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Don’t Blink: Limited Drops, Cask-Strength Heat, and the Biggest Bourbon Party of the Year Are Hitting Now
Pour one and pull up a chair—this week in bourbon comes in hot. We’ve got buzzy new bottles (including a TV tie-in and a rare age-stated Maker’s), a festival lineup that reads like a bucket list, and a few headlines shaking up Bourbon Country. Here’s what you need to know before the good stuff disappears.
New Releases
By order of the Peaky Blinders—an official bourbon lands. Barrel Global has debuted the official Peaky Blinders Bourbon, a limited-edition blend selected by their team and distilled at Green River Distillery, one of Kentucky’s storied names that weathered Prohibition. Feels like a smart collab: a gritty, period-drama aesthetic wrapped around a legit Kentucky pedigree. Expect this one to roll out in limited fashion—translation: don’t dawdle if you’re a fan of the show or just love a conversation-starting bottle. Original coverage: The Whiskey Wash and Total Licensing.
Maker’s Mark drops a first-ever age-stated Cask Strength. Maker’s Mark Cask Strength 2026 is making waves for adding an age statement—something the distillery is famously conservative about. If you’ve followed Maker’s arc from wheated classic to wood-finished experimenter, this feels like a milestone bottle: high proof, heritage mashbill, and now a peek behind the curtain on age. Perfect for anyone who likes their porch pours with a little extra truth in labeling. Details via Maxim.
Southern Star Paragon leans into wine-finish vibes. Southern Distilling Company is out with Southern Star Paragon Bourbon Finished in Zinfandel Casks. Wine finishes aren’t new in bourbon, but Zinfandel can bring a bold, jammy swing—think richer fruit notes riding shotgun with classic caramel and oak. If you like your experiments to still taste like Kentucky but play with a California accent, this is one to snag while it lasts. Launch announced on BevNet.
Fresh drops roundup: Woodford and Maker’s headline, plus a Buffalo Trace collab mention. A Kentucky.com roundup flagged new releases, including a limited-edition from Woodford Reserve and a special, limited-edition personalized label on a premium Maker’s Mark bottle—both squarely in bourbon territory. The piece also notes a Buffalo Trace/Chris Stapleton collaboration; heads-up that not every collab on the shelf is technically bourbon, but it’s still worth a look if you’re browsing. Read the full roundup at Kentucky.com.
Big Events
Bourbon & Beyond drops its biggest lineup ever. The Louisville bash returns to the Kentucky Exposition Center with more than 100 acts and a headliner list that looks like a summer playlist: Foo Fighters, Dave Matthews Band, Chris Stapleton, and Mumford & Sons among the big names. If you’ve been waiting for the year to finally make the trip, this is the one—massive music, serious bourbon programming, and that late-September Kentucky glow. Full details via Relix, with additional notes (including a new group rewards offer) at Ghost Cult.
Company & Industry News
Bardstown Bourbon Co. faces lawsuit from former HR executive. Louisville Business First reports that a former HR leader has filed suit against Bardstown Bourbon Company. No matter where this lands, it’s a reminder that even fast-growing darlings are managing real people and real pressures behind the scenes. Keep an eye out for responses and developments from both sides. Read more at Louisville Business First.
Tariffs stay in the conversation for bourbon’s global push. A FOX 5 DC segment digs into how tariffs continue to shape the bourbon industry’s export game. It’s the unsexy, very real side of whiskey: market access, price pressures, and how Kentucky’s signature spirit competes on the world stage. If you care about where your favorite bottles travel—and how much they cost when they get there—this is worth a watch. Segment here: FOX 5 DC.
Pappy’s roots traced back to Danville. A local history dive connects bourbon legend Pappy Van Winkle to a Danville home, adding another layer to the lore that keeps certain Kentucky addresses feeling downright sacred. Even if you never chase a Pappy pour, it’s fun to see how the trail of bourbon history winds through small towns and front porches alike. Story via The Advocate-Messenger.
That’s the week. Whether you’re hunting limited bottles, plotting a Louisville pilgrimage, or just topping off something trusty, may your next pour hit just right. See you on the porch.