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The Cut — June 16, 2026 — SE02E51 — One Bottle Per Day. No Application.

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Tuesday’s Cut opens with the most straightforward premium access event of the summer. Michter’s confirmed this morning that Fort Nelson Distillery at 801 West Main Street in Louisville will open walk-up sales for the US★1 10-Year 2026 on July 11, 12, and 13 — 10 AM to 4 PM each day, one bottle per customer…

Mentioned in this episode: Heaven Hill, Elijah Craig, Four Roses, Michter’s, Old Forester

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The Cut — June 16, 2026 Episode: Tuesday, June 16, 2026

This is The Cut.

Warm caramel, stone fruit, and a wood-spice exit that settles clean — that’s what an extra decade in a Kentucky warehouse does to bourbon. Michter’s just confirmed three days in July where you can buy it at $159.99.

I’m John from Chasing the Unicorn Podcast. Here’s where we want to end up: Michter’s US★1 10-Year in hand at MSRP before secondary prices it out of reach.

Here’s what makes it tricky. Walk-up windows don’t have applications. No email list, no lottery, no retailer relationship to activate. Most buyers never see the access point because they’re watching for pre-order forms or state lottery notifications that won’t come. By the time secondary is the only option, the spread is $190 and climbing.

Here’s the move. Fort Nelson Distillery, 801 West Main Street in Louisville. July 11, 12, and 13. Ten AM to four PM each day. One bottle per customer per day at $159.99. Show up. That’s the whole mechanism.

The walk-up model is the access type that gets missed most often, and it’s worth understanding why. Pre-order and lottery are systems — you enter, you wait, you get notified. Walk-up has no system. Michter’s is giving you an address, three dates, and a price. They’re not sending a confirmation email. That’s why the Fort Nelson cycle repeats every year and still draws buyers who didn’t know it was happening. The 2026 US★1 10-Year cleared federal label approval at 91.2 proof. Whisky Advocate scored the expression 92 points and called it one of the most controlled wood-spice exits in the Michter’s lineup. Andrea Wilson, Michter’s Master of Maturation, noted the 2026 barrel cohort went through fourteen additional months of slow heat cycling compared to off-site storage — individual barrel monitoring, not warehouse averages. She called it the strongest cohort in a decade. The $190 gap between walk-in price and secondary floor is what that tracking record backs. For a buyer within a few hours of Louisville, the math is simple: this spread doesn’t exist on many expressions at this quality tier.

The Chase this week. Four Roses 2026 Limited Edition Small Batch is the Spotlight — and the pre-allocation window is open right now, before the recipe blend is even published. The TTB confirmed 108.2 proof on June 12. That’s the highest entry proof in the Limited Edition Small Batch series since 2023. The 2025 vintage scored 95 points with Whisky Advocate; secondary on that vintage opened at $380 to $420 and has held a $355 to $395 floor into this year. Fresh stone fruit, floral lift, and toasted pecan on the nose — the floral OESQ register balanced against the spice frame is what the series is known for, and at 108.2 proof the 2026 has more to work with than recent vintages. Pre-allocation at $149.99 is the only MSRP-guaranteed access point. The window closes before most buyers realize the recipe reveal is coming and the demand follows. Worth the chase. Both other tiers are quiet this window — the active entries hit their appearance caps. Full read on all three is in today’s Cut Daily on our website. Free.

A word of caution before you lock in. Two Heaven Hill expressions are both active right now — Elijah Craig 18-Year at $89.99 and 86 proof, and Elijah Craig Barrel Proof C926 at $79.99 and 130.4 proof. Ten dollars apart. The question is whether a confirmed 18-year age statement is worth losing 44 proof points. Here’s the rule that makes the call reliable: know what you’re actually optimizing for before you commit to either window. The age statement buys confirmed years — federal law, every drop at minimum 18, no averaging. The barrel proof buys intensity — 65.2% ABV, the barrel direct, calibrated with water if you want. Adding water opens a 130-proof bottle. Nothing adds years. Once you’re clear on which variable matters to you, the $10 gap is easy to evaluate. The price of being wrong on that call is small. The cost of missing the window on whichever one you actually want is not.

