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The Cut — May 5, 2026 — Parker’s Heritage 2026: A $99.99 Blended Whiskey With a Ten-Year Age Statement | The Cut


In this episode

The biggest whiskey news Tuesday isn’t about a scarce allocated bottle with a three-digit secondary floor. It’s about a category most shoppers skip entirely. Heaven Hill announced Parker’s Heritage Collection 2026 as a ten-year American Blended Whiskey at 96 proof — $99.99 MSRP, 22,000 bottles nationally, specialty retail starting late June. The American Blended Whiskey…

Mentioned in this episode: Pappy Van Winkle, Heaven Hill, Old Fitzgerald, Parker’s Heritage, Henry McKenna, Four Roses, Bardstown, Michter’s, BTAC

Read the full transcript

Target runtime: 7:48 Word count: 1,194 Estimated runtime: 7:58 Source: The Cut Daily 2026-05-05

This is The Cut. American whiskey, daily.

A blended whiskey just went premium. Heaven Hill confirmed Parker’s Heritage Collection 2026 as a ten-year American Blended Whiskey at $99.99 MSRP — 22,000 bottles headed to specialty retail in late June. The category label sounds entry-level. The specs say otherwise.

I’m John from Chasing the Unicorn Podcast. Here’s what moved today. May 5, 2026.

Today’s Big Move — Heaven Hill’s Parker’s Heritage Collection 2026 arrives as a ten-year American Blended Whiskey at $99.99 MSRP. Here’s what happened.

Tuesday is release day on The Cut, and this one earned it. Heaven Hill announced the 2026 Parker’s Heritage Collection Tuesday morning. Ten-year age statement, confirmed. 96 proof. 22,000 bottles nationally. Specialty retail starting late June.

Let’s deal with the designation first. American Blended Whiskey has a bad reputation because the category is broadly associated with cheap mass-market products. The legal definition allows a blend of straight bourbon and grain-neutral spirit — a high-proof grain distillate with no flavor character of its own. That sounds like a shortcut. For Heaven Hill, it’s been a deliberate production statement since the program’s inaugural 2013 blended edition. The straight bourbon backbone does the heavy lifting. The neutral component provides structural balance, not cheap volume.

The ten-year minimum age statement is the most significant documentation commitment this blended format has ever carried. The youngest barrel in the blend is ten years old. A significant portion of the inventory draws from 2013 and 2014 distillation — barrels that aged through the 2015 Bardstown warehouse fire and represent some of the most complex mature stock Heaven Hill currently holds.

The 22,000-bottle allocation is an 8% increase from last year, reflecting expanded mature barrel inventory from Bernheim Distillery’s 2015-to-2018 production scaling now hitting the ten-year maturation point. At $99.99, it sits at the accessible ceiling of the specialty tier — below the $150-and-above range where a bottle’s audience narrows to committed collectors.

One more: a dollar from every bottle goes to ALS research. That’s run every year since Parker Beam’s 2012 diagnosis. The man built Heaven Hill’s premium programs for 37 years. This is the ninth consecutive year that component runs.

Contact your specialty retailer for pre-allocation notification now. Late June arrival. And today’s First Sip ties directly to this release — because the most important word on the Parker’s Heritage label is “minimum.” What does an age statement actually guarantee?

Today’s First Sip — age statements versus no age statements. You’ll see the difference on the Parker’s Heritage label, and after Tuesday’s TTB guidance, what’s printed there carries more legal weight than it did yesterday.

So here’s what it is.

“Aged 10 years” on a label means one specific thing: the youngest whiskey in the bottle is ten years old. If there’s older stock blended in — some twelve-year, some fourteen-year — the label still reads ten. The rule is the age of the youngest drop, not the average.

“No Age Statement” — NAS — means the distillery isn’t committing to a minimum. They might be using six-year whiskey. They might be blending across a wide range. An NAS bourbon isn’t automatically worse. Plenty of excellent bottles don’t carry a number because the distillery wants blending flexibility.

Here’s the analogy. A fuel gauge reading a quarter tank is telling you the floor. It’s not averaging your last five fills. An age statement works the same way — it’s the minimum, not the mean.

The TTB’s Tuesday guidance adds one layer: if a label states a range — “aged 6 to 10 years” — the low number now carries mandatory compliance weight. Same as a single-point statement. The minimum is the promise, and the COLA deadline to comply is December 31, 2026.

