose and flavor. I urge anyone to give them a comparison and I think you'll find the same. If anyone knows who distill's Michter's, I'd bet the farm that's who's doing BMH.

And as a side note, these products mentioned above taste little or nothing like HH's primary mash bill used for EC12, 18 and EWSB. Doesn't mean it's not HH juice, just saying that to me it clearly doesn't taste like any of those HH products.

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I'm kinda new here but I just have to say that I love all this "cloak and dagger" stuff about where the bourbon or rye that is in these bottles was actually distilled! I happen to like the taste of most of the KBD stuff and all the Van Winkle stuff. I guess this goes for the Wathen's as well. It is interesting to try to figure out where they really were distilled. As for the LDI rye (High West, Templeton and now Bulleit Rye), I think there is a lot of great flavor there and they are some of my favorite whiskeys.

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They should either just say where they source their whiskey from (which I understand they probably cannot for contractual reasons) or stay quiet and let the speculation happen. Unless the speculation is that they source from China or some crappy distillery just let it be. Leave it at a statement to the effect of "BMH is a [insert description and superlatives]. In creating BMH, we seek out the finest bourbon from the best distilleries in Kentucky. Only bourbon of the highest quality that fits the legendary BMH flavor profile is chosen."

In response to accusations or inquiries simply state that you are contractually obligated to not disclose the sources. And furthermore, KBD's sources can change over time to ensure that KBD continues to provide award-winning bourbon at the most economical prices.

I don't think I've ever had a KBD product. Just don't see it on the shelves around here.

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That "contractually obligated" excuse is usually a lie too.

Yeah, I wasn't sure about that. Is it more economics-driven secrecy? For example, If KBD buys bourbon from a distillery, say Kevin Still, at a price where KBD can price its juice lower than similarly aged Kevin Still juice, Kevin Still would surely require non-disclosure from KBD so people don't see Kevin Still bourbon on the shelf at a higher price next to bourbon known to be sourced from Kevin Still at a lower price.

In the more likely, opposite scenario, where Kevin Still is sure its price will beat KBD, or is otherwise not in competition with Kevin Still whiskey, Kevin Still doesn't care if KBD discloses their source. In this scenario its in KBD's interest to keep it under wraps.

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...And as a side note, these products mentioned above taste little or nothing like HH's primary mash bill used for EC12, 18 and EWSB. Doesn't mean it's not HH juice, just saying that to me it clearly doesn't taste like any of those HH products.

I'm pretty sure I remember, in a conversation with Drew at one of the SB.com gatherings some time back, he said that some of what KBD does get from Heaven Hill is made to KBD specifications. In other words, Heaven Hill is contract distilling for KBD, using other than a standard HH mash bill and/or yeast.

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I'm pretty sure I remember, in a conversation with Drew at one of the SB.com gatherings some time back, he said that some of what KBD does get from Heaven Hill is made to KBD specifications. In other words, Heaven Hill is contract distilling for KBD, using other than a standard HH mash bill and/or yeast.

That makes sense and it would be a marketing plus in my opinion.

At least the consumer knows that they are getting something original

rather than identical to another brand. Even saying they have select barrels

going into their bottles is a plus. You need something to justify a higher price.

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I'm pretty sure I remember, in a conversation with Drew at one of the SB.com gatherings some time back, he said that some of what KBD does get from Heaven Hill is made to KBD specifications. In other words, Heaven Hill is contract distilling for KBD, using other than a standard HH mash bill and/or yeast.

Good info. That I didn't think about, and it would make sense.

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I'm pretty sure I remember, in a conversation with Drew at one of the SB.com gatherings some time back, he said that some of what KBD does get from Heaven Hill is made to KBD specifications. In other words, Heaven Hill is contract distilling for KBD, using other than a standard HH mash bill and/or yeast.

That's interesting.

I had always assumed the differences were entirely due to aging. If they do have their own mashbill, they must not use it for everything. I've had bottles of Willet, especially younger ones, that screamed HH with every sip. Mint and eucalyptus out the proverbial wazoo.

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, in a conversation with Drew at one of the SB.com gatherings some time back, he said that some of what KBD does get from Heaven Hill is made to KBD specifications. In other words, Heaven Hill is contract distilling for KBD, using other than a standard HH mash bill and/or yeast.
That's interesting.

I had always assumed the differences were entirely due to aging. If they do have their own mashbill, they must not use it for everything. I've had bottles of Willet, especially younger ones, that screamed HH with every sip. Mint and eucalyptus out the proverbial wazoo.

I am spectical.

Think about this, bourbon has to age for years.

Hey I ain't saying, but I'm just saying.

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I'm skeptical too, but it's not implausible. KBD has been buying whiskey from Heaven Hill for a very long time. Probably some of it is under long-term contract and it would make sense for KBD to buy new make and age it themselves, since they have that capability. That's certainly better for Heaven Hill, because they don't have to find room for it in their warehouses. Bernheim was designed to be able to easily make many different products, so that part is plausible too. KBD is really small. They don't need a lot of whiskey. They might pick up a little bit here and a little bit there. They are, among other things, the buyer of last resort for barrels that some people would say are over-oaked. They find customers for that sort of thing.

As for the secrecy, the last person who cares is the seller, especially Heaven Hill. That's why I doubt these 'contractual' claims. Since Heaven Hill's cheapest retail product is the Heaven Hill brand, Heaven Hill isn't worried about anybody undercutting them with their own whiskey.

I can imagine Jack Daniel's or even Jim Beam requiring a non-disclose but not Heaven Hill.

It's usually the marketing company selling the bulk whiskey product that wants to keep the origins secret, not because it matters if you know it's Heaven Hill or Brown-Forman, Beam or BT, that made the whiskey, but because then you'll know that Little Old Brown Jug Distillery didn't make it and that's the secret they're trying to keep.

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