AWIB April 29, 2026: Heaven Hill Confirms 2026 Maintained Barrel Fill at 95% of Prior-Year Rate —…
The pulse of American whiskey: what moved — and why it matters.
Jump to: Today'S Brief At A Glance · The Rickhouse Report · Regional Report · This Window — Summary · The Hunt — Active This Window · The Label Room · The Bar Talk · The Secondary · Composite Floor Erosion Table · The Research Notes · Works Cited
Today's Brief At A Glance
◆ THE RICKHOUSE REPORT — Corporate moves, production decisions, and legislation that shape the shelf. 2 stories · Heaven Hill Maintains 2026 Fill at 95% Prior-Year Rate · Kentucky Revenue Cabinet Year 1 Barrel Tax Phase-Out Guidance
◆ REGIONAL REPORT — Texas. 3 stories · Garrison Brothers Cowboy 2026 at 134.9 Proof · Balcones Texas Pot Still Bourbon · Texas HB 2341 DTC Spirits Delivery Advances
◆ THE LABEL ROOM — New TTB approvals and pipeline intelligence — what's coming to market and when. 6 featured + 2 pending · Larceny BP B526 · Wilderness Trail Wheat BiB · Knob Creek 18-Year 2026 · Four Roses OESV Single Barrel Limited · Jefferson's Ocean Voyage 28 · New Riff Malted Rye BiB 2026
◆ THE HUNT — Lotteries, drops, and releases open right now — what's worth your time. 5 active drops · Blade and Bow 22-Year Final 24 Hours · Angel's Envy Cask Strength Final 48 Hours · Westland Garryana 7 Closing · Michter's US★1 Fort Nelson Walk-Up · Virginia ABC Claim Window
◆ THE BAR TALK — What the community is arguing about and what the facts actually say. 2 debates · Sazerac Divestiture Brand Math · DISCUS -4.2% Volume — Correction at Shelf?
◆ THE SECONDARY — Realized auction prices, floor erosion math, and whether to buy, hold, or sell. 3 graded bottles · Westland Garryana Edition 6 · Blade and Bow 22-Year 2025 · Van Winkle Special Reserve 12 Lot B 2024
The Rickhouse Report
The big moves — corporate decisions, production changes, and industry events that shape what ends up on your shelf.
Story Status:
New This Cycle
Story Title:
Heaven Hill Confirms 2026 Maintained Barrel Fill at 95% of Prior-Year Rate — Counter-Cyclical Production Posture Against Suntory Clermont Idle and MGP Output Cut; Bernheim 12-Year Extension Projection Surfaces
Event Date:
April 29, 2026
The Story:
Heaven Hill Distilleries confirmed at a Kentucky Distillers' Association briefing on Wednesday, April 29, that it will maintain 2026 barrel fill at approximately 95% of prior-year rate — a deliberately counter-cyclical posture against the simultaneous production cuts announced this week by Suntory Global Spirits (Clermont idle extension through Q3 2026) and MGP Ingredients (15% production guidance cut). The Shapira-family-led producer's commitment was paired with a forward projection of a Bernheim Original 12-Year extension that would represent the first age-statement elevation in the Bernheim brand's 27-year history. The maintained-fill posture coincided with the Kentucky Revenue Cabinet's same-day publication of Year 1 barrel tax phase-out implementation guidance, which establishes a 5% first-year assessed-value reduction on aging inventory and partially offsets the carrying-cost premium Heaven Hill accepts by not following Suntory and MGP's production cuts. [9] [10]
Why It Matters:
A vertically integrated producer of Heaven Hill's scale maintaining 95% of prior-year fill rate while two of the industry's largest production contributors simultaneously cut constitutes a directional split with material 2029-to-2031 supply implications. If the recovery cycle arrives on the timeline sell-side models imply, Heaven Hill will have allocation depth that correcting producers will not. The Bernheim 12-Year extension projection is the most specific long-cycle product commitment to emerge from the correction window — a concrete bottle the market can hold accountable as the cycle progresses. [9] [10]
Keep An Eye On:
Watch for Q2 2026 production confirmation from Heaven Hill — the Q1 commitment is the opening signal, but a Q2 maintained-fill confirmation establishes the counter-cyclical posture as a sustained multi-quarter strategic decision rather than a single-quarter positioning statement. Watch for any Kentucky property tax commentary from Heaven Hill following the Revenue Cabinet's April 29 barrel tax phase-out implementation guidance: the first-year 5% assessed-value reduction directly offsets a portion of the carrying-cost premium Heaven Hill is accepting by not following Suntory and MGP's production cuts. Watch for Bernheim Original 12-Year project timeline updates — any public commitment to a production run or projected release year would represent the first age-statement elevation announcement in the Bernheim brand's 27-year history. [9] [10]
Your Chase:
Bernheim Original Wheat Whiskey at $34.99 is the accessible buy in the Heaven Hill lineup that directly benefits from Wednesday's maintained-production announcement. If a Bernheim 12-Year eventually materializes by 2030, the current 7-year floor is the tasting baseline worth establishing now. Buy a bottle, note the wheat mash profile, and return to it when Heaven Hill announces the extended expression.
First_Sip_Anchor:
The mash bill · Age statement vs. NAS
Lineage_Note:
Heaven Hill Distilleries was founded in 1935 in Bardstown, Kentucky by the Shapira family — one of the last family-controlled major bourbon distilleries in the United States alongside Brown-Forman. The company survived the 1996 Cox's Creek distillery fire, the most devastating single-site bourbon fire in post-Prohibition history, and rebuilt at the same site — preserving its yeast strain and production continuity through what might otherwise have been a brand-ending event. The Bernheim Distillery, acquired from United Distillers and Vintners in 1999, added the Louisville production platform and the wheat mashbill capability that Bernheim Original Wheat Whiskey was built on in the same acquisition year.
Story Status:
New This Cycle
Story Title:
Kentucky Revenue Cabinet Issues Year 1 Barrel Inventory Tax Phase-Out Implementation Guidance — 5% First-Year Assessed Value Reduction; $23.4 Million Aggregate Relief Across 47 Active Distilleries; KDA Publishes Distillery-Level Savings Estimates
Event Date:
April 29, 2026
The Story:
The Kentucky Revenue Cabinet on Wednesday April 29 issued formal implementation guidance for Year 1 of the 20-year barrel inventory tax phase-out negotiated by the Kentucky Distillers' Association and enacted by the Kentucky General Assembly — the first operational tax relief communication since the legislation passed in February 2026 and the document that allows individual distilleries to calculate and file for their first-year assessment reduction. The guidance establishes that Year 1 reduces the assessed value of aging barrel inventory by 5% of the January 1 assessed value for all barrels in storage at licensed Kentucky distillery warehouse facilities as of that date, with the reduction applied across the 2026 property tax calculation period. Across the 47 active licensed Kentucky distilling operations that filed barrel inventory assessments for tax year 2025, the Revenue Cabinet estimates aggregate first-year relief at $23.4 million — a figure concentrated at facilities with the largest aging barrel inventories: Buffalo Trace, Heaven Hill, Jim Beam's Clermont and Boston campuses, Brown-Forman's Kentucky warehousing facilities, and Wild Turkey's Lawrenceburg operation. [11] [12]
The Kentucky Distillers' Association published distillery-level first-year savings estimates alongside the Revenue Cabinet guidance, with the largest estimated annual relief figures accruing to: Buffalo Trace at approximately $4.1 million in Year 1 based on an estimated 2.3 million aging barrels; Jim Beam's combined facilities at approximately $3.8 million based on 2025 barrel inventory filings; Heaven Hill's Cox's Creek and Louisville operations at approximately $3.2 million; Brown-Forman's Kentucky properties at approximately $2.9 million; and Wild Turkey's Lawrenceburg campus at approximately $1.7 million. The estimates are KDA calculations based on publicly filed property tax data and the 5% Year 1 phase-out rate and represent first-year figures only. The 20-year phase-out structure reduces assessed value by an additional 5% per year, reaching 100% exemption by tax year 2045. [11] [12]
The implementation guidance's practical significance extends beyond the first-year dollar amounts. Prior to the phase-out, Kentucky's barrel inventory tax created a carrying-cost differential between Kentucky-based aging — where barrels are taxed annually on assessed value — and Tennessee, Texas, Colorado, and other state production environments where no equivalent tax applies. Chattanooga Whiskey's April 28 groundbreaking announcement explicitly cited this differential as a competitive forcing function the Kentucky phase-out would partially close; the April 29 implementation guidance quantifies what "partially" means in Year 1: a 5% reduction in assessed value basis, reaching 10% by Year 2 and 15% by Year 3 — a slope that meaningfully narrows the inter-state carrying-cost gap over the 20-year period even before Year 1 savings are realized at scale. [11] [12] [13]
The guidance also addresses the treatment of barrels entered into storage during calendar year 2026 — a question that Suntory's Clermont idle and MGP's production guidance cut had left commercially significant. Barrels entered into Kentucky storage during 2026 are eligible for assessment at the 5% reduced basis beginning January 1, 2027, meaning that distilleries reducing 2026 new-make fill — as Suntory has done at Clermont — benefit from the phase-out framework on their existing aging inventory immediately, while their new-make fill decisions do not affect first-year relief eligibility. Heaven Hill's maintained 2026 production commitment benefits from both simultaneously: first-year relief on its existing multi-million-barrel inventory base and Year 2 relief on the 2026 new-make barrels entering the 2027 assessment cycle. [11] [12]
Why It Matters:
The Revenue Cabinet's implementation guidance transforms the barrel inventory tax phase-out from a legislative achievement into an operational financial variable for every Kentucky distillery's 2026 balance sheet. At $23.4 million in aggregate Year 1 relief, the phase-out does not eliminate Kentucky's carrying-cost disadvantage relative to Tennessee and Texas — but it begins a 20-year trajectory that will close the gap meaningfully and create a structural incentive for continued Kentucky production investment during correction cycles when per-unit margin pressure is highest. Heaven Hill's explicitly counter-cyclical maintained barrel fill, confirmed the same day, directly benefits from this framework: the Year 1 tax reduction partially offsets the carrying-cost premium Heaven Hill is accepting by not following Suntory and MGP's production cuts, improving the economics of the counter-cyclical thesis Shapira articulated in the KDA briefing. [11] [12] [13]
Keep An Eye On:
Watch for individual distillery 2026 tax filing confirmations through the Revenue Cabinet — the first formal filings will validate the KDA's estimated savings distribution across producers. Watch for Tennessee Distillers Guild's response to the implementation guidance publication: the April 28 Chattanooga Whiskey groundbreaking already cited the Kentucky tax advantage as a competitive forcing function, and the Year 1 implementation quantification gives the Guild a specific dollar differential to present in any future state-level tax relief push. Watch for the Year 2 phase-out guidance publication in early 2027, which will establish whether the Revenue Cabinet's implementation structure is consistent with the legislature's 20-year intent. [11] [12]
Your Chase:
No direct consumer action required today. What the barrel tax phase-out creates over the 20-year window is a structural incentive for Kentucky distilleries to maintain aging inventory through correction cycles rather than liquidating aged stock prematurely to cover carrying costs. The long-cycle implication for drinkers is modest but real: Kentucky's structural production incentives are now more aligned with long-cycle inventory continuity than at any point since the current barrel tax framework was established.
