Jim beam black label review.
Jim beam black label extra aged review.
This no age statement bourbon replaces the black label 8 year.
It is aged longer than jim beam original also known as jim beam white label.
This review is based on the third dram out of a week old bottle.
That bottling is aged at least four years in new charred american oak.
In the early part of the decade jim beam black used to carry the subtitle double aged and featured an 8 year age statement.
It s those extra years of aging that give jim beam black its full bodied flavor with notes of smooth caramel and warm oak.
Black label extra aged is bottled at 43 abv.
Black licorice cherries vanilla bubblegum.
Hints of bruleed pastry and a bit of corn and yeast.
This review is for the triple aged 6 year old jim beam black for export and not the 8 year old domestic version.
In 2015 jim beam dropped the age statement and changed its subtitle to xa extra aged in mid 2016 beam issued a portfolio wide branding change that included new labels and bottle design.
Some wood arrives more than in the white and it comes across less medicinal and more earthy.
Originally labeled with an 8 year old age statement jb black now comes to us as extra aged in a world where distillers are dropping age statements left and right there s some comfort in knowing the quality in this bottle is left largely intact.
I prefer the black label too.
As stated before both of these varieties have similar production steps and requirements however the ingredients and aging process vary significantly.
Jim beam black label is 86 proof whereas white label is 80 proof.
This is a layered and interesting nose.
I recently did some work on the jim beam double oak and had heard that many people preferred the jim beam black.
Jim beam black is the first big step up in quality from the original jim beam white label.
Jim beam black extra aged bourbon was a real surprise for me.
Jim beam black label has nuts included in the recipe whereas white label has pepper notes included.
Nose traditional bourbon nose of caramel vanilla and spice.
As i mentioned before this is an easy drinking bourbon and would be appropriate as an inexpensive go to for cocktails or mixers.
Having had both there s a noticeable difference.
Jim beam black label bourbon was originally aged for 8 years on launch but dropped the age statement for the label beginning in 2015 going with the term extra aged.
Our premium 86 proof bourbon whiskey spends years longer being aged in our american white oak barrels than our original jim beam.
This kentucky straight bourbon from beam was formerly known as jim beam double aged.
It s considered a premium bourbon intended to compete directly with the.
It was considered a premium edition above the more well known jim beam white label s four years of aging.