One more thing before we close — today’s American Whiskey Industry Brief runs the Flight: Elijah Craig 18-Year 2026 against Old Forester Birthday Bourbon 2026. Both MSRP-confirmed in the same window, $60 apart, opposite proof philosophies. The Father’s Day verdict and the full side-by-side are waiting.

That’s The Cut. The full American Whiskey Industry Brief is at patreon.com/ChasingTheUnicornPodcast. I’m John Schuster. Thanks for joining me. Your unicorn is out there.


The Written Briefing

The Cut Daily

Tuesday’s Cut opens with the most straightforward premium access event of the summer. Michter’s confirmed this morning that Fort Nelson Distillery at 801 West Main Street in Louisville will open walk-up sales for the US★1 10-Year 2026 on July 11, 12, and 13 — 10 AM to 4 PM each day, one bottle per customer per day at $159.99 MSRP. No reservation. No lottery application. No online queue. You show up at the address. That’s the entire mechanism. The US★1 10-Year 2026 cleared TTB at 91.2 proof. Whisky Advocate scored the expression 92 points in 2024 and called it one of the most controlled wood-spice exits in the Michter’s lineup. Secondary pricing runs $350 to $450. Andrea Wilson, Michter’s Master of Maturation, called the 2026 barrel cohort the strongest Fort Nelson has passed through in a decade. Today’s Cut Spotlight is the Four Roses 2026 Limited Edition Small Batch. TTB confirmed 108.2 proof before the recipe blend was published. Pre-allocation is open at $149.99. The window closes before most buyers know what they’re missing. Listen to the full Cut episode at chasingtheunicornpodcast.com. Full American Whiskey Industry Brief at patreon.com/ChasingTheUnicornPodcast.

Listen to today’s episode and find us on Spotify and everywhere you listen at chasingtheunicornpodcast.com/podcast.

The Cut Daily
The pulse of American whiskey: What moved — and why it matters.
Chasing the Unicorn Podcast Edition · A Drunken Unicorn Production
Report Date: June 16, 2026
Reporting Period: June 14, 2026 through June 16, 2026
Classification: Free Edition · Share with Attribution
Free Edition · The Cut Daily · Chasing the Unicorn Podcast · A Drunken Unicorn Production · Drunken Unicorn Productions, LLC. The Cut Daily is the free gateway brief to the American Whiskey Industry Brief. Share, quote, and repost freely with attribution. Required attribution: “The Cut Daily · June 16, 2026 · Chasing the Unicorn Podcast · A Drunken Unicorn Production.” The full AWIB is a paid subscriber edition on Patreon. Permissions and inquiries: chasingtheunicornpodcast.com.

Informational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing here is investment advice. Verify before buying, trading, or bidding. We are not liable for errors or financial losses.
What Is The Cut Daily? — The Cut Daily is the free written brief from Chasing the Unicorn. Every weekday we translate the biggest moves in American whiskey into plain English, teach one bourbon concept you can use at the shelf today, flag one bottle under $60 worth knowing about, and curate three Hunt picks across three price tiers. Knowledge-first chase. No FOMO. Just what moved and why it matters.
The full American Whiskey Industry Brief — every story, every Hunt entry, every debate, every auction — is published daily for subscribers on Patreon. If you want the full pour, not just the taste, join us at patreon.com/ChasingTheUnicornPodcast.
The Cut Daily is the free written companion to today’s American Whiskey Industry Brief.
IN TODAY’S CUT

One bottle per day. No application. Michter’s confirmed July 11, 12, and 13 as the Fort Nelson walk-up window — no reservation, no lottery, $159.99 at 801 West Main Street in Louisville. Secondary pricing on this bottle runs $350 to $450. The only requirement is the drive.