First_Sip_Anchor:
The rickhouse · Bottled-in-Bond
Regional Report
Craft and regional whiskey news from outside Kentucky — the producers building the next chapter.
Today's region: Texas.
Region: Texas
Story Status:
New This Cycle
Story Title:
Garrison Brothers Announces 2026 Cowboy Bourbon — 134.9 Proof Texas Straight Bourbon; 3,500 Bottles Across Texas and 14-State Distribution; May 10 Priority Window; $249.99 SRP
Event Date:
April 29, 2026
The Story:
Garrison Brothers Distillery of Hye, Texas announced Wednesday April 29 the 2026 release of its annual Cowboy Bourbon — an uncut, unfiltered Texas straight bourbon bottled at barrel proof, this year confirmed at 134.9 proof — with a retail allocation of 3,500 bottles across Texas and 14 additional states through the distillery's Republic National Distributing Company network. The 2026 release is drawn from barrels distilled from a 100% Texas-grown grain mashbill in 2020 and 2021, averaging 5 years and 4 months of Hill Country maturation through Hye's extreme temperature cycling — a climate that compresses barrel extraction to a degree that makes Texas five-year barrels broadly comparable in extraction intensity to Kentucky eight-to-nine-year maturation under ambient conditions. Distillery founder Dan Garrison confirmed the 2026 vintage specifics in a statement published on the Garrison Brothers website Wednesday morning. [14] [15]
Texas specialty-retail accounts in the Republic National footprint receive confirmed allocations through a May 10 priority claim window. Non-Texas distribution markets — confirmed as Oklahoma, Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, Illinois, New York, New Jersey, Florida, California, New Mexico, Louisiana, Nevada, and Hawaii — begin receiving bottles May 12 with retail shelf arrival estimated May 15 to May 22 depending on state distribution velocity. Garrison Brothers will hold a distillery release event at the Hye campus on May 10 coinciding with the Texas priority window opening, with a walk-up allocation of approximately 250 bottles at the same $249.99 distillery price as the retail release — unusual for a Garrison Brothers distillery event and signaling the 2026 Cowboy Bourbon is not being positioned as a premium-over-retail distillery exclusive. [14] [15]
The 2026 Cowboy Bourbon's 134.9 proof is the highest barrel-proof bottling in the brand's annual Cowboy series history: the 2025 release came out at 131.2 proof and the 2024 at 128.8 proof. Garrison Brothers attributes the trend to increasing barrel entry proof standardization and the maturation intensity of the Hye Hill Country environment on summer-filled barrels. At 134.9 proof, the 2026 release is the highest-proof annual whiskey release from any Texas distillery in the current calendar year by a confirmed margin, sitting in the proof tier that barrel-proof Kentucky enthusiasts associate with Buffalo Trace Experimental Collection releases and Elijah Craig Barrel Proof C-batch bottlings. The price point at $249.99 reflects the sustained Texas craft premium over comparable-proof Kentucky product — a gap the Texas Whiskey Association has defended on the grounds of higher production costs, grain sourcing provenance, and maturation-climate differentiation. [14] [15]
Why It Matters:
Garrison Brothers' 2026 Cowboy Bourbon is the annual bellwether for Texas craft bourbon's price-versus-intensity proposition — whether the Hill Country premium over comparable Kentucky barrel-proof product holds, narrows, or expands at the collector tier. The 2025 Cowboy Bourbon secondary emerged at $320 to $380 within 45 days of Texas retail clearance, implying approximately 28-to-52% secondary premium over $249.99 MSRP — a collector-tier signal that validates the Texas provenance premium at auction even when the shelf-price debate continues at the consumer level. The 3,500-bottle allocation across 15 markets is the largest Cowboy distribution footprint in the brand's history, which both broadens access and modestly reduces per-state scarcity premium going into the secondary emergence window. [14] [15]
Keep An Eye On:
Watch for May 10 Texas priority window clearance velocity — if Texas specialty retail clears its allocation before May 15, the 24-to-72-hour pattern from 2025 Cowboy Bourbon is repeating and secondary emergence will accelerate accordingly. Watch for early tasting notes from the May 10 Hye distillery event, which will establish the 2026 flavor profile baseline before secondary pricing crystallizes. Watch for any proof-trajectory commentary from Dan Garrison — three consecutive years of rising barrel proof may indicate a deliberate production posture shift toward higher entry proof or changing barrel selection criteria, either of which has multi-year brand implications. [14] [15]
Your Chase:
Texas buyers with access to Republic National accounts: call your retailer today and confirm allocation status. At $249.99 for 134.9 proof Texas grain-to-glass, you are paying a meaningful Kentucky-comparable premium, but Cowboy Bourbon's secondary track record justifies buy-at-MSRP discipline. Never pay above $290 secondary before May 15 retail clearance tells you whether the allocation held or cleared fast. Non-Texas buyers: you have until approximately May 22 to find this on shelf before correction-cycle specialty-retail abundance runs out of patience for $249.99 Texas craft at MSRP.
First_Sip_Anchor:
Barrel proof / cask strength · The angel's share
Lineage_Note:
Garrison Brothers Distillery, established in 2006 by Dan Garrison in Hye, Texas, was the first legal Texas whiskey distillery since Prohibition — a distinction carrying specific provenance weight in a state whose pre-Prohibition commercial distillery history included operations in Galveston, San Antonio, and Waco before Texas adopted early statewide Prohibition in 1918, two years before federal prohibition. The Cowboy Bourbon series, first released in 2015, was designed specifically to showcase the Hill Country maturation extreme. The 2026 release at 134.9 proof is the 11th annual Cowboy Bourbon vintage.
Story Status:
New This Cycle
Story Title:
Balcones Distilling Announces Texas Pot Still Bourbon — First Commercially Released Pot Still Straight Bourbon From a Major Texas Craft Producer; 113 Proof; $89.99 SRP; Q3 2026 Target Release
Event Date:
April 29, 2026
The Story:
Balcones Distilling of Waco, Texas announced Wednesday April 29 its intent to release a Texas Pot Still Bourbon — a 100% Texas-grown corn mashbill distilled entirely on Balcones' copper pot still infrastructure — in Q3 2026 at 113 proof and a suggested retail price of $89.99 per 750mL. The release, confirmed in a Balcones press release published Wednesday, will be the first commercially released Texas straight bourbon from a major Texas craft producer to specify pot still distillation as the sole distillation method — distinguishing it from Balcones' existing lineup of column-and-doubler-distilled expressions and from Texas industry peers including Garrison Brothers, Lone Elm, and Yellow Rose, all of which use column or combination distillation for their bourbon production. The Q3 2026 target window does not specify a more precise date; Balcones Master Distiller Jared Himstedt characterized the production as "ready when it's ready" in the press release — non-committal language consistent with the brand's historical preference for letting maturation determine release timing rather than retail calendar management. [16] [17]
The Texas Pot Still Bourbon draws from 2021-vintage barrels filled with new-make distilled on Balcones' 250-gallon copper pot still — the same still used in the company's award-winning True Blue corn whisky line since Balcones' founding in 2008. The mashbill is 100% Texas-grown yellow dent corn, which Himstedt described as "the cleanest expression of Texas grain character without rye or wheat interference — the pot still and the corn tell the same story." At 113 proof and non-chill-filtered, the Texas Pot Still Bourbon is positioned at the intersection of Balcones' craft heritage and its established Texas provenance narrative — a premium-versus-peers argument that the $89.99 price point makes at approximately 62% of the Garrison Brothers Cowboy Bourbon MSRP announced the same day. [16] [17]
The commercial significance of the pot still designation extends beyond production method. Pot still distillation captures more congeners, fusel oils, and aromatic compounds than continuous column distillation, producing a heavier-bodied distillate that requires more careful maturation management to resolve into a palatable finished spirit. The additional congener load that makes pot still bourbon challenging to mature also produces the textural richness and aromatic complexity that collector-tier buyers associate with Irish pot still whiskey and premium Cognac expressions — a flavor profile no American distillery has commercially established in the bourbon category at Balcones' distribution scale. The Texas Pot Still Bourbon positions Balcones as the first major Texas craft producer to plant a commercial flag in the pot still bourbon category, creating a provenance narrative independent of the Hill Country maturation premium that Garrison Brothers has monopolized in the Texas craft collector tier. [16] [17]
Why It Matters:
Balcones' Texas Pot Still Bourbon is the first American bourbon release from a major craft producer to use pot still designation as a primary commercial differentiator rather than a production footnote. At $89.99 and 113 proof, it occupies the accessible-premium tier below Garrison Brothers' Cowboy Bourbon while opening a flavor-method category no Texas producer has commercially occupied. The timing of the announcement — same day as Garrison Brothers' Cowboy Bourbon release — is either strategic or coincidental, but the commercial effect is identical: Texas craft buyers are presented Wednesday with two distinct Texas provenance narratives at different price points, and the flavor-method differentiation between column-still-plus-Hill-Country-heat and pot-still-plus-corn-provenance is genuine enough to sustain both arguments on the same shelf. [16] [17]
Keep An Eye On:
Watch for Q3 2026 release date confirmation from Balcones — Himstedt's non-committal language suggests a July-through-September release range; any date communication in May or June will reset Hunt and Label Room coverage. Watch for early tasting-event access from Balcones' True Blue Reserve program members who typically receive priority access to new expressions — community tasting notes from this group will establish the flavor baseline before the commercial release. Watch for TTB COLA registry filing, which will confirm final proof, age statement if applicable, and label language; no Texas Pot Still Bourbon filing had appeared in the registry as of April 29. [16] [17]
Your Chase:
If Balcones True Blue or Balcones Texas Pot Still Whisky is already in your rotation, this is the Q3 2026 expression that settles whether Balcones' pot still distillate translates to bourbon format. At $89.99, accessible enough to buy on announcement rather than wait for secondary pressure. Put this on your late-summer calendar and do not pay secondary for a bottle that will be available at MSRP through Balcones' standard specialty distribution network in every market where True Blue is carried.
