First Sip: The One I Expected to Be Polite — and Wasn’t
I lined up a cask-strength flight at Middle West Spirits’ Service Bar knowing exactly how I thought this would go. The dark pumpernickel rye would bring the personality. The wheated bourbon would clean things up at the end. And this wheat whiskey? I assumed it would be the soft-spoken one in the middle — agreeable, pleasant, maybe a little forgettable.
That assumption didn’t last long.
This was my second pour of the night, sandwiched between the rye that had already surprised me (I broke that one down in detail in my review of Middle West’s Cask Strength Dark Pumpernickel Rye) and a wheated bourbon waiting in the cleanup spot. What I got instead was a wheat whiskey with more edge than expected — still balanced, still grain-forward, but carrying a spicy streak that made me sit up and pay attention.
If the rye was the conversation starter, this wheat was the one that kept it honest.
The Pour: Proof With Purpose
In the glass, it settles into a deep amber — confident, not flashy. No haze, no tricks. Being cask strength, it clings to the sides with slow, steady legs that tell you there’s weight here, even before the first sip.
It looks fully formed, like a whiskey that knows exactly what it’s supposed to be. No rush, no youth peeking through. Just composed.
Nose: Bakery, Grain, and a Hint of Heat
The first pass on the nose leans unmistakably toward the bakery. White cake crumb, fresh grain, and that warm, slightly dusty sweetness you get walking into a mill or a feed store after rain. This isn’t candy-sweet and it isn’t perfumed. It’s honest.
Let it sit, and you’ll pick up light vanilla and something dry and clean — burlap, maybe, or sun-warmed wood. Middle West talks about brioche and cinnamon in their own notes, and while I didn’t find cinnamon loud and clear, the bakery lane checks out.
What stands out most is how clearly the grain announces itself. This smells like wheat whiskey, not barrel char pretending to be one.
What Does Middle West’s Cask Strength Wheat Whiskey Taste Like?
On the palate, it comes in livelier than expected.
There’s a quick spice pop right up front — not rye spice, not pepper — just a bright tingle that keeps things from feeling sleepy. Then the flavors spread out into orange peel, honeyed cereal, and clean grain. Think breakfast table, not dessert tray.
The sweetness stays measured. It never gets sticky or syrupy, and the oak doesn’t try to muscle in early. This is grain-first whiskey, the kind that lets you taste the mash bill instead of just the barrel. The body sits comfortably in the middle — not thin, not chewy — and the heat reminds you this is cask strength without bulldozing the experience.
I didn’t get the deep dark fruit some distillery descriptions mention, but I didn’t miss it. The citrus keeps it lifted, the grain keeps it grounded, and the proof gives it backbone. Take your time and it rewards patience.
Does Wheat Whiskey Always Drink Soft?
This one doesn’t.
If you think wheat whiskey automatically means gentle and sweet, this pour challenges that idea. It still plays fair — no bitterness, no aggressive tannins — but it carries more spice and structure than expected.
A few drops of water tease out a little more citrus and soften the edges, but it never collapses. It just stretches its legs.
Finish: Clean, Nutty, and Well-Mannered
The finish runs medium, fading into oak once the citrus clears out. Almond shows up late, like toasted nuts brought to the table after dinner. No smoke, no bitterness, no lingering char.
It exits cleanly, which makes you want another sip — always a good sign.
How This Fits in the Middle West Cask Strength Flight
Tasted alongside the other pours from the same night — the ones that anchored my visit to Middle West Spirits’ Service Bar in Columbus — this wheat whiskey played its role perfectly.
The pumpernickel rye had the swagger and stole the early spotlight. The wheated bourbon that followed brought sweetness and ease. This wheat whiskey sat squarely between them, holding the structure together.
It didn’t try to outshine the rye, and it didn’t coast on sweetness like the bourbon. It kept the rhythm.
That balance makes a lot of sense when you consider Middle West’s broader grain-to-glass approach and their focus on Ohio-grown wheat across much of their lineup. Spend a little time digging into Middle West Spirits and their Ohio grain-to-glass philosophy, and this bottle clicks into place.
The Verdict: Don’t Skip the Middle Pour
This cask strength wheat whiskey is a reminder that “middle” doesn’t mean boring.
It brings spice where you don’t expect it, keeps sweetness on a short leash, and lets the grain speak clearly from nose to finish. It’s not flashy, and it’s not trying to convert anyone. It just does its job well.
If you’re building a flight, don’t skip this one. If you think wheat whiskey is always soft, pour it neat and take your time. And if you’re visiting Middle West for the first time, it’s an essential part of understanding what they’re actually good at.
Sometimes the most honest pour of the night is the one that holds everything together.