Tuesday’s American whiskey window landed four consumer-actionable announcements in one session: Michter’s published walk-up dates for the US★1 10-Year 2026, Heaven Hill opened Elijah Craig 18-Year pre-allocation at $89.99, Brown-Forman confirmed Old Forester Birthday Bourbon 2026 holds at $149.99, and the federal TTB issued final guidance that reshapes how cask-finish bourbons get labeled starting July 1. Today’s edition covers what the Michter’s walk-up window actually requires to use, what the debate between EC18 and Elijah Craig Barrel Proof tells you about how to spend a ten-dollar premium, and what the new cask-finish labeling rule means for bottles already on your shelf.

THE BIG MOVE
Michter’s Confirmed Three Days in July — No Lottery, No Application, $159.99 at the Door in Louisville
Event Date: June 16, 2026 (Michter’s press release, walk-up window confirmation)

Michter’s US★1 10-Year 2026 earned its federal label approval June 10. This morning, Chatham Imports confirmed the access window: Fort Nelson Distillery at 801 West Main Street in Louisville will open walk-up sales July 11, 12, and 13, 10 AM to 4 PM each day. One bottle per customer per day at $159.99 MSRP. No reservation. No online queue. No lottery application. No state residency requirement.

That’s the whole mechanism. You show up. You pay $159.99. You leave with a bottle.

The Michter’s US★1 10-Year trades on the secondary market at $350 to $450 — a premium that has held consistently across the 2024 and 2025 Fort Nelson cycles. Whisky Advocate’s 2024 review of the expression scored it 92 points and described “one of the most controlled wood-spice exits in the Michter’s lineup.” The TTB confirmed 91.2 proof and $159.99 MSRP for the 2026 vintage.

Andrea Wilson, Michter’s Master of Maturation, noted in the announcement that the Fort Nelson maturation program allowed individual barrel monitoring through fourteen additional months of slow heat cycling compared to off-site warehousing. The 2026 release is, in Wilson’s framing, the best barrel cohort the facility has passed through in a decade.

Fort Nelson sits five minutes on foot from Louisville’s downtown hotel corridor. Bourbon Trail visitors already planning Louisville travel the weekend of July 11 can add this to the same itinerary without a car. Based on prior Fort Nelson walk-up cycles, expect 200 to 300 buyers per day before stock exhausts — Saturday traffic runs heaviest, so Friday afternoon arrival before the July 11 AM opening buys the shorter line.

The practical math: $159.99 against a $350-plus secondary entry point is a $190 spread before you count the cost of getting there. For a buyer within a few hours of Louisville, this is the most favorable access window available on a premium Michter’s expression this year.

What It Means For Your Shelf — Nothing arrives this week — but the window to buy at $159.99 opens July 11 and closes July 13. Plan the drive or accept the secondary price.
From today’s AWIB Opening Pour. This is one of four lead stories in today’s AWIB Opening Pour. The other three: Heaven Hill opens Elijah Craig 18-Year pre-allocation at $89.99 — window closes June 25; Brown-Forman confirms Old Forester Birthday Bourbon 2026 holds $149.99 against analyst projections of $159.99; Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 secondary pre-market opens at $310–$340, one day after allocation closed. Read all four lead stories on Patreon →
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FIRST SIP
Pre-Order vs. Lottery vs. Walk-In — Which Strategy Works for What Bottle
Paired with today’s: Michter’s Fort Nelson walk-up July 11–13 — the live demonstration of the walk-in access mechanism — alongside today’s Bar Talk debate on whether walk-up is the fairest distribution model available or geographic exclusion by another name.

There are three basic ways allocated bourbon reaches your hands at MSRP. Knowing which one applies to which bottle is how you stop missing access windows.

Pre-order means a retailer opens a request window — online or in-store — and either ships to winners or holds bottles for pickup. This is how Seelbach’s, Total Wine, and Binny’s handle most limited drops. It rewards fast movers and buyers on the right email lists.

