Town Branch Single Barrel Bourbon

The Single Barrel Expression Putting Town Branch Back on Bourbon Lovers’ Maps

7
Neat or Not Score: 3.5/5 Stars
1 Not Good,   2 Below Average,   3 Benchmark Average (Buffalo Trace),   4 Excellent,   5 Exceptional/Near Perfect

Town Branch Single Barrel Reserve

Lexington,

Kentucky

Tasting Notes

Type: Single Barrel, Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Age: At least 4 years
Proof: 110.5
Color: Amber
Legs: Slow, Thick
Nose: Dark fruits, caramel, and brown sugar
Palate: Evolution from orange citrus notes to cherry to oak
Finish: Mid-length finish with sweet notes that reminded me of bubble gum or Juciy Fruit gum.

Flavor Profile

7

In this Review

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Lexington’s pot-still bourbon shows up fruity, sweet, and a little feisty at 110.5 proof

First Sip

I opened this bottle about twenty minutes before the turkey came out, that brief lull when the kitchen quiets down just long enough to breathe. No extended family, no crowd this year. Just my wife, the kids home from college, and a little space to enjoy a first pour before the chaos of dinner resumed.

This bottle is a Liquor Barn exclusive single-barrel pick of Town Branch Single Barrel Reserve. If you’re not from Kentucky, Liquor Barn is a well-known regional chain with a long history of carrying a wide variety of bourbons and doing occasional store picks. Their stickers don’t promise a home run, but they usually signal something worth trying.

One detail I liked right away: the label notes the barrel was filled in 2017. There’s no age statement, but that puts it comfortably past the four-year mark and hints at a bit more maturity, always a welcome sign in single barrels where age can make a noticeable difference.

The Pour

In the glass, this bourbon shows a straightforward amber tone, clean, honest, and pleasant. At 110.5 proof, I kept the pour small. It moves with a little weight, which tracks for a single barrel at this strength.

For readers unfamiliar with Town Branch: the whiskey comes from Lexington Brewing & Distilling Co., a distillery that grew out of a brewing operation right in downtown Lexington. They were the first distillery back in that part of town since Prohibition. Their brewing heritage shows up in their use of copper pot stills and cypress fermenters, and in the subtle malt influence that runs through much of what they produce.

Nose

The nose comes across sweet and friendly: dark cherries, plums, caramel, and brown sugar. Underneath, there’s a faint malt-toffee note, not unusual for Town Branch, given their pot-still setup and their commonly cited mash bill of 72% corn with malted rye and malted barley. That cereal-grain underpinning keeps the aroma from leaning too far into candy.

It’s dessert-leaning but controlled. Inviting without being syrupy.

Palate

The first sip brings a bit of heat, which is expected at this proof. After a few seconds, the flavors settle in. It opens with orange citrus, moves into cherry, then lands on oak. That progression is tidy and enjoyable.

The sweetness stays present but never overwhelms. A gentle malt-toffee thread runs quietly underneath. There’s no smoke, and the spice level is modest, more background harmony than main character.

It drinks medium-bodied and balanced overall. A couple drops of water soften the heat but aren’t required.

Finish

The finish is middle-of-the-road: not short, not long. The most distinctive moment is a light bubble-gum sweetness, something in the Juicy Fruit family. Single barrels always carry little quirks, and this is that note for this one. A touch of oak reins it in, giving the finish a clean, pleasant fade.

The Verdict

This Town Branch Single Barrel Reserve ended up being a solid Thanksgiving warm-up pour. It shows sweetness and fruit early, some citrus brightness, and a friendly oak close. The proof adds a touch of intensity, but it stays manageable once you get into it.

Town Branch’s brewing-to-distilling background is still one of the things that makes them interesting. Their pot stills, malt influence, and cypress fermentation give their bourbon a slightly different profile than what you’ll find from many large Kentucky column-still distilleries. Single barrels express that variability, and this one leans toward the fruit-forward, mildly sweet, cereal-tinged side of their range.

As for the Liquor Barn angle: their store picks can be fun to explore, but they aren’t automatic winners. This bottle fits squarely into the “glad I tried it” category. It’s a good example of what Town Branch can do when a barrel leans approachable. Not a showstopper, not a rarity you’ll be telling stories about for years, but an enjoyable pour that earns its spot at the table.

Would I buy another Town Branch single barrel if I came across one? Yes, with the expectation of a good, interesting, but not necessarily exceptional experience. That’s exactly what this bottle delivered: a well-made, slightly distinctive bourbon that didn’t try to overshadow the meal or the company.

Final thought from the Thanksgiving couch:

I’m glad we opened it. The turkey was great, the family time was better, and the Town Branch played its role, steady, enjoyable, and perfectly content to stay in the background. A comfortable 7 out of 10, and a nice way to start the holiday meal.

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