The thing to watch for is when an age statement disappears from a label that used to have one. That usually means younger stock is stretching to meet demand.

What this changes — age statements are promises. Missing age statements are possibilities. Dropped age statements are usually warnings. Alright — today’s Chase.

Today’s Chase — three bottles across three tiers. The spotlight is in the $80-to-$200 range, and the first access window opens Thursday. Let’s start with the one that matters most.

Michter’s US★1 Barrel Strength Sour Mash Batch 25S1. $80-to-$200 tier. $119.99 MSRP.

Batch 25S1 pours at 116.2 proof — the highest print in the series’ four-year run. Charred vanilla, toasted caramel, dark dried fruit, and a pronounced barrel-spice finish. There’s a tangy sour mash note mid-palate that opens noticeably with three or four drops of water. At 116.2 proof, don’t skip the water.

Here’s why it’s the spotlight. The Fort Nelson Distillery walk-up on Thursday, May 8 is the first consumer-access window before national specialty retail opens the week of May 11. If you’re in Louisville, that’s your cleanest path. The trajectory on this series has been consistent: Batch 22S1 at 109 proof, Batch 23S1 at 111.2, Batch 24S1 at 113.6. Batch 24S1 established $185 to $220 at secondary within 30 days. Batch 25S1 is the highest print the series has produced. The floor tends to follow.

This is worth the chase. Fort Nelson walk-up Thursday. National retail week of May 11 — contact your specialty retailer now on pre-allocation.

Also on today’s Chase — Four Roses Single Barrel Collection Second Rotation, OBSK or OESQ, $79.99 MSRP in the under-$80 tier. Lottery claim windows close approximately May 7 — confirm your inbox today if you entered Ohio, Virginia, or Pennsylvania. And in the $200-and-up tier, no active Hunt entry this edition. Blade and Bow 22-Year is the incoming candidate at an anticipated $249.99 — full assessment on arrival week of May 18. Full detail in today’s Cut Daily. If you want more, head to our Patreon at chasingtheunicornpodcast.

Which brings us to today’s Bar Talk — the best $50 bourbon on the shelf doesn’t have a lottery.

Today’s Bar Talk — Bottled-in-Bond as the 2026 value tier. Community’s split on whether BiB is the best risk-adjusted bourbon buy on the market right now. Here’s what’s actually going on.

A thread Sunday on r/bourbon pulled 1,204 upvotes and 418 comments over the weekend. The question was straightforward: is Bottled-in-Bond the smartest buy available? The argument applies every time you’re standing at a shelf deciding whether an allocated bottle with a markup is worth the hunt.

“Bottled-in-Bond” is not a marketing phrase. It’s a federal statutory guarantee that has been law since 1897 — written to stop producers from adulterating bourbon with industrial alcohol and tobacco juice. The first consumer protection law in American history. Four non-negotiable requirements: one distillery, one distilling season, minimum four years aged in a federally bonded warehouse, bottled at exactly 100 proof. No exceptions, no flexibility.

The math: Old Fitzgerald BiB Spring 2026 arrives at $49.99 the week of May 11. The Fall 2025 edition of that same expression is trading at $108 at secondary right now — 2.2 times MSRP. Pappy Van Winkle 15-Year crossed below $1,000 at auction last weekend for the first time since 2019. That’s 6.6 times its $149.99 retail price. The speculative premium on the blue-chip tier is compressing, and that’s making BiB’s statutory guarantee newly visible to buyers who were previously fixated on BTAC acquisition ratios. Henry McKenna 10-Year Bottled-in-Bond at $39.99 adds a confirmed decade of bonded aging to the same framework — and it’s been sitting on the shelf without a lottery the entire time.

Here’s what it means for the rest of us — BiB was the best value in bourbon in 2019. It still is. The market just caught up.

Two more things before we close. First — today’s AWIB on Patreon has the full Flight comparison: Parker’s Heritage Collection 2026 versus Henry McKenna 10-Year Bottled-in-Bond. Same Heaven Hill distillery, same 10-year minimum age, $99.99 versus $50, blended whiskey versus straight bourbon. The verdict on which one wins for which kind of bourbon-curious drinker is in the brief. Second — the AWIB has the complete affected-expression list from the TTB’s Tuesday age-range labeling guidance, cross-referenced against the COLA database, with a December 31, 2026 compliance deadline for approximately 17 nationally distributed expressions. Both are waiting on Patreon.