State lottery means your state’s ABC system — Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and others — administers a random drawing. You submit one entry per release period. It rewards patience and persistence over speed. BTAC, Pappy, and other blue-chip bottles come through this channel in most control states.

Walk-in means exactly what Michter’s just confirmed: show up at a specific address on specific dates, and the bottle is yours at MSRP. No entry form, no drawing, no retailer relationship required. The catch is geographic — you have to physically be there.

Today’s Fort Nelson announcement is the cleanest walk-in access event of the summer: a 92-point Michter’s expression at $159.99, three days, no application of any kind. Match the access mechanism to your situation. If Louisville is four hours away, this one rewards the drive.

What this changes: Pre-order, lottery, and walk-in are not interchangeable. Know the access type before you decide how to prepare.

The Perfect Pour app — beta open now, launches July 4. For the full deep-dive on pre-order versus lottery versus walk-in — the practical mechanics of each system, when each one rewards a fast-moving buyer versus a patient one, and how to build active pipelines across all three access types — get notified when the Perfect Pour app launches. Take your seat in the beta →
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TODAY’S ENTRY BOTTLE
Michter’s US★1 Small Batch Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
$35–$42 National distribution through Chatham Imports’ retail network; available at most Total Wine locations, premium independent retailers, and spirits-licensed online shippers without pre-registration or wait lists; standard shelf access
Flavor Profile — Vanilla and dried stone fruit on the nose with a warm caramel and light toasted-oak mid-palate; the finish is clean and moderately long, with a gentle spice note that stays well-integrated rather than assertive — approachable neat at 91.4 proof, with a soft entry that doesn’t require water to open
Production Context — Non-age-stated, bottled at 91.4 proof (45.7% ABV) from Michter’s Kentucky production program; small-batch selection designed to reflect the house style’s emphasis on controlled wood-spice integration and accessible mid-palate weight; Michter’s uses a higher temperature-cycling maturation philosophy that yields earlier wood extraction relative to proof
Why This Matters — Today’s Big Move is the Michter’s US★1 10-Year at $159.99 — ten more years of maturation on the same house style that starts here at $35; tasting the Small Batch tells you what an additional decade of barrel time is doing to the caramel, stone fruit, and wood-spice architecture before you plan the drive to Louisville
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THE CHASE
How to read the chase ratings
YESworth chasing
WATCHhold for now
PASSskip this one
Bottle 1 — Under $80
The only under-$80 Hunt entry this window — E.H. Taylor Jr. Old Warehouse C BiB 2026 at $69.99-$79.99 — has reached its 2-of-5-days HARD CAP (appeared in Chase on June 14 and June 11). The pre-allocation window remains open with a Father’s Day ground-ship cutoff of June 18. Check the AWIB for the full pre-allocation access path and shipping deadline math if you’re still working this bottle.
Bottle 2 — $80 to $200
Four Roses 2026 Limited Edition Small Batch
Window: Pre-allocation open now through mid-July 2026; recipe and proof formally revealed before the retail launch
Where: Four Roses–connected national retailers; Seelbach’s, Liquor Barn, Total Wine (Kentucky and major markets); Four Roses Distillery visitor center, Lawrenceburg, KY
MSRP: $149.99 (based on 2025 vintage pricing; 2026 MSRP not yet formally published)
Flavor Profile — Fresh stone fruit, floral lift, and toasted pecan on the nose; honey, apricot, and light baking spice on the mid-palate; long vanilla-and-caramel finish — the 2025 vintage was described as unusually layered for an LESB, with the floral OESQ register balancing the spice frame
YES
Rationale — The TTB confirmed the 2026 LESB at 108.2 proof on June 12 — the highest entry proof in the series since 2023 — before the recipe blend was published. Whisky Advocate’s 2025 vintage scored 95 points. The 2025 LESB opened secondary at $380–$420 post-review and has held a $355–$395 floor into 2026. Pre-allocation at $149.99 is the only MSRP-guaranteed access point before a recipe reveal triggers retail demand; the window closes before most buyers realize the recipe is worth acting on.
Bottle 3 — $200 and up
The Kentucky Bourbon Festival 2026 VIP Master Class ticket at $375 has reached its 2-of-5-days HARD CAP (appeared June 15 and June 14). No other $200-plus Hunt entry is active this window. The high end is quiet on bottles; the KBF VIP ticket evaluation belongs in your travel planning now, not here. Check the AWIB for the full Festival access picture.
Today’s AWIB Hunt section covers 5 active drops, lotteries, and walk-up windows with full palate direction, rationale, and the Hunt Intelligence Note. See the full Hunt on Patreon →
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THE BAR TALK
EC18 at $89.99 and 86 Proof vs. Elijah Craig Barrel Proof C926 at $79.99 and 130.4 Proof — Does a $10 Premium for a Confirmed Age Statement Justify Losing 44 Proof Points?

