Owned by Sazerac since 2003, A. Smith Bowman Distillery has not escaped the hype that follows other Buffalo Trace products. The line up has three relatively findable products:
- Bowman Brothers Small Batch
- Isaac Bowman – Port Barrel Finished
- John J. Bowman Single Barrel Bourbon
They also produce an annual 10 year aged variety A. Smith Bowman which last year was a lottery item. One of the interesting features of this distillery is they don’t currently make their own distillate (which is nodded to in their language on the back of the bottle, “Produced By”), but rather get it from some where else in Sazerac’s portfolio. So does the hype for a product that isn’t even distilled there have merit?
John J. Bowman Single Barrel Bourbon
Please note John J. Bowman has had a packaging change since I wrote this.
- Mash Bill: Unknown – believed to be redistilled Buffalo Trace distillate.
- Age: No Age Stated
- Proof: 100 (50% A.B.V.)
Sight: Russet Muscat
Smell: Peaches and cherries pop cheerfully with notes of vanilla and caramel. A bit of heat comes through with spicy cloves and baked cinnamon pastries. A nice nuttiness and toasted oak pervades around the edges. The fruitiness also continues to abound with hints of white grape, apricot, and other stone fruits. There is a small amount of heat that builds here as well.
Sip: The sip starts smooth and moves toward almond and cherries. The cherries become candied with an increasingly nutty note. There are peaches that start to grow out with with notes of baking spices and tea. The flavor is fruity, but only hints toward caramel and vanilla, giving a fresh fruit flavor. The body is relatively smooth all the way through.
Savor: The ending pulls in charred peach and baked cherry notes before giving way to spice and oak.
John J. Bowman Single Barrel Bourbon is fruity and fragrant if not overly dessert like. The flavors really lean into stone fruit with a nice touch of nuttiness and spice. The result is a moderately complex bourbon with a relatively smooth and evenly weighted bourbon that’s an enjoyable sipper.
In Cocktails
In a Manhattan the fruit flavors show up with full force pulling massive amounts of jammy peaches, macerated cherries, and ripe berries. White grape and tea come in, with a bit of vanilla and hints of brown sugar. The vermouth really brings a nice sweetness here to counterbalance some of the drier notes. On the finish, a nice touch of dried peaches and oak combine to give a little spiciness and a hint of tannin.
In Review – John J. Bowman Single Barrel Bourbon
John J. Bowman Single Barrel Bourbon is fruity and spicy mix with a good complexity. It leans drier, allowing the fruit to show off without overwhelming it in sugar or dessert flavors. The profile isn’t delicate either, robustly communicating the flavors. Overall, it’s a delicious bottle in the $45-50 price point, and that if it were easier to obtain, would be a slam dunk to start your bar with. Given the availability I can’t quite go that far, I still recommend you track down a bottle as this easily earns a recommendations as a great bottle to have around.