Thursday’s Cut opens with the most urgent active spread in the bourbon market: Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 sits at $199.99 through June 15 while secondary pre-sale is already quoting $280 to $320. Seventeen years, 116.4 proof, 11,400 bottles nationally — four days left on the only guaranteed MSRP entry.
Today’s Hunt Spotlight is Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond 11-Year at $99.99 — walk-up closes tomorrow June 14 at Heaven Hill-connected retailers in Kentucky and Tennessee. Eleven-year age statement, 100-proof federal BiB credential, secondary tracking $130 to $150 on the prior cohort. The gap between MSRP and secondary closes overnight.
First Sip covers the angel’s share: the evaporation math that explains why a 17-year age statement costs what it does. And the bar talk: does a walk-up window mean you’re getting a better bottle, or just getting there first?
Listen to the full Cut at chasingtheunicornpodcast.com. Full American Whiskey Industry Brief at patreon.com/ChasingTheUnicornPodcast.
The pulse of American whiskey: What moved — and why it matters.
Chasing the Unicorn Podcast Edition · A Drunken Unicorn Production
Report Date: June 11, 2026
Reporting Period: June 9, 2026 through June 11, 2026
Classification: Free Edition · Share with Attribution
Free Edition · The Cut Daily · Chasing the Unicorn Podcast · A Drunken Unicorn Production · Drunken Unicorn Productions, LLC. The Cut Daily is the free gateway brief to the American Whiskey Industry Brief. Share, quote, and repost freely with attribution. Required attribution: “The Cut Daily · June 11, 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
The editor’s take on what moved this window — the quick read before the full brief.
The $320 bottle still costs two hundred. Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 — 17 years, 116.4 proof — is already trading at $280 to $320 on pre-sale secondary, and the $199.99 allocation window stays open through June 15. One phone call saves you a hundred dollars. Maybe more.
Wild Turkey’s most age-forward Master’s Keep release in five years has four days left on its retailer allocation window — and the gap between what you can pay at MSRP and what you’ll pay on the secondary market is already a hundred dollars wide before a single bottle ships. Also closing tomorrow: Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond 11-Year walk-up in Kentucky and Tennessee, the strongest wheated bourbon at its price in the current market. Today’s First Sip is the angel’s share — the evaporation math that explains why 17-year bourbon costs what it does. And we dig into a community debate that gets asked every walk-up cycle: does buying bourbon at a special event or walk-up window actually mean you’re getting something better?
THE BIG MOVE
The biggest story moving today — in plain English.
Four Days Left on the Only Guaranteed $199.99 Entry for Wild Turkey’s Most Age-Forward Master’s Keep in Half a Decade
Event Date: June 11, 2026 (four-day urgency threshold) · June 15, 2026 (allocation window close)
Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 is a 17-year bourbon bottled at 116.4 proof — the realized output of what the barrel actually contained after 17 Kentucky seasons, not a diluted-to-target number. It retails at $199.99. The secondary market is already quoting $280 to $320 on pre-sale before the first bottle reaches a shelf.
The allocation window closes June 15. After Saturday, those two numbers stop existing at the same time.
Here’s the production case for why the gap is real. Wild Turkey enters spirit at 107 to 110 proof — lower than most major distilleries — which Eddie Russell, Wild Turkey’s master distiller, has long described as the key to the house’s characteristic oil-and-integration depth. A barrel entered at that proof through 17 full Kentucky summers and winters, cycling between 30-degree winters and 100-degree summers, pushes whiskey in and out of the wood repeatedly across those cycles. The angel’s share — the evaporation that happens year over year — strips somewhere between 40 and 50 percent of the liquid from the barrel over that span. What was 53 gallons at entry is now roughly 28 to 32 gallons. There are 11,400 of those barrels worth of bottles total, nationally.
The 116.4-proof bottling is what survived. Not a target — the actual barrel output. Whisky Advocate’s spring preview called it the most integrated Master’s Keep since the Cornerstone Rye in 2021.
Outside Kentucky and Tennessee, most regional allocation pools have substantially cleared. If your retailer has a Wild Turkey allocation account, today is the day to call — not Friday, not Saturday morning.
What It Means For Your Shelf —Nothing changes after June 15 except the price. The bottle is the same; the entry point becomes secondary-only. Four days is enough time to make one phone call.