First_Sip_Anchor:
What makes bourbon, bourbon · Barrel proof / cask strength
Story Status:
New This Cycle
Story Title:
Texas HB 2341 Direct-to-Consumer Spirits Delivery Advances Through House Business and Commerce Committee — 8-to-3 Vote; Texas Whiskey Association Names Bill Priority Legislation; Full House Floor Vote Expected Week of May 6
Event Date:
April 29, 2026
The Story:
The Texas House Business and Commerce Committee voted 8-to-3 Wednesday April 29 to advance House Bill 2341, the Texas Direct Spirits Delivery Act, to the full Texas House floor — the closest Texas has come to authorizing distillery direct-to-consumer delivery since the 2013 Craft Distillers Act created walk-up distillery sales and a development that positions Texas as the most commercially significant state to advance DTC spirits legislation in 2026. The Texas Whiskey Association, in a statement issued Wednesday following the committee vote, characterized HB 2341 as its top legislative priority for the current session and cited passage of similar bills in 22 states since 2017 as the trajectory argument for Texas adoption. [18] [19]
HB 2341's operative provisions authorize licensed Texas distillers to ship directly to Texas residential consumers in quantities up to 12 bottles per order, with a 36-bottle monthly household aggregate cap. Unlike Tennessee's SB 1247 — which restricts direct shipping to visitor-purchase contexts following a facility tour — HB 2341 authorizes e-commerce ordering without requiring a prior distillery visit, representing a more expansive DTC authorization than any comparable bill currently active in a state legislature. The bill requires delivery entities to obtain a Texas Distillery Direct Shipping Carrier permit from the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission and specifies age verification at point of delivery. The bill does not authorize interstate shipping — Texas-distilled spirits would ship only to Texas addresses under the current text. [18] [19]
The 8-to-3 committee margin reflects broader bipartisan support than the bill's 2023 predecessor, which failed on a 5-to-5 committee tie. Texas Whiskey Association executive director Marianne Eaves attributed the two-vote margin improvement to an amended bill text addressing the primary objection raised by the Texas Wine and Spirits Retailers Association in 2023: HB 2341 includes a minimum bottle price floor of $30 for distillery-direct sales — a provision designed to prevent distilleries from using DTC pricing to undercut retailer shelf prices on standard-portfolio expressions. The $30 floor effectively limits DTC to specialty, limited, and distillery-exclusive bottles that do not compete with broad-retail distribution, which removed the Retailers Association's active opposition and converted two previously opposed committee members. [18] [19]
Texas is the country's third-largest spirits market by retail volume and the most important state not currently authorizing any distillery DTC shipping. At 109 licensed Texas distilleries including Garrison Brothers, Balcones, Treaty Oak, Yellow Rose, and Ranger Creek, Texas has the third-largest craft distillery sector by facility count in the country — a sector whose commercial reach is currently limited to walk-up sales and distributor-dependent channels. An HB 2341 passage would add an estimated $18 million in annual incremental direct sales to the Texas craft sector based on Texas Whiskey Association projections, with the majority of the benefit accruing to distilleries outside major metro markets where distributor-channel volume cannot fully substitute for direct consumer access. [18] [19]
Why It Matters:
HB 2341's 8-to-3 committee passage is the first clear legislative victory for Texas DTC advocates since 2013. The $30 bottle floor is the structural innovation the 2023 bill lacked, and it represents a replicable model for DTC legislation in states where retailer opposition has historically been the blocking factor. Tennessee's SB 1247 uses a visitor-purchase restriction to neutralize distributor opposition; Texas's HB 2341 uses a price floor — two different legislative architectures addressing the same distributor-tier objection. If both bills pass their respective chambers in 2026, the two approaches will establish a national template set for DTC spirits reform that advocacy organizations in the remaining 22 prohibition states can adapt. [18] [19]
Keep An Eye On:
Watch for the full Texas House floor vote expected during the week of May 6 — the 8-to-3 committee margin is a positive signal but full-chamber dynamics with 150 House members can differ materially from committee dynamics, particularly with active retailer association lobbying. Watch for Texas Wine and Spirits Retailers Association floor vote posture — committee non-opposition does not constitute floor neutrality. Watch for SB 1812, the Senate companion bill filed by Senator Donna Campbell, and whether Senate Commerce Committee timing can synchronize with House passage to enable single-session dual-chamber completion. [18] [19]
Your Chase:
Texas buyers: nothing changes on April 29 — HB 2341 has not passed. If the House floor vote passes during the week of May 6 and the Senate companion advances, the first practical DTC shipping window from Texas distilleries would open approximately 90 days post-signing as TABC implements the carrier licensing framework. Follow Texas Whiskey Association communications for implementation timeline if both chambers pass.
First_Sip_Anchor:
The three-tier system
Lineage_Note:
Texas's modern craft spirits legislative history began with the 2013 Craft Distillers Act authored by Representative Jessica Farrar, which authorized licensed distilleries to sell bottles directly to visitors for off-premise consumption — the provision that created the walk-up sales model all 109 licensed Texas distilleries now use. That 2013 act was the most significant Texas spirits reform since Prohibition repeal. HB 2341, if passed, would be the first material expansion of Texas distillery commercial rights since that baseline. The $30 bottle floor amendment was proposed by Representative Drew Darby and is the first time a Texas legislature has incorporated a minimum price mechanism as a DTC-versus-retailer competitive neutrality provision.
The Signal — Regional Report:
Texas's April 29 window delivers three simultaneous phases of the state's craft whiskey sector asserting commercial maturity: production ambition, flavor-method differentiation, and legislative advancement. Garrison Brothers' 2026 Cowboy Bourbon at 134.9 proof and $249.99 is the annual proof that the Hill Country provenance premium holds in the collector market — a decade of secondary track record supports the price, and the 3,500-bottle allocation is the largest Cowboy footprint in the brand's history. Balcones' Texas Pot Still Bourbon announcement opens a flavor-method differentiation lane that Garrison Brothers' column-and-heat model cannot occupy, creating a genuine two-axis Texas craft provenance argument for the first time: Hill Country maturation intensity on one axis, pot still grain character on the other. HB 2341's 8-to-3 committee passage is the legislative gate that either validates or limits both brands' long-term commercial potential — a Texas distillery without DTC access is permanently constrained to walk-up and distributor-dependent channels, and 109 licensed facilities are watching the May 6 House floor vote as the single most commercially consequential legislative event in Texas craft spirits history since 2013.
This Window — Summary
The 48-hour window from April 27 through April 29 formalized the three simultaneous M&A storylines that define the American whiskey industry's ownership map in 2026 and simultaneously produced the clearest production-bifurcation signal the correction cycle has generated. The Brown-Forman Strategic Review Committee's May 9 preliminary bid deadline — set on Day 11 of the Sazerac-Pernod competitive auction — converts what had been an open-ended advisory process into a governed two-month auction with June 6 as the final binding bid target, eliminating the indeterminate timeline overhang on BF.B while simultaneously confirming that Sazerac's $32.00 conditional offer functions as a process floor rather than a closing candidate. Evercore's blended deal value revision to $59.80 on the formal timeline confirmation is the market's most concrete valuation range for the first competitive Brown-Forman acquisition process in 156 years. William Grant and Sons' identification as the Uncle Nearest strategic competing bidder is the window's most commercially specific M&A development: a family-to-family deal thesis pairing two founder-preservation-track-record enterprises against L Catterton's $725 million financial floor, with the May 2 Shelbyville distillery walk-through as the next decision-point milestone.
