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Home » Liquor » Bourbon » Maker's Mark 'Wood Finishing' FAE-01 110.6Proof 2021 Release
Maker's Mark 'Wood Finishing' FAE-01 110.6Proof 2021 ReleaseSample Image Only
Maker's Mark 'Wood Finishing' FAE-01 110.6Proof 2021 Release
Our third limited release from the Makers Mark Wood Finishing Series joins our previous years' expressions in honoring our signature bourbon this time, amplifying the naturally present dried fruit and woody richness in a distinctively Makers way. We like to say it tastes exactly how our barrel warehouse smells, with rich figgy notes complemented by tobacco undertones and a pleasantly dank woodiness.
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Store Item ID:#40983
Item Description
Our third limited release from the Makers Mark Wood Finishing Series joins our previous years' expressions in honoring our signature bourbon this time, amplifying the naturally present dried fruit and woody richness in a distinctively Makers way. We like to say it tastes exactly how our barrel warehouse smells, with rich figgy notes complemented by tobacco undertones and a pleasantly dank woodiness.
About Maker's Mark
Maker's Mark is unusual in that no rye is used as part of the mash. Instead red winter wheat is used, along with corn (the predominant grain) and malted barley. During the planning phase of Maker's Mark, Samuels allegedly developed seven candidate mash bills for the new bourbon. As he did not have time to distill and age each one for tasting, he instead made a loaf of bread from each recipe and the one with no rye was judged the best tasting. Samuels also received considerable assistance and recipes from Stitzel-Weller owner Pappy Van Winkle, whose distillery produced the wheated Old Fitzgerald and W. L. Weller bourbons.[20]

Maker's Mark is aged for around six years, being bottled and marketed when the company's tasters agree that it is ready. Maker's Mark is one of the few distillers to rotate the barrels from the upper to the lower levels of the aging warehouses during the aging process[citation needed] to even out the differences in temperature during the process. The upper floors are exposed to the greatest temperature variations during the year, so rotating the barrels ensures that the bourbon in all the barrels have the same quality and taste.
Maker's Mark
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