Tennessee Just Out-Picked Kentucky — Nelson’s Green Brier — The Cut
In this episode
Tennessee just out-picked Kentucky. Nelson’s Green Brier Distillery opened its 2026 Spring barrel pick program Saturday with 14 own-distilled Tennessee bourbon barrels, bottled at barrel proof between 107 and 124 proof, aged four years and eleven months to six years and three months — 11 states, $75.99, no lottery required. Every barrel is grain-to-glass from…
Mentioned in this episode: Buffalo Trace, Heaven Hill, Elijah Craig, Four Roses, Jim Beam, Angel’s Envy
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Target runtime: 7:48 Word count: 1,187 Estimated runtime: 7:55 Source: The Cut Daily 2026-04-28
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This is The Cut. American whiskey, daily.
Tennessee just out-picked Kentucky. Nelson’s Green Brier is releasing 14 barrel-proof, own-distilled Tennessee bourbon picks across 11 states at $75.99 — no lottery, no wait list, and the specs hold up against Four Roses store picks.
I’m John from Chasing the Unicorn Podcast. Here’s what moved today. April 28, 2026.
Today’s Big Move — Nelson’s Green Brier launched a store pick program worth calling your retailer about today. Here’s what happened.
Nelson’s Green Brier Distillery opened its 2026 Spring barrel pick program Saturday. Fourteen own-distilled Tennessee bourbon barrels, bottled at barrel proof between 107 and 124. Aged four years and eleven months to six years and three months. Eleven states. $75.99. No lottery.
The specs matter. The provenance story matters more.
Nelson’s Green Brier spent most of 2018 through 2021 supplementing its Nashville production with sourced stock from Indiana — standard practice for a growing craft brand building its own inventory pipeline. That era is over. Every barrel in the 2026 Spring program is own-distilled at the Nashville facility, confirmed in writing with each purchase agreement the qualifying account signs. That’s not a press-release claim. It’s a contract commitment.
The flavor direction comes from Nashville’s proprietary yeast strain and Middle Tennessee’s moderate maturation climate. Expect fresh grain, baking spice, a structured mid-palate without the heavy caramelization you get from longer Kentucky aging. Master Distiller Becky Harris selected each barrel personally at the Nashville facility. At $75.99 barrel-proof and fully grain-to-glass, comparing this to Four Roses and Elijah Craig Barrel Proof single barrel picks at comparable prices is legitimate. Not aspirational.
The brand traces its lineage to Charles Nelson’s pre-Prohibition Tennessee operation — one of the largest in the state before Prohibition ended it in 1909. Andy and Charlie Nelson re-established the Green Brier name in Nashville in 2014, and Campari Group acquired a majority stake in 2019, funding the facility expansion that makes this program possible.
Accounts in Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, Virginia, Ohio, Illinois, Texas, California, Colorado, and New York have access through the distillery’s distributor network starting this week.
Which brings us to today’s First Sip — finishing. The bottles in today’s Chase are going to use that word, and it’s worth knowing exactly what it means before we get there.
Today’s First Sip — finishing. You’ll see it on the label of Angel’s Envy Cask Strength 2026, and most drinkers either love the word or distrust it.
So here’s what it is.
After primary aging is done, some bourbons get a second life in a different barrel — port, rum, sherry, cognac, Madeira. A few months in the second vessel, sometimes longer. Done right, a finish layers something new on top of a bourbon that’s already good. Port adds dark fruit and berry. Rum adds tropical sweetness. Sherry adds dried fruit and a hint of oxidation. The good ones integrate — you taste bourbon first, then the finish arrives as an echo.
Done wrong, a finish covers up a mediocre base whiskey. If the finish is the only thing you taste and the bourbon underneath feels thin, the distiller was using the cask to hide something. The question to ask with any finished bourbon is whether the base spirit would be worth drinking on its own. If yes, the finish is depth. If no, the finish is a costume.
Think of it like seasoning on a steak. Good seasoning pulls out what’s already there. Bad seasoning is cover for a bad cut.
What this changes — ask yourself whether you can taste the bourbon underneath the finish. If you can, it earned its place. If all you get is port and grape, something is being covered. Speaking of — today’s Chase has a port-barrel finished bourbon at cask strength that earns it.
