Welcome to Shelf Sleepers, our semi-regular guide to the best booze nobody is buying. This time: Heaven Hill 6-Year-Old Green Label, a bottle whiskey conspiracy theorists believe is only made for in-the-know Kentuckians.
A little over an hour into Fred Minnick’s sub-$15 bourbon taste-off, Minnick, prolific bourbon reviewer, personality, host and author, had narrowed a field of dozen bottom-shelf bourbons to just one.
“Let me make sure I didn’t fuck this up on the blind tasting. You never know,” Minnick said, checking the sticker on the bottom of a Glencairn glass. He pulled the sticker off and flashed it in front of the camera. “Green.”
Out of a field that included Buffalo Trace Distillery’s Benchmark and Ancient Age bourbons, Very Old Barton, Old Charter and Heaven Hill’s own Evan William’s Black Label, Minnick landed on Heaven Hill 6-Year-Old Green Label. What the hell is that?
Green Label is from Heaven Hill Distillery, makers of Evan William’s, Elijah Craig, Old Fitzgerald, Larceny, Henry McKenna and other brand whiskeys. It’s a 6-year-old, 90 proof, roughly $12 product, making it perhaps the best value — from an age-price perspective, at least — you can buy. As far as I (and Minnick) can tell, the bottle receives zero marketing dollars and, if you check Heaven Hill’s own website, may as well not exist (they’ve even reserved a place for another venerable bottom-shelf hero, Mellow Corn, but not Green Label).
According to Minnick, it’s only available in Kentucky, Heaven Hill’s homestate. He says the owners of the distillery, the Shapira family, always keep a bottle of it in their homes.