The Cut — June 18, 2026 — SE02E53 — A $70 Bottle Ships Today. Pappy Doesn’t.

In this episode
Thursday’s Cut opens with one deadline. The E.H. Taylor Jr. Old Warehouse C Bottled-in-Bond 2026 has a Father’s Day ground-shipping cutoff before 5 PM ET at most major online retailers. The bottle stays available at $69.99 MSRP after that. The June 21 arrival does not. The BiB credential answers the question someone asks when they…
Mentioned in this episode: E.H. Taylor, Buffalo Trace, Wild Turkey, Old Fitzgerald
Read the full transcript
This is The Cut.
Baking spice and stone fruit in the first pour — not all at once, but arriving before the finish does. Clean and warm on the mid-palate, with enough structure to stay interesting through the glass. This is what a pre-Prohibition brick warehouse does to a Kentucky bourbon over time, and the difference lands before you get to the bottom of the pour.
I’m John from Chasing the Unicorn Podcast.
Here’s where we want to end up: the E.H. Taylor Jr. Old Warehouse C Bottled-in-Bond in hand and on its way to your door before Father’s Day. At $69.99 MSRP.
Here’s what makes it tricky. Most buyers treat Father’s Day bourbon as a secondary-market problem — find the bottle, pay the premium, hope it ships. They don’t check whether there are MSRP options with a ground-ship cutoff today. There are. This one. The window closes around 5 PM ET at major online retailers. After that, the bottle stays at MSRP on shelf. The June 21 arrival does not.
Here’s the move. Pull up Seelbach’s or ReserveBar right now, search E.H. Taylor Old Warehouse C Bottled-in-Bond 2026, confirm ground-ship arrival by June 21, and check out. That’s the whole play.
Why this bottle earns the move. Bottled-in-Bond isn’t marketing — it’s a federal audit result. One distillery, one distilling season, four years minimum in a bonded warehouse, bottled at exactly 100 proof. The TTB verified that before the bottle left the building. Every one of those requirements is on the label in plain English, and every one of them is true because the government checked. That is a different thing than a tasting note.
Old Warehouse C adds the second piece. It’s a pre-Prohibition brick masonry warehouse on the Buffalo Trace campus in Frankfort. Brick thermal mass moderates temperature swings more than corrugated metal rickhouses — the whiskey cycles in and out of the wood more slowly across seasons. More integration, less aggressive extraction. Prior vintages ran baking spice and stone fruit arriving earlier in the pour than the standard E.H. Taylor BiB line. At $69.99, that’s the sentence worth saying when someone opens the box Sunday.
The Chase. The Spotlight this window is Wild Turkey Master’s Keep 2026 Triumph — 116.4 proof, 17-year minimum, three rickhouses blended into one of the most concentrated Wild Turkey builds in years. Retailer lottery portals opened this week in six states: Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia, North Carolina, and Colorado. Entry is free. No purchase required. The national pool runs 11,400 bottles at $199.99 MSRP — enter every lottery in your eligible state before the portals close around June 25 to 28. If you lose, watch first-wave reviews before committing at secondary. This is worth the chase.
Also on the Chase: Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond Spring 2026 Decanter at $79.99 — 11-year wheated BiB in decanter format, and tonight is the last ground-ship window on that one too. The $200-plus tier is quiet this window — nothing qualifies, and I’d rather say that than fill the slot. Full read on all three is in today’s Cut Daily on our website. Free.
A word of caution before you act. Two ground-ship deadlines are live tonight — E.H. Taylor Jr. at $69.99 and Old Fitzgerald at $79.99. Both expire in the same window. The rule that makes the call reliable: know what you’re buying for before you decide which one. For a gift that needs the cleanest label story at the table, Old Fitzgerald’s 11-year wheated decanter answers the question before anyone asks it. For your shelf and the BiB-with-provenance argument, E.H. Taylor’s warehouse credential at that price point is hard to beat. The cost of picking the wrong one is ten dollars. The cost of missing both windows is not getting either bottle before Sunday.
One more thing before we close — today’s American Whiskey Industry Brief runs the Flight: Old Fitzgerald BiB Spring 2026 Decanter against E.H. Taylor Old Warehouse C BiB side by side. Same federal credential, same shipping deadline, different grain philosophies. The gift-tier verdict is in there.
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 Cut Daily
Listen to today’s episode and find us on Spotify and everywhere you listen at chasingtheunicornpodcast.com/podcast.
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.
A $70 bottle ships today. Pappy doesn’t. The E.H. Taylor Jr. Old Warehouse C Bottled-in-Bond — 100 proof, pre-Prohibition warehouse, and a federal production guarantee — has a Father’s Day ground-ship cutoff this afternoon. One of the most defensible gift-bracket bourbons in the current window, and the clock runs out before most people finish their morning coffee.