From today’s AWIB Opening Pour. This is one of four lead stories in today’s AWIB Opening Pour. The other three: Four Roses Limited Edition Small Batch 2026 — pre-allocation windows are live now on a 108.2-proof TTB confirmation, with Brent Elliott’s recipe reveal expected any day and likely to close most allocated accounts within 48 hours; Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond 11-Year walk-up closes tomorrow June 14, the last no-lottery Father’s Day MSRP bottle in the current cycle; Knob Creek 18-Year Single Barrel 2026 TTB clearance opens pre-registration ahead of the formal press announcement.
Read all four lead stories on Patreon →
The glossary moment — one bourbon concept you can apply at the shelf today.
The Angel’s Share
Paired with today’s: Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 — the 17-year production math is built entirely on the angel’s share. Eddie Russell’s 11,400-bottle national allocation exists because a 53-gallon barrel loses roughly 40 to 50 percent of its volume to evaporation across 17 Kentucky seasons. That’s the physics behind the $199.99 price point.
Every bourbon barrel loses liquid over time. Heat expands the wood and the whiskey pushes in. Cold contracts it and the whiskey pulls back out. Each cycle, some liquid evaporates through the staves. Distillers call this “the angel’s share.” In Kentucky’s climate — cold winters, sweltering summers — a barrel loses roughly 3 to 5 percent of its volume every year.
Start with 53 gallons. After 10 years, you have around 35 gallons left. After 17 years — where the Triumph barrels sit — you’re down to roughly 28 to 32 gallons, depending on where the barrel lived in the rickhouse. That’s about 140 to 160 bottles from what was once 265.
That loss is why age-stated bourbon costs more. It’s not marketing scarcity — it’s physics. The distillery produced a fixed amount of liquid and time burned most of it off. What’s left is more concentrated, more integrated with the wood, and rarer than the original barrel entry number implies.
The angel’s share also explains why Texas bourbon can taste older at 4 years than some 8-year Kentucky bourbon. Garrison Brothers’ Hill Country rickhouses hit 110°F or higher in summer — nearly 15 degrees hotter than Kentucky peaks. That heat drives faster cycling and a faster angel’s share rate. Time and temperature are both variables.
What this changes: When you see a 15-year or 20-year age statement, you’re looking at what’s left after the angels took their cut — and that cut was substantial.
The Perfect Pour app — beta open now, launches July 4. For the full deep-dive on the angel’s share — the Texas versus Kentucky climate math, the chemistry of ethanol and water vapor pressure differential across the barrel cycle, and what that 40-to-50 percent volume loss actually costs a distillery per bottle — get notified when the Perfect Pour app launches.
Take your seat in the beta →
$40–$45Nationally distributed and widely stocked at independent spirits retailers, Total Wine, Binny’s, and most grocery store spirits sections in non-control states; one of the most reliably available 10-year age-stated bourbons in its price tier
Flavor Profile —Soft caramel and dried apricot on the nose, a mid-palate of honey, light vanilla, and restrained spice — less assertive than Wild Turkey 101, rounder in texture with a finish that carries soft oak and mild pepper without the proof-forward heat of the house’s higher-end releases; at 90 proof, it rewards slow sipping without demanding water
Production Context —Distilled at Wild Turkey’s Lawrenceburg, Kentucky campus under Eddie and Jimmy Russell’s production direction, using Wild Turkey’s standard corn-rye-barley mash bill and the family’s historically lower barrel-entry proof (107–110 range), which produces the oily integration the house is known for at extended age; the 10-year age statement is a firm floor, not a blended average
Why This Matters —Russell’s Reserve sits in the same family as today’s Master’s Keep Triumph — same distillery, same Russell philosophy, the same rickhouse system — which means it’s the accessible entry point into understanding what Wild Turkey’s production architecture actually tastes like before you chase a 17-year barrel-strength release
Three bottles across three price tiers — what to buy, what to wait on, what to skip.
How to read the chase ratings
YESworth chasing
WATCHhold for now
PASSskip this one
Bottle 1 — Under $80
E.H. Taylor Jr. Old Warehouse “C” Bottled-in-Bond 2026
Window: Pre-allocation open now through approximately June 20; June shipment targeted June 23–28 — inside Father’s Day ground-shipping range at most retailers
Where: Seelbach’s (seelbachs.com); select regional independents with Sazerac-tier allocation access — call ahead to confirm pre-allocation is still open
MSRP: $54.99
Flavor Profile — Stone-warehouse aging produces a softer, more grain-forward mid-palate than standard Buffalo Trace campus rickhouses — restrained caramel oak, extended wheat-cream finish, less wood-driven than a typical Taylor expression at comparable age
YES
Rationale — Federal BiB credential, pre-allocation before the press release, and a secondary floor that tracked $78–$88 at 30-day post-release on the 2025 edition — the value spread closes the moment distribution lands. The June 23–28 ship window still makes Father’s Day with overnight service, and the pre-allocation window won’t survive the press release intact.