Two Heaven Hill expressions, both derived from the Bernheim Distillery’s Kentucky production program, priced within $10 of each other. The barrel-proof camp frames this as obvious: ECBP C926 is confirmed at 130.4 proof and a 14.2-year average age — the longest verified C-batch average in the series — available at $79.99. The age-statement camp counters that the EC18 is a categorically different product: 18 confirmed minimum years, every drop, verified by federal label law, at a price that undercuts the Eagle Rare 17 benchmark by $10. The debate looks like a value comparison. It’s actually a question about what you’re optimizing for.

First Sip Moment —

Proof matters here, so a quick explanation. Proof is twice the alcohol by volume — 86 proof is 43% ABV, 130.4 proof is 65.2%. Most bourbons are cut with water before bottling to reach a target proof. Barrel-proof expressions skip that step: whatever came out of the barrel goes straight to the bottle. At 130.4, ECBP C926 is expressing the barrel directly. At 86 proof, EC18 reflects Conor O’Driscoll’s deliberate choice to bring it down to a profile he hears as right for the barrel cohort — not a market compromise, a palate decision. Worth knowing: at high proof, water is a tool. Adding three to five drops to a 130-proof pour opens it. The same trick applies less to an 86-proof bottle because there’s less alcohol locking down the aromatics to begin with.

The Math —

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof C926 is confirmed at 130.4 proof, $79.99 MSRP, 14.2-year average age, TTB clearance June 2026. Elijah Craig 18-Year 2026 is confirmed at 86 proof, $89.99 MSRP, 18-year minimum age statement, TTB clearance June 9, 2026, pre-allocation closes June 25. Federal labeling standards require the stated age to reflect the youngest spirit in the bottle — every drop in the EC18 is at minimum 18 years old, no exceptions (27 CFR § 5.74). The $10 gap delivers 3.8 more confirmed years of minimum barrel age while surrendering 44.4 proof points. Whisky Advocate’s 2022 review of the EC 18-Year scored it 90 points, describing “dark cherry, vanilla extract, and toasted walnut with a long, drying oak finish.” ECBP C926 had no published independent review as of June 16. The community debate has converged on a sensible third position: these are not competing for the same buyer. Barrel-proof buyers optimize for intensity and like water as a calibration tool. Age-statement buyers optimize for the specific character that 18 years of Bernheim warehouse time produces — which diluting a 14-year bottle cannot replicate regardless of how much or how little water you add. Both cases are defensible. The $10 gap is among the smallest meaningful price differentials in the current premium tier.

What It Means For The Rest Of Us —

The $10 doesn’t buy better bourbon — it buys confirmed years. Know which one you’re actually chasing before you commit to either window.