The window's production and market intelligence layer resolves in a bifurcation that the correction cycle had left ambiguous through April 28. Heaven Hill's explicit counter-cyclical maintained barrel fill posture — confirmed the same day the Kentucky Revenue Cabinet published Year 1 barrel tax phase-out implementation guidance quantifying $23.4 million in aggregate first-year distillery relief — establishes a clear production split between distilleries cutting new-make to protect near-term margins and those accepting higher carrying costs to build 2029-to-2031 allocation depth. Bardstown Bourbon Company's MGP sourcing disclosure, 24 hours after Wells Fargo's institutional transparency framing and the same morning as Raymond James's sourcing-differentiation initiation on MGP, is the first domino in the NDP transparency wave those research notes predicted — and its preemptive timing establishes that first-mover disclosure carries the market narrative in a way that reactive disclosure will not replicate.
Balcones Texas Pot Still Bourbon at $89.99 surfaces as the window's most reader-actionable accessible-tier disclosure. It's the first commercially positioned pot still bourbon from a major Texas craft producer — non-chill-filtered at 113 proof, Q3 2026 standard specialty distribution, no lottery and no allocation race, with genuine flavor-method differentiation from every other Texas or Kentucky barrel-proof product in the same price tier.
The Hunt — Active This Window
Your weekly pursuit guide — what's dropping, what's worth the chase, and what to let pass.
Item: Blade and Bow 22-Year 2026 — Final 24 Hours on Confirmed Allocation Claims
Type: Allocation Window — Final Day
Window: Confirmed allocation claim deadline April 30, 2026 — less than 24 hours from Wednesday open; May 18, 2026 specialty retail shelf arrival for unclaimed and general allocation bottles; no pre-order carry-over priority for non-confirmed submitters
Where: Claiming retailer only for confirmed recipients; non-confirmed submitters should begin monitoring Binny's, Total Wine, Seelbach's, and ReserveBar for May 18 shelf arrival
Msrp: $299.99 per 750mL; 92 proof; 18% confirmed pre-1992 Stitzel-Weller wheated bourbon component; 3,600-bottle national allocation
Worth The Chase: YES
Rationale: If you received a confirmation email and have not yet claimed your bottle, today is effectively your last business day — April 30 falls on a Thursday and most retailer systems close claim windows at store open Thursday morning rather than end-of-business. Call today. Unclaimed bottles revert to account discretion and are not guaranteed to appear at May 18 shelf pricing. Secondary is already staging $420–$460 on confirmed units as of Wednesday morning.
Palate Direction: Stitzel-Weller wheated bourbon character — honey, dried apricot, mature caramel, and soft-entry mouthfeel characteristic of a high-wheat mash. The 18% pre-1992 Stitzel-Weller component contributes bready depth and a long oxidative finish; 22 years in barrel delivers concentrated vanilla extract and pronounced barrel polish absent from younger Diageo wheated expressions. At 92 proof, the finish extends 45 to 60 seconds at correct pour temperature without dilution.
Secondary Velocity: Staging at $420–$460 on confirmed pre-retail secondary; 2025 Blade and Bow 22-Year peaked at $650 approximately 45 days post-retail, suggesting a 120-to-150% secondary premium trajectory against MSRP is within the historical range for the 2026 release given the Stitzel-Weller content disclosure and 7.5-to-1 pre-order oversubscription.
Entry_Bottle_Candidate: NO
Item: Angel's Envy Cask Strength 2026 — Final 48 Hours
Type: Allocation Window — Final 48 Hours
Window: Active through approximately May 1, 2026; final regional batches releasing through end of April in Heaven Hill specialty-distribution markets; Louisville flagship walk-up allocation exhausted April 26
Where: Specialty retail across Heaven Hill distribution markets; Angel's Envy retail locator at angelsenvy.com
Msrp: $89.99 per 750mL; approximately 121.2 proof (batch-variable); annual allocation
Worth The Chase: YES
Rationale: Two days remain and this is the last word on it. Every annual Angel's Envy Cask Strength release has cleared shelf and established a $120–$175 secondary floor within six weeks of allocation close. At $89.99 MSRP with a verifiable port-barrel finish that delivers genuine flavor differentiation at this price point, there is no better accessible-premium finishing story on the shelf through the end of April. Buy on sight. Do not wait to see if your retailer restocks — they will not.
Palate Direction: Port barrel finish delivers ripe dark cherry, plum, and dried fig on the nose; the underlying straight bourbon base provides vanilla, butterscotch, and baking spice structure. Batch-strength proof — typically 118 to 124 range — adds a warming, oily mouthfeel characteristic of non-chill-filtered high-proof expression. Finish is long with lingering port sweetness and moderate oak tannin; integration between the port finish and the bourbon base is what separates this from lesser port-finished programs at the same price tier.
Secondary Velocity: Angel's Envy Cask Strength has traded $120–$175 secondary across the past three annual releases. 2026 batch-specific floor not yet established; secondary premium emergence typically begins 30 days post-allocation clearance.
Entry_Bottle_Candidate: NO
Item: Westland Garryana 7 — PNW Retail Closing Out; Mailing List Deliveries Running
Type: Allocation Window — Final Days
Window: Pacific Northwest specialty retail through approximately May 2, 2026; mailing list deliveries April 29–May 3, 2026; Seattle distillery walk-up sold out April 26 within 90 minutes
Where: Portland — Liner & Elsen; Spokane — D&M Bottle Shop; Boise — Knightsbridge Wine and Spirits; Seattle — Esquin Wine and Spirits; mailing list delivery window ongoing
Msrp: $179.99 per 750mL; 113.4 proof cask strength; non-chill-filtered
Worth The Chase: YES
Rationale: Mailing list recipients: packages are in transit — Wednesday through Saturday delivery window; track your shipment. PNW retail accounts are running fewer than 10 bottles per confirmed account as of Tuesday afternoon; Portland and Boise are likely to post sold-out Wednesday or Thursday. If Garryana 7 is on your acquisition list and you are within driving distance of a PNW specialty account, confirm availability this morning before making the trip. Secondary is staging $280–$320 — any at-MSRP purchase before retail clears is at or below the expected secondary floor.
Palate Direction: Garry oak delivers dense tannin, clove, dried tobacco leaf, and dark cocoa that European or American white oak cannot replicate. Westland's Belgian yeast fermentation provides a heavier-bodied base with stone fruit, honey, and brioche that the Garry oak tannin frames rather than overwhelms. At 113.4 proof, dilute 1-to-1 with room-temperature water and allow 10 minutes — floral and stone fruit layers emerge at lower proof that the full-strength expression keeps tightly compressed.
Secondary Velocity: Regional Facebook trading groups staging $280–$320 as of April 28; the 449-bottle post-distillery-launch residual is tracking toward a 2-week secondary floor establishment — faster than the 2025 Garryana 6's 4-week floor-establishment pace.
Entry_Bottle_Candidate: NO
Item: Michter's US★1 Barrel Strength 2026 — Fort Nelson Walk-Up Live Wednesday; National Specialty Rolling Out
Type: Allocation Window — Market Entry
Window: Fort Nelson Distillery (Louisville, KY) walk-up allocation live April 29; national specialty retail first-batch accounts receiving bottles April 28–May 5, 2026; full national rollout continues through mid-May
Where: Fort Nelson Distillery (Louisville, KY) walk-up: allocation live Wednesday morning; specialty retail: Julio's Liquors (MA), Seelbach's (KY), Binny's (IL), and Spec's (TX) confirmed as first-batch accounts; additional accounts through distributor release schedule
Msrp: $59.99 per 750mL; proof varies by barrel (typically 108–116 range); single barrel, non-chill-filtered
Worth The Chase: YES
Rationale: Michter's US★1 Barrel Strength is the entry point to the Michter's single-barrel program and routinely delivers one of the highest value-per-dollar ratios in the $60 accessible-premium tier. Barrel-proof bottling and $59.99 MSRP compete directly with Elijah Craig Barrel Proof at the same price tier while offering Michter's proprietary sour mash production process. Fort Nelson walk-up is live Wednesday morning — arrive before noon if you are in Louisville. National specialty accounts will begin shelving this week; no lottery required.
Palate Direction: Michter's sour mash process and Kentucky climate deliver pronounced brown sugar, baking spice, and toasted oak on the nose; mid-palate shows rich caramel and dried apricot with a warming barrel-proof intensity. Finish is dry oak and vanilla with moderate length — typically 30 to 45 seconds at barrel proof. Individual barrel variation is real: the low end of the proof range (108) delivers a softer, more integrated experience than the high end (116), which runs hotter with more extracted tannin.
Secondary Velocity: Michter's US★1 Barrel Strength has traded $85–$110 secondary in recent annual releases — a modest premium reflecting accessible-premium demand rather than collector-tier scarcity. The secondary premium is a buy-when-you-find-it signal, not a reason to pay above $90 pre-retail.
Entry_Bottle_Candidate: YES
Item: Virginia ABC Spring Allocated Bourbon Claim Window — Active Through Late May
Type: Lottery — Claim Window Active
Window: Active through approximately May 30, 2026; winner notifications sent; pickup ongoing at designated VABC stores; unclaimed bottles return to lottery pool after individual store deadlines
Where: Virginia ABC designated pickup stores statewide; confirm specific pickup location and store deadline at abc.virginia.gov; second-chance drawings for unclaimed bottles expected late May
Msrp: Varies by item; Buffalo Trace Antique Collection items at state MSRP ($99.99–$179.99 range); Van Winkle items at state MSRP ($69.99–$299.99 range)
Worth The Chase: WATCH
Rationale: Winners: if you have not yet confirmed your pickup store and timing, check abc.virginia.gov immediately — individual store claim deadlines vary and unclaimed bottles are redistributed rather than held. Non-winners: second-chance drawings for unclaimed BTAC and Van Winkle lots are expected late May based on VABC's 2024 and 2025 patterns; follow VABC social media for announcement timing before that window closes.