Bottle 2 — $80 to $200
Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond 11-Year — Father’s Day Walk-Up
Window: Open now through June 14 (tomorrow) — no Father’s Day ground-shipping guarantee for most of the country after this date
Where: Heaven Hill-connected retail accounts in Kentucky and Tennessee; Seelbach’s and Westport Whiskey & Wine in Louisville confirmed walk-up stock as of June 10 — call ahead before driving
MSRP: $99.99
Flavor Profile — Classic wheated BiB profile — soft caramel and almond on the nose, dried stone fruit and light oak mid-palate, long wheat-cream finish with minimal heat at 100 proof; Whisky Advocate awarded 92 points to the Fall 2024 release, noting the finish as the most extended in the Old Fitz BiB modern series
YES
Rationale — Tomorrow is the last day for MSRP-guaranteed walk-up access on the most provenance-dense wheated BiB at this price in the current market — 11-year age statement, 100-proof federal credential, Stitzel-Weller recipe lineage. Secondary floor sits at $130–$150 on the prior cohort. After June 14, this bottle is a secondary purchase before Father’s Day shipping, period.
Bottle 3 — $200 and up
No new $200-plus Hunt entry in today’s window. Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 at $199.99 is correctly slotted in the $80–$200 tier — it is not a $200-plus bottle — and the high end of the Hunt is genuinely quiet this edition. We’d rather say so than pad the tier.
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 →
What bourbon drinkers are debating right now — and what the argument teaches the rest of us.
Walk-Up Access — First in Line, or a Genuinely Better Bottle?
Every walk-up window produces the same question. Someone drives two hours, gets their bottle at MSRP, and goes home wondering if they got something the people who ordered online didn’t. The community debates this routinely, and the two camps talk past each other because they’re not describing the same type of walk-up. Whether walk-up status means anything depends entirely on where the walk-up is happening — a distillery gift shop or a regional retailer holding its allocated allotment on a Saturday morning. Those are different things, and conflating them is the source of most of the confusion.
First Sip Moment —
Two distinct programs get called “walk-up.” The first is distillery-direct: a bottle only available at the distillery’s own retail point, often a different production run, specification, or single-barrel selection that never moves through the three-tier distribution system. Buffalo Trace’s campus store single-barrel exclusives, Heaven Hill’s Bourbon Heritage Center releases, and Wild Turkey’s Rickhouse K event pours are this type — legitimately different product, no equivalent on a distributor’s shelf anywhere. The second is regional-retailer walk-up: an allocated account holding bottles from the standard distribution allotment and selling them in-person rather than through an online queue or mailing list. Same bottle, same TTB spec, same batch number as what eventually lands on the broader distribution shelf two to four weeks later — the walk-up status is an access mechanism, not a product distinction.
The Math —
Old Fitzgerald BiB 11-Year current walk-up: confirmed at the same TTB spec as distribution allocation — 100 proof, 11-year age statement, standard BiB federal credential, no warehouse or batch designation distinguishing the walk-up bottles from distribution stock (Heaven Hill brand documentation, June 2026). Walk-up confirmed at Seelbach’s and Westport Whiskey & Wine, Louisville, as of June 10 (retailer confirmations, June 10, 2026). Buffalo Trace Distillery Store exclusives — White Dog experimental mash fills, single-barrel campus selections — confirmed distillery-only distribution, not available through three-tier system (Buffalo Trace distillery documentation, 2025). Heaven Hill Bourbon Heritage Center exclusive releases: confirmed distillery-only program with specifications that differ from distribution releases (Heaven Hill program documentation, 2025). Multiple buyers have confirmed identical TTB spec between walk-up Old Fitz BiB stock and national-distribution bottles from the same production cycle.
What It Means For The Rest Of Us —
Know which type of walk-up you’re dealing with. Retailer walk-up is a line; distillery walk-up is sometimes a different bottle.