Today’s Chase — three bottles across three tiers. Two finishing stories and a 22-year age statement. Let’s start with the one that matters most.
Angel’s Envy Cask Strength 2026. Mid-tier, $89.99.
In the glass: ripe dark cherry, dried fig, and plum from the port barrel. Behind that, vanilla, caramel, and baking spice from the bourbon base. Batch-strength proof — approximately 121 this cycle — adds a warming, oily mouthfeel with a long port-sweetened finish. The key is that you can taste both. The port barrel and the bourbon underneath it are having a conversation, not one drowning out the other.
Here’s why it’s the spotlight. The port barrel finish on a legitimate bourbon base, non-chill-filtered at barrel proof, is the most consistent annual cask-strength value in the accessible-premium category. This is not a fluke vintage. It delivers every year.
Three days left on the allocation window — this closes around May 1. Buy on sight at MSRP. It will not restock before the window closes, and secondary typically stages above $120 within six weeks of clearance. Check the Angel’s Envy retail locator or call your specialty account today.
This is worth the chase.
Also on today’s Chase — Hard Truth Barrel Finish Reserve, French Oak Cask, under $80 at $79.99. Toasted almond and dry spice over corn sweetness — French oak instead of port or sherry, which is a genuinely unusual move at this price point. Worth watching if you’re in the Midwest. And Blade and Bow 22-Year 2026 in the premium tier at $299.99 — confirmed pre-orders claim through April 30, so call your retailer today if that’s you. Non-confirmed submitters get a May 18 specialty retail shelf window that historically clears in 24 to 72 hours. Full detail in today’s Cut Daily. If you want more, head to The Brief at chasingtheunicornpodcast.
Alright — today’s Bar Talk. The bourbon community is asking why NDP prices haven’t come down, and the answer is more specific than most people are crediting.
Today’s Bar Talk — bulk whiskey prices dropped, so why didn’t your NDP bourbon get cheaper? Community’s split on whether brands are pocketing a windfall or whether something structural is blocking the savings. Here’s what’s actually going on.
MGP’s Q1 2026 earnings showed new-make bulk bourbon softened roughly 8 to 12 percent from the 2022-to-2023 spot-market peak at Lawrenceburg, Indiana. That’s real movement. But most NDP brands — labels that source their whiskey from bulk distilleries rather than making it themselves — aren’t buying on the spot market. They locked into multi-year supply contracts at peak pricing. A brand that signed a three-year contract in 2022 is still paying 2022 rates in 2026, regardless of what the spot market is doing now.
On top of that, the three-tier distribution system adds a 6-to-12-month lag between any wholesale price movement and what shows up at your register. The whiskey that softened at Lawrenceburg in Q1 cannot reach your shelf at a lower price until the contract rolls and the lag clears — earliest, late 2026.
The tier most likely to feel it first is the $35-to-$50 accessible-premium shelf, where competitive pressure from own-distillate brands like Heaven Hill and Buffalo Trace makes margin defense harder than it is at $80 and above. Watch that shelf through Q3.
Here’s what it means for the rest of us — the savings exist, they’re stuck in a 2022 contract. Watch the $35-to-$50 NDP shelf this fall.
One more for today — today’s full American Whiskey Industry Brief has the Suntory confirmation that Jim Beam’s Clermont distillery stays idle through Q3 2026. Paired with MGP’s production cut, that’s two major suppliers pulling back simultaneously, and the compounding supply math for 2029 through 2031 is worth understanding. It’s waiting at chasingtheunicornpodcast.com.
That’s The Cut. The full American Whiskey Industry Brief is waiting at chasingtheunicornpodcast.com/the-brief/. I’m John F. Schuster II. 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.
Tennessee just out-picked Kentucky. Nelson’s Green Brier is releasing 14 barrel-proof, own-distilled Tennessee bourbon picks across 11 states at $75.99 — no lottery, no wait list, and the specs hold up against Four Roses store picks.