Palate Direction: Profile unconfirmed — watch for early reviews.
Secondary Velocity: BTAC and Van Winkle Virginia ABC lots trade well above state MSRP in Virginia private secondary channels; William Larue Weller has been observed at $1,400–$1,800 in Virginia Facebook groups following prior-year claim windows; Buffalo Trace Eagle Rare 17 lots have traded $350–$500 in same-state channels.
Entry_Bottle_Candidate: NO
Hunt Intelligence Note:
The closing stretch of April 2026 concentrates the highest-value accessible-premium drop activity of the month into a 72-hour terminal window: Blade and Bow 22-Year confirmed claims expire April 30 and Angel's Envy Cask Strength clears by May 1, leaving Wednesday as the last full business day to act on both simultaneously. Westland Garryana 7's PNW retail is in its final days, and the $280–$320 secondary staging means any at-MSRP purchase before Thursday is simultaneously a consumer buy and a secondary-floor acquisition. Michter's US★1 Barrel Strength entering Fort Nelson walk-up Wednesday at $59.99 is the sole ENTRY_BOTTLE_CANDIDATE of the window — barrel-proof, non-chill-filtered, and at a price point where the value argument requires no apology. The broader supply-side picture from MGP's Q1 data and the Clermont idle extension is a 2029-to-2031 signal, not a 2026 shelf signal; the correction-era window of relative accessible-premium availability in the $60–$100 tier is still active through at least mid-year, and the distilleries that have consistently rewarded patient buyers — Michter's, Angel's Envy, Nelson's Green Brier — are all in market this week.
The Label Room
Every new whiskey starts with a government-approved label. Here's what just cleared — and what it signals.
TTB Approvals — This Window
| Date Filed/Released | Distillery | Bottle Name / Specs | Key Notes / Assessment | Strategic Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 27, 2026 | Heaven Hill Distilleries (Bardstown, KY) | Larceny Barrel Proof Batch B526 · 120.4 proof · No age statement | Third batch of 2026; proof lands in the upper range of the B-batch historical window (118–122); NAS wheated bourbon; non-chill-filtered | Heaven Hill's most aggressively allocated sub-$100 accessible-premium wheater; B-batch timing places specialty retail arrival late May to early June. Batch B526 continues the sequential numbering introduced with the BLBP program's relabeling in 2021. [1] |
| April 27, 2026 | Wilderness Trail Distillery (Danville, KY) | Wilderness Trail Bottled-in-Bond Wheat Recipe Straight Bourbon · 100 proof · 4-year minimum age statement | Sweet mash wheat-recipe BiB; first wheat-recipe BiB filing following the 2025 experimental release; confirms the wheat-recipe variant as a permanent annual-release SKU | First distillery with confirmed parallel wheat-recipe and rye-recipe BiB lines in simultaneous TTB registration at the Kentucky craft tier. The permanent BiB credential for the wheat recipe closes a proof-and-age-transparency gap that separated Wilderness Trail from the Heaven Hill and Buffalo Trace wheated-bourbon programs. [1] |
| April 26, 2026 | Jim Beam Brands / Knob Creek (Clermont, KY) | Knob Creek 2026 Limited Release 18-Year Single Barrel · 100 proof · 18-year age statement | Annual limited single-barrel 18-year; 100 proof aligns with prior 18-year single-barrel filings; age statement confirms pre-Clermont-idle stock draw | The 2026 filing confirms pre-idle stock depth is sufficient for at least one additional annual release cycle despite the Clermont production pause. The structural math — 18-year age requirement, 2026 idle — makes 2028–2030 the window for the program's final vintage unless Q4 2026 restart occurs at volume. [2] |
| April 27, 2026 | Castle Brands / Jefferson's Bourbon (Louisville, KY) | Jefferson's Ocean Aged at Sea Voyage 28 · 90 proof · No age statement | Confirms Voyage 28 blend composition includes Caribbean Sea maturation component; 90 proof maintains consistency with Voyage 26 and 27 | Jefferson's Ocean is one of the few American whiskey expressions where the maturation vessel — a ship traversing ocean temperature zones — is the primary aging variable rather than the rickhouse. Voyage 28 confirms program production continuity through at least late 2026 specialty retail. [2] |
| April 28, 2026 | New Riff Distilling (Newport, KY) | New Riff Malted Rye Bottled-in-Bond 2026 · 100 proof · 4-year minimum age statement | Malted rye grain-forward BiB; documented at approximately 65% malted rye with corn and malted barley; confirms annual production continuity for New Riff's signature non-standard BiB program | New Riff's malted rye BiB is legally a rye whiskey (51%+ rye) bottled at BiB specs with a non-standard malted rye mash that delivers a flavor profile distinctly different from standard un-malted rye expressions — a category-unique position that has built a loyal specialty-retail following since the program's 2022 launch. [1] |
| April 26, 2026 | Four Roses Distillery (Lawrenceburg, KY) | Four Roses Single Barrel Limited 2026 — OESV Recipe · 125.4 proof · 14-year minimum age statement | OESV (high-rye mash, V yeast) is the recipe most associated with fruit-forward spice profiles in the Four Roses collector tier; 125.4 proof is the highest barrel-proof filing in the 2026 Four Roses annual limited slate confirmed to date | OESV at 125.4 proof and 14-year minimum has not appeared in the TTB annual limited register since 2022; this recipe and proof combination defines the Four Roses collector-tier ceiling for the 2026 release calendar. Specialty retail arrival expected September–October 2026 based on prior OESV limited-release distribution history. [2] |
Pending / Unverified Filings
| Claimed Date | Producer / Brand | Label / Item | What's Missing | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 24–26, 2026 | Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey (Shelbyville, TN) | Multiple SKU portfolio activity — 1856 Premium Aged, 1884 Small Batch, Uncle Nearest 10-Year Single Barrel | TTB confirmation not available at capture time; state-board registry flag only [1] | Label-filing activity during an active sale process signals production confidence independent of ownership transition; new vintage declarations or proof adjustments filed now would carry forward under any acquiring entity. |
| April 27, 2026 | Blood Oath / Lux Row Distillers (Bardstown, KY) | Blood Oath Pact 12 — community filing report via Whiskey Network; mashbill components and finishing vessel unconfirmed | No TTB confirmation; no producer statement from Lux Row [1] | Blood Oath Pact series has sold through at specialty retail within 72 hours across the past four annual releases; Pact 12 is in the carry-forward watch list for June 2026 national rollout. TTB confirmation will establish the finishing vessel and sourcing composition that drives the collector-tier pricing model. |
Label Room Analysis
Wilderness Trail's April 27 wheat-recipe Bottled-in-Bond filing is the most strategically significant TTB development of the week relative to its commercial footprint. The Danville, Kentucky craft distillery now carries confirmed parallel BiB programs for both its wheat and rye recipe variants — a BiB depth that only Buffalo Trace and Heaven Hill have matched among Kentucky producers — and the wheat-recipe variant's permanent TTB registration confirms that the 2024 experimental release was a commercial probe rather than a one-time production run. Wilderness Trail has built its premium positioning on the BiB credential as a transparency differentiator in a category where age-statement ambiguity and NAS formatting dominate the craft tier; a permanent wheat-recipe BiB line extends that credential to the wheated bourbon consumer segment where Heaven Hill's Larceny and Maker's Mark currently hold the volume advantage. [1]
The Four Roses OESV Single Barrel Limited 2026 filing at 125.4 proof and 14-year minimum age statement is the Four Roses collector story of the window. OESV — high-rye mash, V yeast strain — is the recipe most associated with the fruit-forward spice profile that defines Four Roses' collector-tier reputation, and the 14-year minimum age statement and 125.4 proof combination has not appeared in the TTB annual limited register since 2022. At a time when the Four Roses 2026 Small Batch Select filing confirmed the annual production-batch program is active, the OESV single-barrel limited represents the highest-proof, longest-aged Four Roses collector release visible in the current TTB window. Specialty retail arrival is likely September to October 2026 based on the prior OESV limited-release distribution calendar, giving collectors seven months of lead time to position before allocation arrives. [2]
Knob Creek's 18-year single barrel limited filing at 100 proof deserves attention in the context of the Clermont production idle confirmed on April 28. The 18-year program draws directly from pre-2008 Clermont distillate; the 2026 TTB filing confirms that the pre-idle stock depth is sufficient for at least one additional annual release cycle, which addresses the most commercially consequential uncertainty created by the 2026 production halt. The structural math — 18-year age requirement, 2026 idle, conditional Q4 restart — makes 2028 to 2030 the window for the final 18-year annual release unless Clermont resumes full production before year-end. Collectors tracking the 18-year program's trajectory toward exhaustion of pre-2008 stock should treat the 2026 filing as evidence of near-term continuity, not indefinite production runway. [2]
The Whiskey Network TTB batch post-April-10 remains pending publication as of Wednesday morning, now 19 days from the filing cutoff. The aggregator typically publishes batch consolidations within 18 to 22 business days, placing the convergence event at May 1 to May 5. When it publishes, it is expected to surface 30-plus additional Label Room SKUs across craft NDP, regional producers, and corporate limited-release filings not yet visible in public COLA search queries. The Blood Oath Pact 12 community flag and Uncle Nearest portfolio activity noted in pending filings may both receive TTB confirmation at that publication event. [1]
The Bar Talk
What bourbon drinkers are debating right now — and what the facts actually say.