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 →
Floor erosion measures how far a bottle’s secondary-market price has dropped from its recorded high. Old Fitzgerald BiB 11-Year Fall 2025 peaked at $195 in the weeks after its November release and realized $138 at Unicorn Auctions on June 5, 2026 — 29.2 percent below that peak. The mechanism compressing it right now is specific and visible: the Spring 2026 release is at $99.99 walk-up availability through tomorrow, June 14. When buyers can get the same 11-year wheated BiB at $99.99 retail with no lottery and no secondary fee, the argument for paying $138 for the prior cohort becomes difficult to sustain. The floor on the Fall 2025 edition will compress further as the Spring 2026 walk-up window closes — not because demand for Old Fitz BiB disappears, but because the incoming supply channel eliminates the scarcity rationale for holding prior cohort stock at a 38 percent premium over retail.
The lesson: When a new release of the same spec lands at MSRP walk-up while you’re still holding the prior cohort at secondary, the market re-anchors to the retail price — not your cost basis.
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 →
What you’re missing in the full brief — in order, by section.
Today’s Flight: Old Fitzgerald Bottled-in-Bond 11-Year ($99.99, 100 proof, wheated) versus Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 ($199.99, 116.4 proof) — same Father’s Day occasion frame, $100 price gap, structurally opposite production philosophies. Full side-by-side specs, tasting profiles extrapolated from distillery documentation, and the access verdict by occasion in today’s American Whiskey Industry Brief.
Wild Turkey just filed the first Russell’s Reserve Single Rickhouse release with a specific warehouse-and-rack designator on the label — “Camp Nelson G” at 110.4 proof, the highest-proof Single Rickhouse release in the program’s commercial history. Today’s AWIB Rickhouse Report covers what that Camp Nelson G identifier actually means for the whiskey in the bottle and why it sets a transparency precedent the rest of the single-barrel industry will have to respond to.
The Four Roses LESB 2026 pre-allocation debate is sharper than it looks. Three years of buyer-outcome data and the 108.2-proof TTB confirmation are the only two inputs you have before Brent Elliott’s recipe reveal closes most allocated accounts within 48 hours of publication. Today’s AWIB Bar Talk covers the actuarial case for committing now versus waiting — including why the two camps are arguing about completely different market tiers without realizing it.
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
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 →
The Perfect Pour — beta open now, launches July 4.
Build your Rickhouse, log every pour in your Logbook, and learn your palate with your Pour Print — the app that turns every pour into your next discovery.
Founder’s rate: lock $99/year for life as a Bourbon Keeper (through July 3, 2027).
Want the full picture? The complete American Whiskey Industry Brief — every section, every source, every story — is published daily for subscribers on Patreon. Join us at patreon.com/ChasingTheUnicornPodcast.
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…
Monday’s biggest story isn’t a new product launch or an auction result — it’s a master distiller willing to connect a state tax law to a barrel-filling decision on the record. Heaven Hill’s Conor O’Driscoll confirmed this week that the distillery is adding distilling runs at its Bardstown, Kentucky campus for Q3 and Q4 2026,…
Monday’s Cut opens with the most consequential production decision in American bourbon this year. Beam Suntory’s Clermont, Kentucky distillery — source of Knob Creek, Booker’s, Baker’s, and Jim Beam — resumed full distillation this morning after a 14-week production pause. The barrels entering the rickhouse today won’t reach your shelf for nine years. Knob Creek’s…
▶ Listen to this episode on Spotify Tuesday’s Cut opens with a proof record and a three-day deadline. Heaven Hill’s Elijah Craig Barrel Proof C926 is TTB-confirmed at 130.4 proof and 14.2 years average age — the highest-proof C-designated batch in the expression’s tracked history — shipping June 8 to pre-allocation accounts at $79.99 MSRP….
Listen on Spotify • Watch on YouTube: In Episode 4 of Chasing the Unicorn: Your Quest for the Perfect Pour, we’re asking the question every bourbon lover needs to consider: Are you truly experiencing the spirit in your glass, or are you being swayed by labels, brands, and preconceived notions? This week, we’re diving headfirst…
This week, Heaven Hill’s production calendar created the most useful direct comparison in the current bourbon window. Two federally certified wheated bourbons from the same Bardstown distillery entered distribution within 72 hours of each other — and one of them is still available. Parker’s Heritage 2026 Bottled-in-Bond pre-allocation closed last night at $99.99. Old Fitzgerald…