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


The Written Briefing

The Cut Daily

The biggest whiskey news Tuesday isn’t about a scarce allocated bottle with a three-digit secondary floor. It’s about a category most shoppers skip entirely. Heaven Hill announced Parker’s Heritage Collection 2026 as a ten-year American Blended Whiskey at 96 proof — $99.99 MSRP, 22,000 bottles nationally, specialty retail starting late June. The American Blended Whiskey designation carries a reputation for cheap volume blending. Heaven Hill’s version carries a confirmed ten-year minimum age statement, a bourbon backbone built at Bernheim Distillery, and a charitable giving component running nine consecutive years in Parker Beam’s name. That’s not the same conversation. Also on the shelf this week: Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond Spring 2026 arrives at $49.99 the week of May 11, and Michter’s Barrel Strength Batch 25S1 at 116.2 proof opens for walk-up access at Fort Nelson Distillery Thursday before national retail the following week. Listen to the full Cut above for the complete picture.

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

The Cut Daily
The pulse of American whiskey: What moved — and why it matters.
Chasing the Unicorn Podcast Edition · A Drunken Unicorn Production
Report Date: May 5, 2026
Reporting Period: May 3, 2026 through May 5, 2026
Classification: Free Edition · Share with Attribution
Free Edition · The Cut Daily · Chasing the Unicorn Podcast · A Drunken Unicorn Production · Drunken Unicorn Productions, LLC. The Cut Daily is the free gateway brief to the American Whiskey Industry Brief. Share, quote, and repost freely with attribution. Required attribution: “The Cut Daily · May 5, 2026 · Chasing the Unicorn Podcast · A Drunken Unicorn Production.” The full AWIB is a paid subscriber edition on Patreon. Permissions and inquiries: chasingtheunicornpodcast.com.

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

A blended whiskey just went premium. Heaven Hill confirmed Parker’s Heritage Collection 2026 as a ten-year American Blended Whiskey at $99.99 MSRP — 22,000 bottles headed to specialty retail in late June. The category label sounds entry-level. The specs say otherwise.

Heaven Hill announced the Parker’s Heritage Collection 2026 Tuesday morning, and the headline is unusual: an American Blended Whiskey with a confirmed ten-year age statement at $99.99 MSRP. A category most shoppers associate with cheap blends just landed a premium specialty-tier release. In today’s edition: why the blended designation doesn’t mean what you think it means, what the TTB’s new age-labeling guidance means for the bottles already on your shelf, and why the Bottled-in-Bond category is generating the bourbon community’s most engaged value debate of the year — plus a $49.99 bottle that’s been making that case the entire time.

THE BIG MOVE
Heaven Hill’s Most Documented Blend — Parker’s Heritage 2026 Comes With a Ten-Year Age Statement and a $99.99 Price Tag
Event Date: May 5, 2026

Heaven Hill announced the 2026 Parker’s Heritage Collection Tuesday morning. The expression is an American Blended Whiskey at 96 proof with a confirmed ten-year age statement — 22,000 bottles nationally at $99.99 MSRP, specialty retail starting late June.

Let’s deal with the designation first. American Blended Whiskey gets a bad reputation because the category is broadly associated with cheap mass-market products. The legal definition allows a blend of straight bourbon and grain-neutral spirit — a high-proof grain distillate that carries no flavor character of its own. That sounds like a shortcut. In Heaven Hill’s case, it’s been a deliberate production statement since the program’s inaugural 2013 blended edition: a straight bourbon backbone doing the heavy lifting, with the neutral component providing structural balance rather than cheap volume.

The ten-year minimum age statement is the most significant documentation commitment the Parker’s Heritage blended format has ever carried. The youngest barrel in the blend is ten years old. A significant portion draws from 2013 and 2014 distillation — barrels that aged through the 2015 Bardstown warehouse fire and represent some of the most complex mature inventory in Heaven Hill’s current program.

The 22,000-bottle allocation is an 8% increase from last year, reflecting expanded mature barrel inventory from Bernheim Distillery’s 2015-to-2018 production scaling now arriving at the ten-year maturation point. At $99.99 MSRP, it sits at the accessible ceiling of the specialty tier — below the $150-and-above range where a bottle’s audience typically narrows to committed collectors.

