Stranahan's Colorado Whiskey
Type | Whiskey |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Stranahan's Distillery |
Distributor | Proximo Spirits |
Country of origin | United States |
Introduced | 2004 |
Alcohol by volume | 47% |
Proof (US) | 94 |
Related products | List of whisky brands |
Website | stranahans.com |
Stranahan's Colorado Whiskey is a 94 proof, small batch whiskey distilled in Denver, Colorado. Stranahan's was the first modern microdistillery to legally make whiskey in Colorado, and an early craft whiskey distiller in the United States.
History
[edit]Stranahan's was founded by Jess Graber and George Stranahan, after whom the whiskey is named, in Colorado in 2004.[1][2] In 1998, Graber, a volunteer firefighter, met Stranahan, the founder and owner of Flying Dog Brewery, while fighting a fire at Stranahan's barn.[3][4] They struck up a conversation about whiskey, and were soon in business together.[4] One of the first craft whiskey distillers in the US,[5] Stranahan's is said to have "kicked off the Colorado distilling craze" with its whiskey and the designation it invented, Rocky Mountain Whiskey.[6] It was Colorado's first microdistillery,[7] and the state's first legal distillery since Prohibition.[8]
The first batch of Stranahan's Colorado Whiskey was distilled in 2004 and bottled in 2006.[4] Stranahan's was sold to New Jersey–based Proximo Spirits in 2010, with operations remaining in Colorado.[1] By 2012, Proximo had increased whiskey production from around 12 barrels per week to 30, with plans to grow into the high forties.[1][4] Stranahan's was sold in 38 states and 7 countries until 2010, when Proximo decided to scale down sales to mostly the Colorado area, maintaining the whiskey's availability in its home state.[4][9]
Until 2019, Rob Dietrich had served as Stranahan's head distiller, after taking over from the founding head distiller Jake Norris.[3] Dietrich was followed by Owen Martin, who in late 2022 took a position with Angel's Envy.
Product description
[edit]Distillation and aging
[edit]Stranahan's is a straight whiskey, aged in new charred oak barrels, like bourbon, with the final whiskey a blend of two, three and five year-old whiskeys.[7][10] It is distilled from a 100% malt barley base grain, with four barleys sourced from the Colorado area,[5] and water sourced from the Eldorado spring outside Boulder.[9] Stranahan's initially used wash from Flying Dog Brewery, before moving to a larger facility and making their own wash beginning in 2009.[10]
Packaging
[edit]Each barrel is bottled by hand, with each label hand-signed by the distiller, often including a note about, for instance, the music listened to during the whiskey's production.[5] The bottling process is done by volunteers, who receive a free tour and a bottle of Stranahan's for their efforts. Volunteers can sign up online on the Stranahan's website – a random lottery picks volunteers from this list for each bottling crew. Current estimates show the waiting list to be over 20,000 people. The bottle features a metal cap, inspired by the old barroom practice of covering bottles with tin cups when the corks dry out.[5]
Products
[edit]- Stranahan's Blue Peak Whiskey – released in 2020, this uses a Solera finish, a maturation process typically used in wine. This is bottled at 43% ABV.[citation needed]
- Stranahan's Mountain Angel 10-Year-Old Whiskey – the first batch was released in 2020, aged 10 years in new charred American oak casks with less than 500 bottles available at 47.3% ABV. Other batches have also been released.[citation needed]
- Stranahan's Osopher 11-Year-Old Whiskey – Released in 2022, an age-statement 11-Year-Old whiskey at 47.3% ABV finished in Imperial Porter barrels. This release was done in collaboration with Flying Dog Brewery.[11][non-primary source needed]
- Snowflake Series – Released yearly and only available for purchase at the Denver distillery. Finished in oak casks previously filled with wine from local wineries or other spirits, sitting in the casks for roughly 18 months.[5][9] When new bottles of Snowflake are set to be released, Stranahan's makes an announcement on their Facebook and Twitter accounts, and people typically camp outside by the distillery the night before the release to secure a bottle.[9]
In 2012, Stranahan's began collaborating with Colorado's Breckenridge Brewery to create Stranahan's Well Built E.S.B., an English style bitter style ale 7.8% abv beer brewed by Breckenridge and aged in Stranahan's Colorado Whiskey barrels for three months.[1]
Television and film
[edit]Stranahan's was featured in "Whiskey", an episode of the History Channel's Modern Marvels that originally aired on March 17, 2008.[12]
Honors and awards
[edit]- Multiple batches received "Liquid Gold" status from Jim Murray's Whisky Bible 2014
- Whisky Advocate Artisan Whiskey of the Year, 2009[10]
- Jim Murray's Whiskey Bible 2009, small batch distillery of the year, 2009[13]
- Malt Advocate Best Artisanal Whiskey, 2010[4]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Jonathan Shikes, “Stranahan’s Colorado Whiskey has been sold to an East Coast liquid distributor,” Westword, December 28, 2010.
- ^ Margaret Jackson, “Legend hangs a sale sign,” Denver Post, October 12, 2008.
- ^ a b Sean Kenyon, “Is Stranahan’s the punk rock of whiskey? Ask the bartender…” Westword, September 6, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f Natasha Gardner, “Strange Brew,” 5280, September 2011.
- ^ a b c d e Geoff Kleinman, “Stranahan’s New American Whiskey,” Drink Spirits, January 25, 2011.
- ^ Jeffries Blackerby, “Blithe Spirits,” New York Times Magazine, November 11, 2011.
- ^ a b Jennings Brown, “The Colorado Spirit,” Cowboys & Indians, March 2010.
- ^ Josh Chinn, “Stranahan’s Colorado Whiskey Review,” Red White & Bourbon, March 27, 2013.
- ^ a b c d Stephen Wayne Kasica, “Stranahan’s Snowflake Whiskey,” Outside, December 18, 2013.
- ^ a b c “Malt Advocate Whisky Awards ‘Artisan Whiskey of the Year’: Stranahan’s Colorado Whiskey,” Whisky Advocate, February 2, 2010.
- ^ "STRANAHAN'S COLORADO WHISKEY & FLYING DOG REUNITE TO CREATE SPECIAL LIMITED-EDITION WHISKEY AND BEER" (Press release). Retrieved 2023-03-14.
- ^ “Whiskey,” Modern Marvels, The History Channel, March 17, 2008.
- ^ Amiee White Beazley, "Jess Graber's Whiskey Business," Aspen Peak. Accessed October 7, 2014.