First Sip
I hit the Neeley Family Distillery on a day that started out like a quick pit stop and turned into a full-on hangout. John was our guide, and he had that easy way of talking that makes you feel like you’ve known him since Little League. By the end of the tour, he set up what looked like a county fair prize table, only better. Thirty bottles lined up. You could choose eight. I stood there like a kid with a dollar at the gas station candy aisle, trying to make it count. First pull I reached for was the Neeley Single Barrel, Barrel Strength Wheated. New-to-me bottle, fresh lineup, zero clue what to expect. Was this going to be another small-producer swing, or did they plant one right down the middle?
Short answer, they hit it square. That first pour set the tone for the rest of my picks. If you want the play-by-play from that visit, I scribbled up the whole stop here: tour recap on The Pourch.
The Pour
In the glass it shows deep amber, the kind of color that makes you nod before you even get your nose in. It’s 105.2 proof, which is a sweet spot for me. Not a flamethrower, not sleepy either. The whiskey clings to the glass with a nice sheet and breaks into slow trails. Nothing flashy, just steady and confident. Given the age at 4 years and 6 months, I was curious how the barrel would show itself. This one spent its time in a 25 gallon, char 2 barrel, and you can see the oak in the color without it looking overcooked.
Nose
The nose comes in light, with a little spice peeking through. It’s not a big, booming aroma that jumps out of the glass. More like a friendly wave. You get a soft sweetness that feels wheat-driven, a dusting of cinnamon, and a hint of vanilla peels back once it sits for a minute. I didn’t find much fruit or nuttiness. No smoke to speak of either. It smells clean and honest, which fits what Neeley tells you right on the label. They keep it transparent over there, and I appreciate that.
Palate
First sip lands sweet and easy, and then the flavor starts stepping up. Caramel leads, with vanilla right behind it, and cinnamon nudging along. That wheat shows up in a big way, not just in the sweetness but in the texture. It’s silky, almost creamy, with a cereal note that reads like warm grain, not raw. There’s enough spice to keep it lively without turning sharp. If you’ve ever had a wheated bourbon that went mushy in the middle, this isn’t that. It keeps its shape.
The heat sits in a comfortable pocket. I got a little warmth right on the tongue, then it settled down and let the flavors hang out. For 105.2, it behaves. Balance is the word that kept coming to mind. Sweetness does the heavy lifting, the spice sets the pace, and the oak stays polite. That char 2 approach, plus the 25 gallon barrel, can sometimes push a whiskey into a louder wood profile, but this one stays measured. You can feel that it’s a younger bourbon, but not in a way that gets in the way. Triple pot distilled, sweet mash, non-chill filtered, and it tastes like folks who care about process were guiding it from the start.
Mash bill’s on the label at 76% corn, 19% wheat, and 5% malted barley. That lines up with what I tasted. Corn brings the caramel, wheat brings the soft edges, and malt adds just enough backbone to keep it from getting flat.
Finish
The finish surprised me with a little tang that kept things bright. It stretches out longer than I expected for the age. The sweetness eases off and that cinnamon-spice sticks around, not hot, just present. The grain note takes a victory lap, and the oak finally pipes up, still not heavy, just enough to frame everything. No smoke. No bitter crash at the end. It clears clean and invites another sip.
The Verdict
I went into this one with zero expectations and walked out grinning. The Neeley Single Barrel, Barrel Strength Wheated feels like a blueprint for how a younger wheated bourbon can show up right. Sweet-leaning without turning syrupy. Spice that keeps you interested. Grain character you can actually taste, in a good way. The body is silky and comfortable, not thin at all, and it comes across put together from front to back.
What really sealed it for me was how honest it felt. Everything they say is right there on the bottle, and that transparency means something. Triple pot stilled. Sweet mash. Non-chill filtered. 25 gallon, char 2 barrel. Mash bill spelled out. When the whiskey tastes like the label reads, that builds trust, and I’m here for that. I’ve had plenty of wheaters that were all soft talk and no follow-through. This one delivers.
Back to John’s lineup. After this pour, I got a little more bold with my picks and found a few other standouts, but this first glass set the mood. It told me I wasn’t just at another small producer trying to fake big distillery swagger. I was in a place that was proud of what they make and happy to let it speak for itself. If you’re heading that way, make time. And if you want the whole story from my visit, with more photos and rambling commentary, here’s that link again: You’re missing out if you haven’t stopped at this hidden Kentucky distillery.
Bottom line, this is an easy yes if you spot it. Folks who like their wheated bourbon on the sweeter, silkier side will be right at home, and there is enough spice and length to keep the sip from getting sleepy. I’d pour this for friends who claim they don’t like barrel strength. It proves you can have some heat without catching a mouthful of fire. Strong start, strong finish, and no regrets picking it first.