New Riff Distilling’s Kentucky Straight Bourbon is our core bourbon expression, a genuinely high-rye, full-bodied whiskey offering savory, spicy character.
This year’s shortlist included whiskies from Scotland’s Highlands, Islay and Campbeltown, a fruity red wine cask-finished Irish whiskey and a spicy high-rye bourbon. After much deliberation the votes were cast and the winner was clear: the Whisky of the Year is New Riff Kentucky Straight ...
New Riff Distilling is a family-owned, Kentucky-bred whiskey distillery putting a new riff on an old tradition: Kentucky bourbon.
New Riff Circle Badge Kentucky Mule Mug $29.99 Circle Badge (Magnet) $5.99 Bottle - Magnet $5.99 New Riff Bottle Keychain $6.99 New Riff Circle Badge Ornament $13.99 New Riff Bottle Ornament $12.99 New Riff Tower Ornament $16.99 New Riff Circle Badge Bar Mat ...
What is the New Riff Whiskey Club? We're building a community of Bourbon, Rye, and whiskey lovers, eager to explore our riff on Kentucky’s whiskey traditions. The NRWC provides early notice and online access to pre purchase seasonal releases of our highly allocated spirits. Twice a year ...
The Bourbon Chronicles New Riff Single Barrel Pick Help us pick the one! Discover Similar CampaignsAbout this campaign You may also be interested in gogopick Kneeflow: Knee pain relief in less than 15 minutes Starting at $165$249 USD(33% off) ...
New Riff (Newport, KY): Fiercely independent and unabashedly innovative: New Riff Distilling starts with time-honored sour mash methods and bottled-in-bond standards, creating new riffs on old traditions since 2014. Located in Northern Kentucky — the gateway to bourbon country — the independentl...
The wintertime and holiday special release bottle is a small but growing category for American Whiskey. Utah’s High West has Midwinter Night’s Dram. Colorado’s Stranahan’s has Snowflake. And now, Kentucky’s New Riff has Winter Whiskey—a delicious whiskey with a quirky mash bill. ...
Blue People of Kentucky: Why the Fugate Family Had Blue Skin Only 97 blacks inhabited New Orleans in 1771—3% of the population. That number jumped to 300 within six years, and 820 in 1788. By 1805, blacks were 20% of the people in Louisiana. The Census of that year counted 8,500 ...
(Not pictured: losing to Kentucky the next day.) Still, these tourists brought money and attention to the capital city. Why did they annoy me more than tourists to the Crescent City? Is it because tourism is the number 1 source of income to the New Orleans economy and GNOSF’s mission...