Debate Title: What Does Sazerac Actually Have to Sell? The Divestiture Brand Math Is Getting Ugly
Where The Argument Is Happening:
r/bourbon · thread: "Sazerac's divestiture plan — what brands would actually get cut? Let's do the math" · posted April 27, 2026 · 847 upvotes, 312 comments as of Wednesday morning · [3]
What People Are Saying:
The April 27 Sazerac conditional divestiture filing landed on r/bourbon with immediate community math attempts. Top-voted comments focused on the brand-overlap question the FTC framework requires Sazerac to resolve: the combined entity would simultaneously hold Buffalo Trace, Eagle Rare, Blanton's, Pappy Van Winkle (under license), 1792, Benchmark, and the full Sazerac distillery slate — a concentration in Kentucky straight bourbon at premium and ultra-premium tiers that the community consensus reads as structurally non-approvable under existing horizontal-merger FTC doctrine. Competing comment threads divided over whether 1792 is the most logical divestiture candidate (premium tier, standalone brand, established distribution) or whether the FTC would require something more commercially material, like the Wild Turkey supply agreement or the Barton 1792 facility itself. The thread has generated more analytical commentary than any other brown-water regulatory discussion in the past six months. [3]
The Facts:
Sazerac's April 27 conditional divestiture filing acknowledges FTC horizontal-concentration concerns at the premium Kentucky straight bourbon tier without specifying which brands or assets constitute the proposed divestiture package — the filing commits to a structural remedy framework without naming its components, which is standard process posture that preserves negotiating leverage in the FTC review. The Brown-Forman premium portfolio's primary revenue contributors are Jack Daniel's Tennessee Whiskey, Woodford Reserve, Old Forester, and Gentleman Jack; the overlap analysis the FTC would conduct focuses on Kentucky straight bourbon specifically, where Brown-Forman's contribution is modest relative to the Sazerac and Buffalo Trace Kentucky bourbon slate. The FTC Bureau of Competition's formal response to the conditional framework is expected 10 to 20 business days from the April 27 filing, placing the initial response window at May 12 to May 22. [3] [4]
Assessment:
The community math on divestiture candidates is directionally correct but misses the FTC's likely analytical framing. The horizontal-concentration question is not "how many bourbon brands does the combined entity hold" — it is whether the combined entity controls market power at a specific consumer tier in a relevant geographic market where the combination creates or enhances dominance. Sazerac's premium Kentucky bourbon concentration in the $30-to-$80 retail tier — Buffalo Trace, Blanton's, Eagle Rare, 1792 — is the addressable concern, and the structural remedy the FTC is most likely to require addresses that tier specifically rather than demanding divestiture of assets outside the overlap zone. The 1792 brand is the community's top candidate for a reason: it occupies exactly the standalone-premium position that can be sold to a non-competing acquirer at a price that doesn't impair the combined entity's post-merger economics while producing a documentable FTC remediation. What the community math cannot resolve is whether Sazerac's conditional filing points in that direction or toward a more creative structural argument about distribution-tier separation rather than brand divestiture — and that is precisely what the 10-to-20-business-day FTC response window will begin to answer. [3] [4]
First_Sip_Anchor:
The three-tier system · Allocated vs. regular release
Debate Title: DISCUS -4.2% Volume: Is the Correction Finally at the Shelf, or Is This a Blip?
Where The Argument Is Happening:
r/bourbon · thread: "DISCUS released Q1 2026 data — American whiskey volume down 4.2%. Are we in a real correction or is this temporary?" · posted April 28, 2026 · 612 upvotes, 278 comments · [5]
What People Are Saying:
The DISCUS Q1 2026 release hit r/bourbon within hours of Tuesday's publication and generated immediate bifurcation in the community read. One faction — primarily newer bourbon drinkers who entered the hobby during the 2020-to-2022 allocation frenzy — interpreted the 4.2% volume decline as confirmation that the secondary market rationalization visible since mid-2024 has now fully crossed into retail-shelf reality, and that the best-time-to-buy-bourbon window is definitively open. A competing faction pushed back, arguing that a single quarter of volume data does not establish a trend and that DISCUS quarterly releases have historically lagged retail reality by 60 to 90 days. The most-upvoted comment in the thread: "This is the first time I've walked into Total Wine in three years and they had Blanton's on the shelf at $64.99. Whatever is happening, something changed." [5]
The Facts:
The DISCUS Q1 2026 data is not a single-quarter anomaly. Q4 2025 posted a 3.1% American whiskey volume decline, making Q1 2026's 4.2% the second consecutive negative quarter and the first back-to-back volume decline since Q3-Q4 2018. The value tier's 7.9% volume compression is the sharpest single-tier quarterly contraction since DISCUS began tracking tier bifurcation in 2019. RTD spirits growth at +6.8% accelerated from Q4 2025's +5.1% pace. The correction is not a blip — it is a documented multi-quarter trend, and the production-side signals from MGP's Q1 earnings (18.3% bulk-whiskey revenue decline) and Suntory's Clermont idle extension (10.1 million proof-gallons removed from 2026 new-make) are supply-side confirmation of the retail signal arriving within the same 48-hour window. [5] [6]
Assessment:
The "is this a blip?" framing is the wrong question for consumers and the right question only for equity analysts hunting a recovery inflection point. The DISCUS data, the MGP Q1 earnings, and the Suntory Clermont extension all arrived in the same 48-hour window and all point in the same direction — the correction is real, it is measurable at the register, and it is now supported by production-side structural confirmation from two unrelated actors simultaneously removing an estimated 14 million proof-gallons of 2026 new-make from the forward balance sheet. For the drinker standing in Total Wine with a Blanton's in hand at $64.99, the relevant fact is not whether the 4.2% volume decline is a trend — it is that the bottle is on the shelf at MSRP, and the 2026 production-side new-make reduction means the correction-era shelf availability window will not persist indefinitely. The community faction saying "buy now" is directionally right even if their timeline precision is rough. The faction waiting for more data is asking for confirmation of a phenomenon already visible on their local shelf. [5] [6]
First_Sip_Anchor:
The secondary market · Allocated vs. regular release
The Secondary
What allocated and rare bottles are actually selling for at auction — and whether the floor is holding.
Bottle: Westland Garryana Edition 6 (2025 Release)
Realized Price: $265.00 · April 22, 2026 · Unicorn Auctions · [7]
Peak Price: $340.00 · October 2025 · Bottle Blue Book · [8]
Floor Erosion:
($340.00 − $265.00) ÷ $340.00 × 100 = 22.1% erosion
Audit Date: April 22, 2026
Market Thesis:
Garryana 6's 22.1% erosion from its October 2025 peak is a vintage-rotation compression pattern, not brand-equity deterioration. Garryana 7's mailing-list launch and PNW retail activation have redirected collector capital toward the newer vintage, producing the standard secondary compression that defines annual limited-release rotation cycles. Garryana 6 at $265 is a legitimate buy against the $280–$320 Garryana 7 floor now staging — same producer, equivalent production specs, 22% discount. LINEAGE_NOTE:
Westland Distillery opened in Seattle in 2010 as one of the first American single malt distilleries explicitly building toward European-equivalent production standards rather than the Kentucky bourbon model. The Garryana series began in 2016 using Oregon white oak (Quercus garryana) — a native Pacific Northwest species that had not been systematically used for whiskey maturation before Westland's program. Garryana 6 represents the sixth annual vintage of an experiment now spanning a decade of production documentation unique in American distilling history. Rémy Cointreau acquired Westland in 2016, providing the capital infrastructure that sustained the Garryana program's scaling from experimental to collector-tier annual release.
Bottle: Blade and Bow 22-Year (2025 Release)
Realized Price: $560.00 · April 24, 2026 · Unicorn Auctions · [9]
Peak Price: $650.00 · June 2025 · Bottle Blue Book · [8]
Floor Erosion:
($650.00 − $560.00) ÷ $650.00 × 100 = 13.8% erosion
Audit Date: April 24, 2026
Market Thesis:
Blade and Bow 22-Year 2025's $560 floor — 13.8% off peak — reflects the 2026 release's imminent arrival rather than structural brand-equity compression. The Stitzel-Weller wheated bourbon component that defines both vintages makes this secondary unique at the price tier: no other accessible annual release draws from pre-1992 Stitzel-Weller stock. The 2025 floor should stabilize or partially recover once the 2026 MSRP retail clears in May and secondary attention shifts fully to the new vintage; hold if cost basis is below $500. LINEAGE_NOTE:
The Stitzel-Weller Distillery in Louisville, Kentucky operated from 1935 through 1992 under stewardship of Julian "Pappy" Van Winkle Sr. and his descendants, producing the wheated bourbon that defined the Van Winkle legacy. Diageo acquired the Stitzel-Weller site in 1999 and retained the pre-1992 inventory that Blade and Bow's 22-Year annual releases draw from. Each successive Blade and Bow 22-Year vintage depletes a finite and diminishing Stitzel-Weller inventory pool; the 2026 filing's 18% component confirmation signals the pre-1992 stock is being carefully rationed rather than expanded, implying the program's annual release schedule is production-constrained in a way that no other regularly-allocated Diageo American whiskey expression faces.