Today’s AWIB Bar Talk has 2 more debates with full source citations, fact-checked positions, and editorial assessment. Read the full debates on Patreon →
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SECONDARY SPOTLIGHT
Larceny Barrel Proof A926
Realized Price
$92.00
Peak Price
$210.00
Floor Erosion
↓ 56.2%
($210.00 − $92.00) ÷ $210.00 × 100 = 56.2% erosion from pandemic-era peak
What Floor Erosion Means —

Floor erosion measures how far a bottle’s secondary price has dropped from its recorded high. Larceny Barrel Proof A926 peaked at $210 during the 2022 bourbon boom, when demand for wheated barrel-proof expressions dramatically outpaced supply and secondary buyers were paying multiples of retail on bottles that now sit on most premium independent shelves. The A926 batch is confirmed at a series-record 126.8 proof and retails at $69.99 MSRP. It is now selling at $92 on Bottle Spot — a 31% premium over MSRP on a bottle that doesn’t require a lottery, wait list, or pre-allocation form to buy at retail. The 56.2% erosion from the 2022 peak is the market correcting to something closer to rational. The $22 gap between secondary and MSRP is the only number a buyer actually needs to make a decision.

The lesson: When secondary is only $22 above an easily found retail price, the secondary buyer is paying for impatience — not scarcity.
Today’s AWIB Secondary section grades 2 more bottles with realized prices, floor erosion math, lineage notes, and buy/hold/sell calls. Read the full secondary report on Patreon →
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ALSO IN TODAY’S AWIB
Today’s Flight: Elijah Craig 18-Year 2026 vs. Old Forester Birthday Bourbon 2026 — both MSRP-confirmed in the same Tuesday window, $60 apart, opposite proof philosophies, one arriving through pre-allocation and the other through the standard September retailer channel. Full side-by-side tasting notes, the Father’s Day gift-tier verdict, and which bottle surprises versus which bottle impresses — in today’s AWIB.
The TTB issued final informal guidance today clarifying that any bourbon spending time in non-charred-oak secondary vessels must carry a “Whiskey Specialty” designation on COLA applications filed after July 1. Maker’s Mark Wood Finishing Series, Michter’s Toasted Barrel Finish, and Garrison Brothers Lady Bird Cognac Finish are grandfathered under existing approvals. New expressions currently in the TTB queue are not. The AWIB Rickhouse Report covers which producers have applications in motion right now, what “Whiskey Specialty” means for retail shelf positioning, and whether this guidance resolves two years of inconsistent COLA decisions or just adds labeling complexity consumers will need to learn to read.
Tennessee’s Distillers Guild filed a formal legislative request this week to mandate age statement transparency on Tennessee whiskey export labels — closing a gap where EU buyers see age data on the same bottle that domestic buyers do not. Nelson’s Green Brier, Uncle Nearest, and Corsair are behind the petition; Jack Daniel’s is explicitly excluded from its scope. The AWIB Regional Report covers the petition’s legislative timeline, why the export-label asymmetry exists under current federal and EU law, and what the precedent means for state-level label transparency advocacy across the broader American whiskey category.
Today’s Full AWIB Includes (in reading order)
Bar Talk: 3 debates · The Hunt: 5 active drops · Label Room: 5 items · The Secondary: 3 graded bottles
Rickhouse Report: 5 stories · Regional Report: 3 stories (Tennessee)
The full AWIB walks today’s bourbon world in reader-forward order — the Opening Pour lead stories, the community Bar Talk, the side-by-side Flight comparison, every active Hunt window, the full Label Room pipeline, the Secondary market grading, and the industry-depth Rickhouse, Regional, and Research Notes coverage. Plus full source trail. Join on Patreon →
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The Perfect Pour — beta open now, launches July 4.
Build your Rickhouse, log every pour in your Logbook, and learn your palate with your Pour Print — the app that turns every pour into your next discovery.
Founder’s rate: lock $99/year for life as a Bourbon Keeper (through July 3, 2027).
The Cut Daily
Report Date: June 16, 2026 · Chasing the Unicorn Podcast · A Drunken Unicorn Production
Free Edition · No Redistribution Without Permission

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