Picture it. Low light, a good playlist, five glasses catching candlelight, and not one person checking her phone.
Galentine’s Day Bourbon and Chocolate Pairings
Every Galentine’s post on the internet defaults to the same box of drugstore chocolates and a bottle of rosé. There’s nothing wrong with that exactly, it’s just a gesture, and the women who show up for you all year deserve something that feels like more than a gesture. This one’s built in two parts: start with a signature cocktail to ease everyone in, then move into a small neat tasting once the room’s already warm and nobody’s walking in cold to straight bourbon. You don’t need to know anything about bourbon going in. You need about twenty minutes of setup and the willingness to pour small.
Part One: The Signature Cocktail
Starting with a cocktail rather than jumping straight into neat pours isn’t just friendlier, it’s the smarter order. A drink with a little sweetness and citrus warms the palate up, and bourbon that might taste sharp on a cold start tends to open up and taste rounder once you’ve already had a sip of something. Save the straight tasting for after everyone’s had a cocktail in hand and settled into the evening.
This one’s built specifically for a glass with a big ice sphere built in, so the ice is doing double duty as both a chill and a centerpiece.
NORIMODA Spinning Rocks Glasses with Iceball Molds, Set of 4
The glass this cocktail was built for — the ice ball becomes part of the presentation.
View on Amazon →And since the ice itself is part of the presentation here, this is the moment for the shaped cubes. A heart or a diamond floating in a rocks glass photographs beautifully and costs you nothing beyond an overnight freeze.
Tovolo Heart and Diamond Ice Cube Molds, Set of 4
No more effort than regular ice — fill the tray, freeze it, done.
View on Amazon →Blushing Berry Old Fashioned
Makes 1 drink — scale up for the group
Ingredients
- 2 oz bourbon
- 0.5 oz honey syrup (equal parts honey and warm water, stirred until dissolved, cooled)
- 3–4 fresh raspberries, muddled
- 2 dashes orange bitters
- A fresh raspberry and an orange twist, for garnish
- One heart or diamond shaped ice cube
Build
- Muddle the raspberries gently in the bottom of a mixing glass — just enough to break them open, not puree them.
- Add the bourbon, honey syrup, bitters, and ice, then stir for about 20 seconds.
- Strain into your rocks glass over the shaped ice cube.
- Garnish with a fresh raspberry dropped in and an orange twist expressed over the top.
It’s pink enough to feel like the occasion without tasting like a novelty drink, and the honey and berry both give a bourbon with some caramel backbone somewhere warm to land.
Part Two: The Tasting
Once everyone’s had their cocktail and the room’s warmed up, this is where you move into an actual flight, small neat pours in a proper tasting glass. This is the part of the night where bourbon stops being a party ingredient and becomes the thing everyone’s actually talking about.
For this portion you want a Glencairn rather than the rocks glasses. Its shape concentrates aroma in a way that matters when the whole point is nosing and comparing rather than sipping something over ice.
Glencairn Crystal Whiskey Glass, Set of 6
Built to concentrate aroma for the nosing-and-comparing part of the night.
View on Amazon →Keep the pours small, half an ounce to an ounce each. This is a tasting, not a round of drinks, and nobody needs four full pours of straight bourbon on top of a cocktail to still be having a good time by the end of the night.
Choosing Bottles If You’re Building the Flight Yourself
If you’re shopping without much bourbon background, a little bit of category knowledge goes further than any single bottle recommendation. Bourbon mash bills fall into a few loose camps, and knowing which is which helps you build a flight that actually has some contrast in it instead of four bottles that all taste the same.
Three Styles to Build a Flight Around
Wheated — start here
Swaps rye for wheat in the mash bill. Softer, more caramel and vanilla, nothing sharp to catch anyone off guard. Example: Green River Wheated Bourbon →
Traditional mash bill — the middle pour
Corn sweetness balanced with moderate rye. A little spice, a little sweetness, splits the difference. Example: Elijah Craig Small Batch →
High-rye — finish here
More rye means more black pepper and baking spice. The boldest of the three. Bulleit Bourbon and Four Roses are both widely available examples if you want a reliable pick off any shelf.
For proof, the same logic applies as the flavor progression, start low and build up. If your group is newer to bourbon, keep the whole flight in the 80 to 100 proof range, and if you want one pour with a little more presence to finish on, a bottled-in-bond offering, which by law sits at exactly 100 proof, is a nice peak without tipping into anything that’ll singe anybody’s palate. Anything creeping up toward 104 proof or higher is worth saving for a group that’s already comfortable with bourbon, not a first flight.
The Chocolate Side
Keep this part simple, two or three chocolates that each pull in a different direction, so the group has something to actually compare during the tasting portion.
Lindt LINDOR Caramel Milk Chocolate Truffles
Smooth, melting caramel center — the sweeter, gentler lane of the comparison.
View on Amazon →
Mrs. Cavanaugh’s Orange Cream Mixed Chocolates
A real citrus fondant center — the brighter, sharper lane for comparison.
View on Amazon →Giving Everyone the Words for What They’re Tasting
This is where most casual tastings fall apart. Everyone takes a sip, somebody says “oh that’s good,” and the conversation has nowhere left to go. A flavor wheel fixes that instantly, not by making anyone an expert, but by handing the table a shared vocabulary.
The Pourch Bourbon Flavor Wheel
100+ descriptors across 8 flavor categories, printable and ready for the table.
Shop the Flavor Wheel →Turning the Tasting Into a Game
Give everyone a tasting card for each pour, have them rate it, jot down what they’re picking up, and compare notes once everyone’s made it through the whole lineup. Somebody’s favorite is always the surprise, and the disagreements afterward are honestly half the fun.
The Pourch Bourbon Tasting Cards
Four cut-out cards, one per pour, each with a mini flavor chart and a 5-star rating.
Shop the Tasting Cards →If you want the flavor wheel, the tasting cards, and everything else that goes into a proper tasting night in one purchase, the full bundle covers it.
The Pourch Bourbon Tasting Bundle
Flavor wheel, tasting mats, scorecards, tally sheet, and tasting cards, all in one download.
Shop the Bundle →Have Questions, or Want It Hosted Instead
If you’re putting this together yourself and get stuck on a bottle choice or how to structure the flight for your group, feel free to send a question over. And if all of this sounds like a great night but not something you want to plan and pour yourself, that’s worth asking about too.
Email [email protected] →The Whole Night
Start with the cocktail, let everyone settle in over something pink and a little sweet in a glass with a heart of ice floating in it. Then move into the tasting, low proof to high, a wheated pour to open, something more traditional in the middle, a high-rye or bottled-in-bond bottle to finish. Chocolate on the side, a flavor wheel to give everyone something to say, tasting cards to make it a game. Low light, a good playlist, five women who showed up for each other. That’s the night.
The Cluster Pillar
The Bourbon and Food Pairing Guide: What to Serve With Every Pour
Read the guide →The Pourch Verdict
Start with a cocktail, ease into a tasting, and let good bourbon do what a card and a box of chocolates never could. That’s a Galentine’s tradition worth repeating every year.
Affiliate Disclosure: Some links on this page are Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend gear we’d actually put on our own table. We are never paid to recommend a specific product.