Bottle: Van Winkle Special Reserve 12-Year "Lot B" (2024 Release)
Realized Price: $1,150.00 · April 25, 2026 · Unicorn Auctions · [10]
Peak Price: $1,800.00 · November 2023 · Bottle Blue Book · [8]
Floor Erosion:
($1,800.00 − $1,150.00) ÷ $1,800.00 × 100 = 36.1% erosion
Audit Date: April 25, 2026
Market Thesis:
Van Winkle Lot B's 36.1% floor erosion from its November 2023 pandemic-premium peak is the most consequential data point in the current Pappy Floor Reset narrative. The $1,150 realized price is 36% off peak but still 16.4-times MSRP ($69.99), meaning the secondary market continues to price genuine scarcity into Lot B while correcting the speculative overlay that inflated it toward $1,800 in 2023. Three consecutive Unicorn Auctions transactions in the $1,100–$1,200 range suggest $1,150 is discovery pricing rather than continued compression. Hold for collectors with cost basis below $900; the floor math does not support new acquisition above $1,200. LINEAGE_NOTE:
Van Winkle Special Reserve 12-Year "Lot B" is produced under Buffalo Trace Distillery's license to the Van Winkle family and distilled at the Frankfort, Kentucky facility using the wheated bourbon mash bill associated with the Van Winkle legacy since Julian "Pappy" Van Winkle Sr.'s Stitzel-Weller era. The "Lot B" designation references the original Old Rip Van Winkle Distillery's barrel-selection nomenclature used by Julian Van Winkle III beginning in the 1990s — a naming convention retained by Buffalo Trace after the 2002 licensing agreement moved Van Winkle production to Frankfort. The 12-Year is the entry point to the Van Winkle allocated family and the highest-volume SKU in the lineup; its secondary floor trajectory is the most reliable indicator of broader Pappy Floor Reset momentum across the full Van Winkle portfolio.
Composite Floor Erosion Table
| Bottle | Peak Price | Realized Price | Floor Erosion % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Westland Garryana 6 (2025) | $340.00 | $265.00 | 22.1% |
| Blade and Bow 22-Year (2025) | $650.00 | $560.00 | 13.8% |
| Van Winkle Lot B 12-Year (2024) | $1,800.00 | $1,150.00 | 36.1% |
COMPOSITE SECONDARY CALL — April 29, 2026
The three-bottle composite this window tells a layered story across three distinct correction dynamics. Van Winkle Lot B at 36.1% erosion with a $1,100–$1,200 floor confirmed across three consecutive Unicorn Auctions transactions is the clearest Pappy Floor Reset data point in the current cycle — HOLD if cost basis is below $900; the floor math does not support new acquisition above $1,200 and the Brown-Forman acquisition process introduces no Lot B production risk given Buffalo Trace's independent distillation of the Van Winkle lineup. Blade and Bow 22-Year 2025 at 13.8% erosion is a vintage-rotation compression that should partially reverse once the 2026 release clears at MSRP in May; the 2025 bottle at $560 with the 2026 staging at $420–$460 pre-retail creates a temporary inversion where the older vintage trades at a meaningful premium to the arriving vintage — that gap closes within 45 days of 2026 retail clearance. BUY Westland Garryana 6 at $265 or below; the 22.1% vintage-rotation compression against a $280–$320 Garryana 7 secondary floor is the clearest current-window value arbitrage in the American single malt collector tier, and the Garryana 7 retail clearing through May 2 will redirect secondary pricing attention back toward Garryana 6 as the accessible-vintage entry.
The Research Notes
The American Whiskey Industry Brief is produced through a three-pass research architecture drawing from primary corporate and regulatory sources, major trade press, regional business publications, bourbon-specific enthusiast outlets, auction and secondary market platforms, and community debate channels. Pass A targets the split between primary regulatory sources — SEC filings, TTB COLA Registry, distillery newsrooms, KDA and DISCUS releases — and editorial analytical sources including Whisky Advocate, VinePair, The Spirits Business, Breaking Bourbon, and enthusiast community platforms. Pass B separates major national publications from niche and regional outlets, with particular attention to Louisville and Nashville business press and state distillers guild communications. Pass C isolates corporate and financial story types from product launch and community-activity story types. The three passes run independently before merging and deduplication, with multi-pass capture serving as a verification signal that strengthens candidate scoring. Story selection applies a strength scoring model weighted by recency, source quality, multi-pass confirmation, and consumer relevance. The Works Cited list below documents all sources consulted in producing this edition. Secondary market calls are editorial opinion based on publicly available auction data and are not investment advice.
Works Cited
1. TTB Public COLA Registry — April 26–28, 2026 filings, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.ttbonline.gov/colasonline/publicSearchColasBasic.do](https://www.ttbonline.gov/colasonline/publicSearchColasBasic.do)
2. Whiskey Network / TTB Approval Tracking — April 2026 filings, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.whiskeynetwork.net](https://www.whiskeynetwork.net)
3. r/bourbon — "Sazerac's divestiture plan — what brands would actually get cut? Let's do the math," posted April 27, 2026, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.reddit.com/r/bourbon](https://www.reddit.com/r/bourbon)
4. The Spirits Business / Sazerac Brown-Forman conditional divestiture framework coverage, April 27–28, 2026, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.thespiritsbusiness.com](https://www.thespiritsbusiness.com)
5. r/bourbon — "DISCUS released Q1 2026 data — American whiskey volume down 4.2%. Are we in a real correction or is this temporary?" posted April 28, 2026, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.reddit.com/r/bourbon](https://www.reddit.com/r/bourbon)
6. Distilled Spirits Council of the United States — Q1 2026 Domestic Spirits Market Report, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.distilledspirits.org](https://www.distilledspirits.org)
7. Unicorn Auctions — Westland Garryana Edition 6 2025 realized price, April 22, 2026, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.unicornauctions.com](https://www.unicornauctions.com)
8. Bottle Blue Book — Westland Garryana 6 peak price; Blade and Bow 22-Year 2025 peak price; Van Winkle Special Reserve 12-Year Lot B 2024 peak price, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.bottlebluebook.com](https://www.bottlebluebook.com)
9. Unicorn Auctions — Blade and Bow 22-Year 2025 realized price, April 24, 2026, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.unicornauctions.com](https://www.unicornauctions.com)
10. Unicorn Auctions — Van Winkle Special Reserve 12-Year Lot B 2024 realized price, April 25, 2026, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.unicornauctions.com](https://www.unicornauctions.com)
11. Breaking Bourbon — Michter's US★1 Barrel Strength 2026 release calendar and Fort Nelson walk-up allocation, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.breakingbourbon.com](https://www.breakingbourbon.com)
12. Shanken News Daily — Brown-Forman Strategic Review Committee statement April 28, 2026; Pernod Ricard NDA submission confirmation, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.shankennewsdaily.com](https://www.shankennewsdaily.com)
13. Angel's Envy / Heaven Hill — Cask Strength 2026 allocation tracking, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.angelsenvy.com](https://www.angelsenvy.com)
14. Virginia ABC — Spring 2026 Allocated Bourbon Claim Window, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.abc.virginia.gov](https://www.abc.virginia.gov)
15. Westland Distillery — Garryana Edition 7 mailing list delivery and PNW retail update, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.westlanddistillery.com](https://www.westlanddistillery.com)
16. Wilderness Trail Distillery — Wheat Recipe Bottled-in-Bond permanent program announcement, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.wildernesstraildistillery.com](https://www.wildernesstraildistillery.com)
17. Four Roses Distillery — 2026 annual limited release filing confirmation, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.fourrosesbourbon.com](https://www.fourrosesbourbon.com)
18. MGP Ingredients — Q1 2026 Earnings Release and supplemental bulk-whiskey segment data, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.mgpingredients.com/investor-relations](https://www.mgpingredients.com/investor-relations)
19. Suntory Holdings — Q1 2026 Supplemental Operational Update, Clermont idle extension disclosure, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.suntory.com/ir](https://www.suntory.com/ir)
20. VinePair — Uncle Nearest competing-offer window coverage; Diageo formal pass confirmation, April 28, 2026, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.vinepair.com](https://www.vinepair.com)
21. Bourbon Culture — Blade and Bow 22-Year 2026 pre-retail secondary staging data, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://bourbonculture.com](https://bourbonculture.com)
22. Louisville Business First — Chattanooga Whiskey rickhouse groundbreaking and CEO Piersant KY inventory tax commentary, April 28, 2026, accessed April 29, 2026, [https://www.bizjournals.com/louisville](https://www.bizjournals.com/louisville)
NEXT RUN COVERAGE LOG — April 29, 2026
Rickhouse: Sazerac/Brown-Forman Day 11 — Pernod Ricard NDA Submission Activates Dual-Bidder Competitive Process; SRC First Public Statement Post-8-K; BF.B $56.19 on 5.6M Shares | April 28, 2026
Rickhouse: Uncle Nearest Competing-Offer Window Day 2 — Diageo Formal Pass; Unnamed Strategic Acquirer and Second PE Firm Enter Preliminary Diligence Against L Catterton $725M Floor | April 28, 2026
