Full Review

Helsinki

Helsinki
Small Batch Pioneer Corn Whiskey Release #27

Category: Corn Whiskey

Date Tasted:
Country: Finland
Alcohol: 43%
92 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$70

Helsinki
Small Batch Pioneer Corn Whiskey Release #27

Category: Corn Whiskey

Date Tasted:
Country: Finland
Alcohol: 43%
Light golden amber color. Aromas and flavors of leather and kettle corn, browned almond flour, Corn Pops and Play Doh, and honey graham crackers with a velvety, vibrant, dry medium body and a tingling, compelling, medium-length finish with accents of corn pops, caramel corn, graham cracker, and molasses on roasted corn and oats. Very corn forward and light on the oak, it does the job and does it damn well; great for a highball with lemon.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Rich & Full
Aroma Aroma: leather and kettle corn, browned almond flour, Corn Pops and Play Doh, and honey graham crackers
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with accents of corn pops, caramel corn, graham cracker, and molasses on roasted corn and oats
Smoothness Smoothness: Tingling
Enjoy Enjoy: in cocktails, neat, on the rocks and with cigars
Cocktail Cocktails: Sazerac, Old Fashioned, Manhattan
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Very corn forward and light on the oak, it does the job and does it damn well; great for a highball with lemon.

The Producer

The Helsinki Distilling Company

The Producer

Corn Whiskey

Spirits Glass Glencairn Canadian Straw.jpg
Serve in a Glencairn Ganadian Whisky Glass
Corn Whiskey is a commercial product that must contain at least 80% corn, be distilled at less than 80% ABV (160 proof) and if wood-aged, may be aged in either used or new uncharred barrels.

Corn whiskey was the first truly American whiskey, and the precursor to Bourbon. An unaged, clear spirit, it was the type of whiskey that Scotch-Irish farmers produced in their stills for family consumption or to trade for store goods. When state and federal excise taxes were permanently introduced during the Civil War, most of the production of Corn whiskey went underground to become moonshine, where it has remained ever since. A modest amount of commercial Corn whiskey is still produced and consumed in the South.