WhistlePig’s tasting room sits right in the heart of Quechee Village, making it the most accessible spot to sample Vermont’s most famous rye whiskey without driving up to their main farm distillery. Founded by Raj Peter Bhakta in 2008, WhistlePig started as an ambitious project to create America’s finest rye whiskey on a 500-acre farm in Shoreham. Bhakta, a former contestant on The Apprentice and heir to a real estate fortune, fell in love with rye whiskey and decided Vermont’s climate was perfect for aging. The Quechee location opened as their southern outpost, housed in a renovated building on Main Street that captures the classic Vermont village vibe.
The story behind WhistlePig is part Silicon Valley ambition, part Vermont farming tradition. Bhakta originally sourced aged Canadian rye while building his distillery operation, but the goal was always to create a farm-to-bottle Vermont rye. Master Distiller Pete Lynch joined in 2017, bringing experience from High West, and they’ve been pushing boundaries ever since with experimental finishes and triple terroir projects. They’re growing their own rye, coopering their own barrels, and even making their own yeast. It’s the kind of vertical integration that would make a tech CEO proud, applied to whiskey making.
The Quechee tasting room gives you the WhistlePig experience without the farm tour commitment. You’re tasting world-class rye whiskeys that have won international awards, including their 15-year that scored 96 points from Wine Enthusiast. The space feels more sophisticated than your typical Vermont tasting room, which makes sense given they’re charging premium prices for premium whiskey. You’ll walk away understanding why rye whiskey is having its moment and why WhistlePig is leading that charge.