Let’s get on with the review…
- Appearance: Deep amber color. After giving it a swirl, thick, fast moving legs form.
- Aroma: Brown sugar. Molasses. Cinnamon. Nutmeg. Subtle hint of pipe tobacco. Adding water brings out some vanilla and caramel notes.
- Taste: A bit thin and watery. Starts off with some cinnamon spiciness that coats the tip of your tongue. There’s a bit of brown sugar and maple syrup sweetness, but it’s overpowered by the spice. When you let it linger in your mouth, the spice factor escalates and tingles/warms the middle of your tongue. Warm and spicy medium finish. Adding water tones down the cinnamon flavors and lets some of the sweetness take hold.
- ABV: 45%
I wasn’t expecting to like this whiskey. I don’t care for the look of the bottle or the label, and the “extracting whiskey from the wood” process sounds a bit too gimmicky. To say that I had low expectations would be an understatement.
I am happy to report that Jim Beam Devil’s Cut Bourbon is actually very good, and at an average price of around $23, it’s also a very good value. Devil’s Cut is a very smooth and very drinkable Bourbon. You can definitely taste the alcohol when you drink it neat, but it’s not harsh, and it doesn’t burn like a lower quality whiskey would. If I had to rank it against other Bourbons, I would say that it’s a notch above the standard issue Buffalo Trace, and several notches below the standard issue Knob Creek Small Batch (not nearly as complex and flavorful). It looks like Jim Beam proved me wrong and crafted a very good and affordable whiskey. Being wrong never tasted so good!