Thursday’s American whiskey window is running on one clock. The E.H. Taylor Jr. Old Warehouse C Bottled-in-Bond 2026 has a Father’s Day ground-shipping deadline that expires today — and it is the strongest per-dollar purchase in the June 21 gift window for buyers who can still reach it. Alongside that deadline, Wild Turkey’s Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 retailer lotteries opened this week in six states, Four Roses confirmed July 19 as the date Brent Elliott reveals the 2026 LESB recipe, and the 18-year bourbon bracket now has three confirmed MSRPs inside the same release cycle. Today’s edition covers the shipping decision, explains what a pre-Prohibition warehouse actually does to a barrel, and gives you the three-bracket Father’s Day gifting map with 72 hours remaining.
The E.H. Taylor Jr. Old Warehouse C Bottled-in-Bond 2026 has one piece of news attached to it today: the Father’s Day ground-shipping window closes at approximately 5 PM ET. Most major online bourbon retailers — Seelbach’s, ReserveBar, Caskers — require orders before that cutoff for June 21 delivery in standard domestic carrier zones. After today, the bottle stays available at retail. The Father’s Day shipping window does not.
Here is what the label is legally promising. Bottled-in-Bond means four things, each of them verified by the federal government: one distillery, one distilling season, at least four years in a federally bonded warehouse, bottled at exactly 100 proof. That is not marketing copy. That is the Bottled-in-Bond Act of 1897 — the first consumer protection law Congress passed for any food or beverage product in the United States. The law was named for Edmund Haynes Taylor, Jr., the same man whose name is on the bottle.
The Old Warehouse C designation adds the extra sentence. It refers to a pre-Prohibition masonry warehouse on the Buffalo Trace campus in Frankfort, Kentucky — one of the oldest actively-used aging structures in American bourbon. Brick construction moderates temperature swings differently than the corrugated metal rickhouses where most modern bourbon ages. The whiskey cycles into and out of the wood more slowly. More integration, less aggressive wood extraction. Prior Old Warehouse C BiB vintages earned 89–91-point marks in trade reviews, with Whisky Advocate’s 2024 vintage describing baking spice and stone fruit arriving earlier in the pour than the standard E.H. Taylor BiB line.
At $69.99 MSRP, the access case is straightforward: confirmed proof, confirmed credential, confirmed warehouse, and a logistics clock that makes the decision unavoidable before noon.
A rickhouse is the warehouse where bourbon barrels age. In Kentucky, they’re often six, seven, or nine stories tall — corrugated metal or brick, lined with wooden racks that each hold dozens of barrels. A single rickhouse can hold 20,000 barrels or more.
Every floor tastes different. The top floors cook through Kentucky summers at 100 degrees-plus, pushing whiskey aggressively in and out of the wood. The bottom floors stay cool and damp, aging slower and gentler. A barrel on the top floor and a barrel on the bottom floor of the same rickhouse, from the same distilling season, can produce noticeably different whiskey after 10 years — same distillery, same mash bill, same yeast.
The pre-Prohibition masonry warehouses like Buffalo Trace’s Warehouse C sit outside this spectrum. Brick thermal mass moderates temperature swings compared to corrugated metal, which means the whiskey cycles in and out of the wood more slowly across the seasons. That is what today’s debate is really asking: does slower cycling produce a detectable flavor signature, or does barrel-to-barrel variation swamp the warehouse-mean difference?
The honest answer — and the AWIB’s assessment — is both things are true simultaneously. The warehouse effect is real and directional. But no individual barrel is guaranteed to express the warehouse signature over its own barrel-specific character.
What this changes: When a label says “Old Warehouse C” or any named-structure designation, you now know what it’s claiming — and what it’s not.
Floor erosion is how much a bottle’s secondary market price has dropped from its highest recorded sale. 47.3% erosion on Knob Creek 12-Year Limited Edition 2024 means buyers who paid the secondary peak in June 2022 — $165 on average — are now looking at an $87 realized price at auction. That is a drop of nearly half, on a bottle that was never truly scarce — it was constrained during the allocation-era demand spike of 2021–2022, and when that pressure eased, so did the premium. The floor has now crossed a meaningful threshold: at $87 secondary, the incremental case for paying extra for three more years of aging over Knob Creek’s standard $46–$52 nine-year expression is thin. The argument collapses further when the Knob Creek 18-Year Single Barrel Reserve 2026, now confirmed at $124.99 MSRP, arrives at retail in August. That bottle will structurally displace the 12-Year’s position as Beam Suntory’s age-forward expression.
Rickhouse Report: 5 stories · Regional Report: 3 stories
◆ Full AWIB (Paid Patreon Subscriber): https://www.patreon.com/c/ChasingTheUnicornPodcast
◆ Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/56Lt67gvTPjifCyeqFW3IT
◆ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@chasingtheunicornpodcast
Want the full picture? The complete American Whiskey Industry Brief — every section, every source, every story — is published daily for subscribers on Patreon. Join us at patreon.com/ChasingTheUnicornPodcast.