One more thing: a dollar from every bottle goes to ALS research. The program has run that way since Parker Beam’s 2012 diagnosis — the man who built Heaven Hill’s premium programs for 37 years. This is the ninth consecutive year that component runs. The 2026 edition is the most substantively documented blended whiskey the program has produced since Parker was alive to make the case in person.

What It Means For Your Shelf — Contact your specialty retailer for pre-allocation notification now. Late June arrival. At $99.99, this is the Parker’s Heritage entry that doesn’t require collector intent to justify.
From today’s AWIB Opening Pour. This is one of four lead stories in today’s AWIB Opening Pour. The other three: TTB tightens the age-range loophole (17 expressions need COLA review by December 31); Virginia ABC quarterly lottery reset (first state ABC structural change in five years); Michter’s Batch 25S1 walk-up Thursday at Fort Nelson. Read all four lead stories on Patreon →
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FIRST SIP
Age statement vs. NAS
Paired with today’s: TTB Issues Revised Informal Guidance on Age-Range Disclosure in Bourbon Labeling — Minimum-End Compliance Required for Range-Statement Expressions

The TTB issued guidance Tuesday requiring that the low end of any stated age range on a bourbon label — “aged 6 to 10 years,” say — carry the same legal compliance weight as a single-point age statement. It’s the most direct regulatory clarification of what age labels are actually promising in six years. Here’s what they’re promising.

“Aged 10 years” on a label means something specific: the youngest whiskey in the bottle is ten years old. If there’s older whiskey blended in — some twelve-year, some fourteen-year — the label still reads ten, because the rule is the age of the youngest drop, not the average. Today’s Parker’s Heritage Big Move demonstrates the distinction clearly: “ten-year minimum” on that label is now a compliance obligation, not a marketing estimate.

“No Age Statement,” or NAS, means the distillery isn’t committing to a minimum. They might be using six-year whiskey. They might be using twelve-year. They might be blending across a range. An NAS bourbon isn’t automatically worse — plenty of excellent bottles don’t carry an age statement because the distillery wants blending flexibility or because the whiskey is legitimately premium without needing a number.

The thing to watch for is when an age statement disappears from a label that used to have one. That usually means the distillery is stretching younger stock to meet demand, and the bottle is likely younger than it used to be. The TTB’s Tuesday guidance makes the range minimum a compliance fact rather than a marketing estimate going forward.

What this changes: Age statements are promises. Missing age statements are possibilities. Dropped age statements are usually warnings.

