First Sip
I grabbed this bottle of Hidden Barn Small Batch Series One, Batch 23a, after touring Neeley Family Distillery. Didn’t taste this particular batch on the tour, and you know how that goes. You leave the rickhouse all warm and sentimental and next thing you know, you’re at the counter saying go on and ring it up. I’ve got a longer write‑up about the visit over in the Pour Tour section if you want the story on the place and the folks. This one was a bit of a blind trust buy, which can be fun or dumb, depending on the night and your ice situation.
Anyway, I cracked it back home, no crowd, just me and the kitchen light humming, and poured it neat. I wanted to see where it wanted to go before I tried to steer it with water. At 107.4 proof, it’s not shy. It walks in the room knowing you heard it coming.
The Pour
In the glass it sits a straight amber, like fresh honey in a jar that hasn’t seen the sun. Nothing flashy, nothing cloudy. Looks the part of a proper Kentucky bourbon. First impression is that this isn’t going to be a dessert bomb or an oak log. It looks lively, not heavy.
Nose
The nose hits with peach first, then you get a little spice cabinet wake‑up and a soft corn note. There’s also this white wine thing that surprised me, like a quick swirl over a chilled glass of something dry. It keeps the sweetness honest and keeps your nose from sinking into syrup. The corn shows up like a handshake, not a headlock, and that peach note sticks around enough to make you curious about the sip. Nothing perfumey, just a light, clean lift that makes sense if you’ve ever sniffed a fermenter and thought, well that’s alive.
Palate
First taste is straight up corn sweetness. Not kettle corn at the fair, more like the soft sweetness off a fresh cornbread crust. That rolls into butterscotch and vanilla, then brown sugar shows up and you think you’re headed down a cozy lane. But hold on. About mid‑palate it gets feisty. The spice kicks up and brings a little heat, the kind that stands up in your mouth and clears a path. Not harsh, but there’s a coarseness to the texture, a little grit in the gears. The body runs on the leaner side, not watery, just not oily or syrupy. It keeps things moving and it doesn’t get cloying, which I appreciated at this proof.
That jump from sweet to spicy is the character here. It starts cool, like a shady porch, then steps out into the sun. There’s enough brown sugar and vanilla to keep the spice from getting rowdy, but you’ll feel it. If you like a bourbon that changes lanes mid‑sip, this one’s gonna make you grin.
About halfway through the glass I added a few drops of water. That took the edge off the heat and let the oak step forward. The sweetness tightened up, and the spice lined out instead of popping up all at once. If you’re proof sensitive, a little water turns this into a calmer ride without losing the point.
Finish
The finish warms with spice then settles into pecans, oak, and a dry tobacco note. That nutty piece is real nice, like the last bite of a pecan cookie that didn’t have to be sugary to be good. Oak shows up clean, not bitter, and the tobacco sits easy on the back end. The heat hangs around enough to let you know it meant what it said, but it cools off in a friendly way. Not a smoke show, not a mouthful of wood. Just a steady wind‑down that keeps you reaching back for another sip.
The Verdict
This pour has a clear story to it. It walks you from cool, corn‑sweet and butterscotch to a spice pop, then leaves you with nuts, oak, and a hint of tobacco. The body runs lean and the texture has a little grit, which I think suits the style. It tastes like something made on a pot still, and that tracks with what Hidden Barn says about Series One. Per their site, this Small Batch comes out of Neeley Family Distillery in Sparta, Kentucky, with a 70% corn, 20% rye, 10% malted barley mash bill, fermented five days with wild‑caught Kentucky yeast and Northern Kentucky aquifer water, double pot distilled and collected at 127, then matured in a two‑year seasoned American white oak barrel and bottled at 110 with only a sediment filter. You can taste that hands‑on approach. It feels like they let it be what it is instead of sanding every edge.
Batch 23a, at least in my glass, is less about big oak and more about that sweet‑to‑spice flip. If you want wall‑to‑wall caramel and butter, this ain’t that. If you like a bourbon that keeps you paying attention, starts friendly, gets lively, and lands clean, you’ll have fun here. It’s plenty flavorful without feeling heavy, and it handles a splash of water like a gentleman. Water pulls some oak out from behind the curtain and tucks the heat back, which could make this a nice porch pour when the air’s still and you’re not in a hurry.
Given I bought it on faith after the tour, I’m happy with where this bottle ended up. It’s not a sugar bomb, not a smoke stack, and not a lumberyard. It’s a solid, character‑forward Kentucky bourbon that leans sweet up front, rides into spice, and finishes with nutty, oaky calm. I’d pour this for someone who likes rye spice but still wants the corn sweetness to speak up first. And if you’re new to higher proof, you can get along fine with a little water. No shame in that at all.
I’ll circle back to Hidden Barn as I make it through more batches, but for this one, Batch 23a, the takeaway is simple. It’s honest, lively, and worth the shelf space. If you visited Neeley and walked past this bottle like I did the first time, well, you might want to go on back and fix that.