Tennessee’s craft bourbon scene just landed a store pick program worth calling your local specialty retailer about — Nelson’s Green Brier’s 14 own-distilled barrel-proof picks are available this week across 11 states at $75.99, no lottery required. That’s today’s lead, and it’s the rare one that asks you to take action today. This edition also covers the Bar Talk debate everyone in bourbon is having about MGP’s falling wholesale prices — and why the savings you heard about aren’t at your shelf yet, explained in plain terms — plus the Secondary Spotlight on why Pappy Van Winkle’s Lot B has given back 36% from its pandemic-era high, and what that number tells us about the market right now.
Nelson’s Green Brier Distillery opened its 2026 Spring barrel pick program Saturday — 14 own-distilled Tennessee bourbon barrels, bottled at barrel proof between 107 and 124, aged four years and eleven months to six years and three months. Eleven states. $75.99. No lottery.
The specs matter, but the provenance story matters more. Nelson’s Green Brier spent most of 2018 through 2021 supplementing its Nashville production with sourced stock from Indiana — standard practice for a growing craft brand building its own inventory pipeline. That era is done. Every barrel in the 2026 Spring program is own-distilled at the Nashville facility, confirmed in writing with each purchase agreement the qualifying account signs. That is not a press-release claim. It is a contract commitment.
The flavor direction centers on Nashville’s proprietary yeast strain and Middle Tennessee’s moderate maturation climate — expect fresh grain, baking spice, a structured mid-palate without the heavy caramelization of longer Kentucky aging. Master Distiller Becky Harris selected each barrel personally at the Nashville facility. At $75.99 barrel-proof and fully grain-to-glass, the comparison to Four Roses and Elijah Craig Barrel Proof single barrel picks at comparable prices is legitimate, not aspirational.
The brand traces its lineage to Charles Nelson’s pre-Prohibition Tennessee operation — one of the largest in the state before Prohibition ended it in 1909. Andy and Charlie Nelson re-established the Green Brier name in Nashville in 2014, and Campari Group acquired a majority stake in 2019, funding the facility expansion that makes this program possible. Accounts in Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, Virginia, Ohio, Illinois, Texas, California, Colorado, and New York have access through the distillery’s distributor network starting this week.
Today’s Chase includes Angel’s Envy Cask Strength 2026 — a straight Kentucky bourbon that spent time in port wine barrels after primary aging. That second barrel is called a finish, and it is one of the most misused techniques in the category.
After primary aging is done, some bourbons get a second life in a different barrel — port, rum, sherry, cognac, Madeira. A few months, sometimes longer, in the second vessel. Done right, a finish layers something new on top of a bourbon that is already good. Port adds berry and dark fruit. Rum adds tropical sweetness. Sherry adds dried fruit, nuts, and a hint of oxidation. The good ones integrate — you taste bourbon first, then the finish arrives as an echo.
Done wrong, a finish covers up a mediocre base whiskey. If the finish is the only thing you taste and the bourbon underneath feels thin, the distiller was using the cask to hide something. The question to ask with any finished bourbon is whether the base spirit would be worth drinking on its own. If yes, the finish is depth. If no, the finish is a costume.
Angel’s Envy Cask Strength is the current working example of finishing done correctly — the underlying straight bourbon is legitimate on its own, and the port barrel finish arrives as added complexity, not as cover. The entry-level Angel’s Envy standard expression at $39.99 teaches the same lesson at lower proof and lower cost.
What this changes: Taste through the finish. If you can still taste the bourbon underneath, the finish earned its place. If all you get is port and grape, something is being hidden.
Floor erosion is the gap between a bottle’s all-time high auction price and what it is actually selling for now. Van Winkle Special Reserve 12-Year — better known as Lot B — peaked at $1,800 at auction in March 2023, near the top of the pandemic-era bourbon bubble. It sold at Whisky Auctioneer this week for $1,150, which is 36.1% below that peak. That $650 decline from peak is more than double the MSRP of most bottles in today’s Chase.
The number worth noting beyond the headline erosion: this does not look like a bottle in free fall. Three transactions landed between $1,100 and $1,200 since February 2026, a cluster pattern that typically signals a bottle transitioning from price discovery to floor establishment. Lot B appears to be finding its post-correction floor somewhere in the $1,100-to-$1,200 range — well below the 2023 peak, but consistent across recent transactions in a way that suggests stabilization rather than continued collapse.
The Hunt: 5 active drops · Bar Talk: 2 debates · The Secondary: 3 graded bottles
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