The Perfect Pour app — coming soon. For the full deep-dive on age statements vs. NAS — the chemistry of years 2-4 in barrel, the famous age-statement-drop incidents (Eagle Rare 2019, Elijah Craig 2016, Knob Creek 2016), and how to read what a producer’s silence on age really means — get notified when the Perfect Pour app launches. Get notified when it launches →
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TODAY’S ENTRY BOTTLE
Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond Spring 2026
$49.99 National specialty-retail arrival scheduled week of May 11, 2026; pre-allocation commitment windows open now at participating Heaven Hill specialty-retailer network; state-control-board lottery systems in Ohio, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina for applicable market buyers.
Flavor Profile — Old Fitzgerald BiB at 100 proof delivers the wheated mash format at its most accessible — honey, dried fig, and light caramel with a clean vanilla close and minimal barrel astringency. Distinctly softer and less rye-forward than high-rye expressions at comparable proof, consistent with the wheated mash bill Heaven Hill has used for this expression since its Stitzel-Weller lineage.
Production Context — Made at Heaven Hill’s Bernheim Distillery in Louisville on a wheated mash bill — wheat substitutes for rye as the secondary grain, producing the characteristic softness that defines Old Fitzgerald’s palate direction. Bottled at exactly 100 proof under the Bottled-in-Bond statutory framework: single distillery, single distilling season, minimum four years of federally bonded warehouse aging, no added color or flavoring.
Why This Matters — At $49.99, the BiB statutory guarantee gives you single-distillery provenance, documented minimum age, and 100-proof bottling — the most transparent provenance promise in bourbon retail at the sub-$50 tier, arriving the week of May 11 without a lottery.
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THE CHASE
How to read the chase ratings
YESworth chasing
WATCHhold for now
PASSskip this one
Bottle 1 — Under $80
Four Roses Single Barrel Collection Second Rotation — OBSK (or OESQ)
Window: Lottery winner claim-confirmation windows close approximately May 7, 2026; national specialty-retail allocation active through week of May 11, 2026
Where: Ohio OHLQ, Virginia VABC, Pennsylvania PLCB lottery winner inboxes (confirm today); Total Wine, Seelbach’s, Binny’s, and participating independent specialty retailers nationally — allocation absorbing rapidly
MSRP: $79.99 per 750mL expression
Flavor Profile — OBSK (low-rye, K yeast, 107.6 proof) — caramel, light floral, baked stone fruit, accessible and round; OESQ (high-rye, Q yeast, 110.2 proof) — dried apricot, cracked pepper, toasted oak with a clove-forward close
YES
Rationale — Lottery claim windows close by May 7. National specialty retail absorbs by end of the week. First Rotation secondary established $120-to-$175 within 14 days — the MSRP gap is unambiguous. OBSK is the recommended entry point for first-time Single Barrel Collection buyers and is consistently underpriced by the secondary market relative to palate return.
Bottle 2 — $80 to $200
Michter’s US★1 Barrel Strength Sour Mash Batch 25S1
Window: Fort Nelson Distillery walk-up Thursday, May 8, 2026; national specialty-retailer launch week of May 11, 2026
Where: Michter’s Fort Nelson Distillery, 801 West Main Street, Louisville, Kentucky (May 8 walk-up access); participating specialty retailers nationally beginning week of May 11
MSRP: $119.99
Flavor Profile — Charred vanilla, toasted caramel, dark dried fruit, and a pronounced barrel-spice finish; a tangy sour mash mid-palate note that opens measurably with three to four drops of water at 116.2 proof
YES
Rationale — The Fort Nelson walk-up Thursday is the first consumer-access window before national specialty retail opens — if you’re in Louisville, it’s the most direct path. Batch 25S1 at 116.2 proof is the series’ confirmed highest print; Batch 24S1 at 113.6 established $185-to-$220 secondary within 30 days. Contact your specialty retailer now on any open pre-allocation commitment.
Bottle 3 — $200 and up
No active Hunt entry in the $200-and-up tier this edition.
Window: Next confirmed high-tier release: Blade and Bow 22-Year Kentucky Straight Bourbon, anticipated $249.99 MSRP, arriving week of May 18, 2026 — assessment pending retail arrival and first-week sellthrough data
Where: N/A this edition
MSRP: N/A
Flavor Profile — N/A
WATCH
Rationale — No current Hunt entry qualifies for the $200-plus tier. The Blade and Bow 22-Year is the closest incoming candidate at this tier and will be assessed as a full Hunt entry on the week-of-May-18 arrival.
Today’s AWIB Hunt section covers 5 active drops, lotteries, and walk-up windows with full palate direction, rationale, and the Hunt Intelligence Note. See the full Hunt on Patreon →
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THE BAR TALK
The Best Fifty-Dollar Bourbon on the Shelf Doesn’t Have a Lottery

A thread posted Sunday on r/bourbon became the weekend’s highest-engagement bourbon debate: is Bottled-in-Bond the best risk-adjusted buy in the current market? With Old Fitzgerald BiB arriving at $49.99 the week of May 11, 1,204 upvotes and 418 comments came in across the weekend. The underlying argument is worth understanding because it applies every time you’re standing at a shelf deciding whether an allocated bottle with a markup is worth the hunt — and because the answer has been sitting there the whole time.

First Sip Moment —

“Bottled-in-Bond” is not a marketing phrase. It’s a federal statutory guarantee that has been law since 1897 — written to stop producers from adulterating bourbon with industrial alcohol and tobacco juice, the first consumer protection law in American history. Four non-negotiable requirements: one distillery, one distilling season (January through June or July through December), minimum four years aged in a federally bonded warehouse, bottled at exactly 100 proof. No exceptions, no flexibility, no label claims that can’t be verified. A BiB bottle at $35 carries every one of those guarantees in exactly the same way a BiB bottle at $150 does.