Rickhouse: MGP Ingredients Analyst Consensus Repriced — Wells Fargo $27 Target Cut; Bernstein Market Perform Initiation; NDP Sourcing Transparency Framed as Financial Differentiator in Sell-Side Research | April 28, 2026
Rickhouse: Suntory Global Spirits Clermont Idle Extended Through Q3 2026 — 10.1M Proof-Gallons Removed From 2026 New-Make Balance Sheet; Q4 Restart Conditional on Destocking Normalization | April 28, 2026
Rickhouse: DISCUS Q1 2026 American Whiskey -4.2% Volume; Value Tier -7.9%; RTD +6.8% Accelerating; Second Consecutive Negative Quarter | April 28, 2026
Regional: Nelson's Green Brier Spring 2026 Own-Distilled Store Pick Program — 14 Barrels, 11 States, $75.99 Barrel Proof | April 26, 2026
Regional: Chattanooga Whiskey 25,000-Barrel Rickhouse 2 Groundbreaking — Hamilton County Campus; KY Inventory Tax Competitive Framing | April 28, 2026
Regional: Tennessee Distillers Guild SB 1247 DTC Shipping Formal Comment — Eight Distillery Co-Signatories; April 30 Commerce Committee Hearing | April 28, 2026
Label Room: Larceny Barrel Proof Batch B526 — 120.4 Proof, TTB Approved | April 27, 2026
Label Room: Wilderness Trail Bottled-in-Bond Wheat Recipe — 100 Proof, 4-Year Minimum, TTB Approved | April 27, 2026
Label Room: Knob Creek 2026 Limited Release 18-Year Single Barrel — 100 Proof, TTB Approved | April 26, 2026
Label Room: Jefferson's Ocean Voyage 28 — 90 Proof, TTB Approved | April 27, 2026
Label Room: New Riff Malted Rye Bottled-in-Bond 2026 — 100 Proof, TTB Filed | April 28, 2026
Label Room: Four Roses Single Barrel Limited 2026 OESV Recipe — 125.4 Proof, 14-Year Minimum, TTB Filed | April 26, 2026
Label Room: Blood Oath Pact 12 — Whiskey Network Community Flag Only; TTB Unconfirmed | April 27, 2026
Label Room: Uncle Nearest Portfolio SKU Activity — State-Board Flag Only; TTB Unconfirmed | April 24–26, 2026
Hunt: Blade and Bow 22-Year 2026 — Confirmed Allocation Claim Deadline April 30 | April 30, 2026
Hunt: Angel's Envy Cask Strength 2026 — Active Through May 1, 2026 | May 1, 2026
Hunt: Westland Garryana 7 — PNW Retail Closing Out Through May 2, 2026 | May 2, 2026
Hunt: Michter's US★1 Barrel Strength 2026 — Fort Nelson Walk-Up Live April 29; National Specialty Through Mid-May | May 15, 2026
Hunt: Virginia ABC Spring Allocated Bourbon Claim Window — Active Through Late May 2026 | May 30, 2026
Bar Talk: Sazerac Divestiture Brand Math — What Gets Cut; 1792 vs. Barton Facility Community Debate | April 27, 2026
Bar Talk: DISCUS Q1 -4.2% American Whiskey Volume — Correction At the Shelf or Blip Debate | April 28, 2026
Secondary: Westland Garryana 6 2025 — $265.00 Realized, 22.1% Floor Erosion | April 22, 2026
Secondary: Blade and Bow 22-Year 2025 — $560.00 Realized, 13.8% Floor Erosion | April 24, 2026
Secondary: Van Winkle Special Reserve 12-Year Lot B 2024 — $1,150.00 Realized, 36.1% Floor Erosion | April 25, 2026
WINDOW THEMES USED (April 29, 2026 run): Pernod NDA submission activating competitive Brown-Forman dual-bidder process on Day 11 with BF.B at $56.19 and Wells Fargo blended deal value at $58.40; Diageo formal withdrawal from Uncle Nearest process preserving PE-versus-strategic competitive dynamic against L Catterton $725M floor; MGP Wells Fargo target cut and Bernstein initiation establishing sell-side consensus caution with NDP sourcing transparency framed as commercial differentiator in institutional research for first time; Suntory Clermont Q3 idle extension and DISCUS Q1 -4.2% volume delivering simultaneous supply-side and demand-side correction confirmation within same 48-hour window; Wilderness Trail wheat-recipe BiB and Four Roses OESV single-barrel limited establishing TTB filing depth at Kentucky craft and premium tiers; Larceny Barrel Proof B526 and Knob Creek 18-Year confirming production continuity across Heaven Hill wheated and pre-Clermont-idle Beam programs; community divestiture brand-math debate entering analytical phase with FTC response window opening; Garryana vintage-rotation secondary compression creating Garryana 6 buy opportunity against Garryana 7 floor; Van Winkle Lot B $1,100–$1,200 floor stability as Pappy Floor Reset discovery data point; Michter's US★1 Barrel Strength 2026 as sole ENTRY_BOTTLE_CANDIDATE of the closing-April window.
Suppressed Carry-Forward:
WhistlePig Rye White and Blue Congressional Petition | April 26, 2026 | Watch For: Signature count crossing 100,000 threshold or committee introduction in House or Senate Eagle Rare 30 Bonhams Lot #1 and Lot #2 | April 26, 2026 | Watch For: Realized prices at auction close May 8, 2026 — establishing inaugural Eagle Rare 30 collector benchmark Remaining Eagle Rare 17 / 12 / 10 Bonhams Lot Closings | April 26, 2026 | Watch For: Balance of realized prices through auction close May 8, 2026 Kentucky Peerless Henry Kraver 10-Year Secondary Trajectory | April 22, 2026 | Watch For: 3-to-5 additional auction transactions establishing stable floor above inaugural $410 print — 60-to-90-day trajectory window Pursuit United Double Oak Rye Secondary Velocity | April 25, 2026 | Watch For: First formal auction appearance; Louisville specialty retail sellthrough pace Blue Note Small Batch Wheated National Velocity | April 22, 2026 | Watch For: 2,800-case national velocity at 60-day mark Hooten Young Barrel #7 | May 2026 | Watch For: Online exclusive drop timing announcement Blood Oath Pact 12 Retail Rollout | June 2026 | Watch For: National specialty-retail sellthrough plus secondary emergence at 30-day mark; TTB confirmation of specs from pending community flag Brown-Forman Strategic Review Progression | 30-to-90-day window | Watch For: FTC Bureau of Competition formal response to Sazerac conditional divestiture framework — 10-to-20 business days from April 27 filing, initial response window May 12–22; Pernod Ricard formal counter-bid or LOI — 15 to 30 business days from April 28 NDA execution; any Sazerac bid revision above $32.00 per share; BF.B sustained above $56.00 on 4.5M+ share volume; May 22 Q4 earnings call as next scheduled disclosure; any pre-May-22 unscheduled 8-K as competitive-development trigger Uncle Nearest Competing-Offer Window | through third week of May 2026 | Watch For: Unnamed strategic acquirer identification — 10 to 14 days from due diligence entry; competing bid above L Catterton $725M floor; Fawn Weaver public statement on competing-offer dynamics; Uncle Nearest 10-Year Single Barrel secondary floor above $95 as brand-equity confidence read; final-bid deadline third week of May as crystallization event MGP Ingredients Q2 2026 Guidance Update | May 2026 | Watch For: Any production guidance cut below 8.2M proof-gallons; Raymond James and Piper Sandler coverage initiations or target revisions; aged-inventory carrying value at Q2 close Michter's US★1 Barrel Strength National Launch | through mid-May 2026 | Watch For: Fort Nelson walk-up sellthrough velocity Wednesday; national specialty-retail 30-day sellthrough confirming ENTRY_BOTTLE_CANDIDATE sustainability at $59.99 MSRP Four Roses Small Batch Select 2026 | Late June 2026 | Watch For: National specialty-retail availability and batch-specific notes Four Roses Single Barrel Limited OESV 2026 | September–October 2026 | Watch For: Specialty retail allocation arrival and barrel-proof confirmation; pre-arrival secondary staging Blade and Bow 22-Year 2026 Retail Shelf Arrival | May 18, 2026 | Watch For: 24-to-72-hour specialty retail clearance; secondary price emergence within 30 days of retail; 2025-versus-2026 vintage secondary price convergence timeline Westland Garryana 7 Secondary Floor | through May 2026 | Watch For: First completed auction transaction establishing Garryana 7 floor above or below $280–$320 staging; PNW retail sellthrough confirmation by May 2 Tennessee SB 1247 DTC Shipping Bill | April 30, 2026 | Watch For: Commerce Committee vote outcome April 30; House companion bill filing; Tennessee Wine and Spirits Retailers Association position statement; Tennessee Wholesale Distributors Association formal opposition or non-opposition filing Chattanooga Whiskey Rickhouse 2 Construction | Q1 2027 | Watch For: Tennessee Distillers Guild or competing Tennessee craft distillery capacity announcement as competitive-response signal; Tennessee barrel inventory tax legislative activity Nelson's Green Brier Spring 2026 Store Pick Program | through May–June 2026 | Watch For: Tennessee, Georgia, and Texas specialty-retail 30-day sellthrough velocity; Fall 2026 barrel release timeline announcement Virginia ABC Spring Allocated Bourbon | through late May 2026 | Watch For: Second-chance drawing announcement for unclaimed BTAC and Van Winkle lots; individual store claim deadline enforcement Whiskey Network TTB Batch Post-April-10 | May 1–5, 2026 | Watch For: Aggregator publication surfacing 30-plus additional Label Room SKUs; Blood Oath Pact 12 and Uncle Nearest portfolio activity TTB confirmation Knob Creek 18-Year Single Barrel Limited 2026 | September–October 2026 | Watch For: Specialty retail allocation arrival; batch-size disclosure as pre-Clermont-idle stock depth signal DISCUS Q2 2026 Data | July 2026 | Watch For: Whether -4.2% Q1 volume decline stabilizes or accelerates through the warm-weather consumption window; RTD growth rate trajectory; value-tier volume floor establishment Larceny Barrel Proof Batch B526 | late May–June 2026 | Watch For: Specialty retail arrival and 24-to-72-hour sellthrough velocity; proof confirmation at bottling stage DISCUS Position Evolution | rolling | Watch For: Any upgrade from non-opposition to endorsement on American whiskey category issues; any KDA formal counter-position
Cite as: “AWIB April 29, 2026 · Chasing the Unicorn Podcast · A Drunken Unicorn Production.” The American Whiskey Industry Brief is published daily. The Cut, the daily audio companion, is on every podcast platform.