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Spirits

The Best Rye Whiskey Under $50

October 08, 2024

Story: Punch Staff

photo: Punch

Spirits

The Best Rye Whiskey Under $50

October 08, 2024

Story: Punch Staff

photo: Punch

We blind-tasted more than 15 bottles to find five expressions worth seeking out.

Rye whiskey has come a long way over the last decade. For what is arguably America’s oldest spirit, that’s saying a lot. 

Historian David Wondrich has found evidence of something akin to rye being distilled in Salem, Massachusetts, as early as 1648. In the following years, rye took root along the East Coast and flourished there, especially in Maryland and Pennsylvania, until the early 20th century. 

Then it vanished. Chalk it up to Prohibition, the rise of Kentucky distilling, changes in America’s collective palate or some combination of all those factors and more. Once the great distilleries shuttered, styles and methods were forgotten. Even in the early days of the bourbon revival, in the 2000s, it looked like rye might go overlooked—it is notoriously hard to make, and its reputation as a spice bomb seemed like a drink too far for whiskey novices.

It turns out, rye’s return was just a matter of time. Today scores of distilleries are making rye, and drinkers have come to embrace its alluring diversity. A young rye, bouncy and herbaceous, is practically another spirit entirely from one aged five years or longer, when barrel-influenced notes of mint, chocolate and vanilla take over. It mixes well and drinks just as nicely on its own. 

We’re early in the rye renaissance, but it’s still possible to guess where the category might be headed. One clear direction is the rise of regionality. Traditional Pennsylvania rye, also called Old Monongahela, made with malted barley, unmalted rye and occasionally malted rye, is making a comeback, with more than a dozen distilleries across the state embracing the style. Maryland-style rye—made with corn, and bearing a much sweeter flavor profile—is likewise on the rise, especially among the half-dozen or more distilleries around Baltimore. And Kentucky rye, once dismissed as a sad shade of the spirit’s old glory, is winning respect and recognition as a style all its own.

All of this points even further to a word that many distillers don’t like to use: terroir. The last century of commodity-driven, industrial-scale distillation erased any memory of a time when distillers drew on local grain varieties, then distilled and aged their whiskey to draw out nuances. Not anymore. Rosen rye was once immensely popular among distillers around the Great Lakes; long neglected, it is again being grown for distillation. —Clay Risen

We recently tried 17 representative ryes—some old standards, some new craft releases—to get a picture of where the category is, and where it is going. Here are our top five.

Editor’s Note: Clay Risen participated in the original blind tasting in 2022, but was not present for the latest edition. Three out of five selections below were also selected in 2022—tasting notes have been updated to reflect current releases. Because prices vary by market, certain bottles listed below may retail for slightly above $50.

The Best Rye Whiskeys

Catoctin Creek Roundstone Rye Whiskey 92 Proof

Catoctin Creek’s Roundstone Rye has a 100 percent rye mash bill, but doesn’t read like the spice bomb one might expect. The Virginia distillery, founded in 2009 by husband and wife Scott and Becky Harris, selects 10 percent of its aging barrels—those deemed to have desirable or interesting flavor profiles—to be bottled at a slightly higher proof as single-barrel offerings in the “Distiller’s Edition” line. This bottling has notes of burnt sugar and, thanks to the higher proof, a more oily texture, which makes it just as enjoyable to drink neat as mixed into a cocktail.

  • Price: $50 (750 milliliters)
  • ABV: 46%

Dad’s Hat Pennsylvania Rye Whiskey

Dad’s Hat typifies the Old Monongahela style, with a mash bill of 80 percent rye, 15 percent malted barley and 5 percent malted rye. It presents a nose of aromatic wood and baking spice, along with lychee and flowers. The tasters also favored this brand’s four-year-old, 95-proof version, which possessed more of that archetypal rye spice, but which can sometimes retail for over $50 depending on the retailer’s markup.

  • Price: $45 (750 milliliters)
  • ABV: 45%

Michter’s US*1 Kentucky Straight Rye

With a relatively low-rye mash bill (just 53 percent), Michter’s is a popular choice with bartenders, who gravitate toward its classic profile—it’s the rye of choice in Richard Boccato’s winning Manhattan recipe, for instance. Every bottle of Michter’s rye comes from single barrels, allowing for slight variation from one bottle to the next, while always hitting a balance between spicy and sweet, but never cloying. This bottling had a distinct red-hot cinnamon profile with a grainy sweetness to balance it all out.

  • Price: $47 (750 milliliters)
  • ABV: 42.4%

Russell’s Reserve 6 Years Old Rye Whiskey

A great example of a well-aged rye, Russell’s is made with the same mash bill as the standard rye from Wild Turkey (where Russell’s is produced), but with an aging and blending program that rounds off its edges and makes it more cocktail-friendly. It offers subtle smoky, dusty aromatics, and a well-structured palate that has a distinct juicy freshness and dry, bracing finish.

  • Price: $47 (750 milliliters)
  • ABV: 45%

Sazerac Rye Whiskey

Buffalo Trace may be better known today for its bourbons, but the Sazerac name is built on rye, going back to its origins in old New Orleans. Despite its low-rye mash bill, this whiskey is all about the spice, with baked apples and cinnamon on the nose and notes of cocoa on the palate.

  • Price: $26 (750 milliliters)
  • ABV: 45%

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