By nearly every measure, Buffalo Trace Distillery’s Blanton’s Bourbon is one of the most sought-after American whiskeys in the world. There are hundreds of Facebook groups dedicated to finding bottles at retail, showing off completed sets of horse stoppers or hunting down bottles with specific dates scrawled on the label to commemorate life events. By the numbers, it’s among the most-searched whiskeys on Google, and the most-searched whiskey on spirit pricing site Wine-Searcher multiple years running. It’s also the poster child of whiskey price rising across the U.S. Nobody can find it, except Dominic Guglielmi.
“I don’t even drink it or like it for the flavor. It’s all about the collectability. I see people post all over the place about waiting in line all day and missing out on a bottle. If you want it, you just gotta know where to look,” Guglielmi tells me over the phone.
Based in Ohio, Guglielmi collects ultra-rare, one-off Blanton’s expressions, many of which were never sold to the public in the first place: Bottles commemorating a small town’s bicentennial, bottles celebrating the life of Japanese Elvis, bottles given as gifts to Japanese liquor retailers and more. He’s been called the “Ultimate Blanton’s Tater” — watch the video for tasting notes on some extremely rare Blanton’s — and has built a catalog of rare Blanton’s on his website, Warehouse H. He estimates his collection of Blanton’s is worth somewhere between $75,000 and $100,000. Here’s how one of the world’s most successful Blanton’s collectors pulls the bottles you didn’t even know existed.
Q: Why Blanton’s? What did you start with?
I’m all in on Blanton’s. I may have two other bourbons in my house at most; I’m not a well-rounded bourbon collector. My boss suggested it to me, gave it to me as a gift and I liked the horse toppers and collecting the letters like most people.
That brought me to the internet and Googling it. When I stumbled into photos of the other varieties, and some of the Japanese releases, it was over. I travel to Japan for work so I thought I’d bring some home. I found the standard lineup — the Red, Gold and Black at the time — and I was bringing them back in huge quantities. I think one time I brought back 28 bottles in one go.