The Math —

Old Fitzgerald BiB Spring 2026 arrives at $49.99 MSRP the week of May 11 — same wheated mash bill, same 100 proof, same single-distillery provenance it carries in every edition. The Fall 2025 edition of the same expression trades at $108 at secondary auction right now, which is 2.2x MSRP. Pappy Van Winkle 15-Year — the allocated-market’s benchmark floor reference — crossed below $1,000 at auction last weekend for the first time since 2019, sitting at 6.6x its $149.99 retail price. Weller Full Proof is approaching functional secondary parity with its MSRP. The r/bourbon thesis is that the correction in the blue-chip allocated tier has made BiB’s statutory value newly legible to buyers who were previously fixated on BTAC acquisition ratios. Henry McKenna 10-Year Bottled-in-Bond at $39.99 adds a full decade of bonded age to the same statutory framework — and it has been sitting on the shelf without a lottery the entire time the community was arguing about Pappy floors.

What It Means For The Rest Of Us —

BiB was the best value in bourbon in 2019. It still is. The market just caught up.

Today’s AWIB Bar Talk has 2 more debates with full source citations, fact-checked positions, and editorial assessment. Read the full debates on Patreon →
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SECONDARY SPOTLIGHT
Pappy Van Winkle’s Family Reserve 15-Year
Realized Price
$995.00
Peak Price
$2,600.00
Floor Erosion
↓ 61.7%
($2,600.00 − $995.00) ÷ $2,600.00 × 100 = 61.7% erosion from October 2021 peak
What Floor Erosion Means —

Floor erosion measures how far a bottle’s market price has dropped from its all-time high. Pappy Van Winkle 15-Year peaked at $2,600 at auction in October 2021 — the height of pandemic-era collector competition, when every allocated bottle in the Buffalo Trace lineup was riding a speculative wave. The May 3 realized price of $995 is the first time Pappy 15-Year has traded below $1,000 since 2019. That 61.7% decline across 55 months is not a crash — it’s a correction back toward the gravity of a bottle that retails at $149.99 and is scarce but not supernatural. The whiskey in the bottle is exactly what it was in 2021. What changed is the speculative premium collectors were willing to pay to own the name above what the liquid justified. The fall 2026 BTAC season arriving in roughly five months is the next variable that could generate modest upward pressure, typically beginning in late August.

The lesson: When the market’s most recognized benchmark crosses a round-number psychological floor for the first time in seven years, it’s telling you the speculative premium is gone — the scarcity is still real, but the panic that built the peak isn’t coming back at the same scale.
Today’s AWIB Secondary section grades 2 more bottles with realized prices, floor erosion math, lineage notes, and buy/hold/sell calls. Read the full secondary report on Patreon →
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ALSO IN TODAY’S AWIB
Today’s Flight: Parker’s Heritage Collection 2026 vs. Henry McKenna 10-Year Bottled-in-Bond — full comparison and verdict in the AWIB.
Today’s AWIB Opening Pour also covers the TTB age-range disclosure circular (the de facto no-age-statement loophole closes for ~17 expressions by December 31), the Virginia ABC quarterly lottery reset (the first state ABC structural change in five years), and Michter’s Batch 25S1 walk-up Thursday at Fort Nelson. Three more lead stories in the brief.
Today’s AWIB Rickhouse Report covers Beam Suntory’s Q1 2026 depletion data — first positive year-over-year print in five quarters and a possible inflection signal for the broader bourbon supply correction. The full brief has the analysis against KDA inventory data, what a Q3 vs Q4 Clermont restart timeline means for Jim Beam supply, and whether one quarter is enough to call the bottom.
Today’s Full AWIB Includes (in reading order)
Opening Pour: 4 stories · Bar Talk: 3 debates · The Flight: 1 comparison · The Hunt: 5 active drops · Label Room: 5 items · The Secondary: 3 graded bottles
Rickhouse Report: 5 stories · Regional Report: 3 stories · Research Notes: complete
The full AWIB walks today’s bourbon world in reader-forward order — the Opening Pour lead stories, the community Bar Talk, the side-by-side Flight comparison, every active Hunt window, the full Label Room pipeline, the Secondary market grading, and the industry-depth Rickhouse, Regional, and Research Notes coverage. Plus full source trail. Join on Patreon →
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The Cut Daily
Report Date: May 5, 2026 · Chasing the Unicorn Podcast · A Drunken Unicorn Production
Free Edition · No Redistribution Without Permission

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