Full Review

Swear Jar

Swear Jar
Canadian Whisky

Category: Canadian Whisky

Date Tasted:
Country: Canada
Alcohol: 42%
89 Points
Silver Medal
Highly Recommended
$30

Swear Jar
Canadian Whisky

Category: Canadian Whisky

Date Tasted:
Country: Canada
Alcohol: 42%
Light gold color. Aromas and flavors of caramel corn, vanilla, black pepper, and Corn Pops with a round, vibrant, dry light-to-medium body and a tingling, captivating, medium-length finish with notes of vanilla caramel corn, fennel seed, strawberry mint, and molasses cookie. A very nice all purpose Canadian Whisky with enough flavor and oomph to be sipped neat.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Spicy & Complex
Aroma Aroma: caramel corn, vanilla, black pepper, and Corn Pops
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with notes of vanilla caramel corn, fennel seed, strawberry mint, and molasses cookie
Smoothness Smoothness: Tingling
Enjoy Enjoy: neat, in cocktails and on the rocks
Cocktail Cocktails: Sazerac, Old Fashioned, Manhattan
Bottom Line Bottom Line: A very nice all purpose Canadian Whisky with enough flavor and oomph to be sipped neat.

The Producer

Swear Jar Craft Distillers

The Producer
9200 Meilleur
Montreal, Quebec H2N 2A5
Canada

Canadian Whisky

Spirits Glass Glencairn Canadian Amber.jpg
Serve in a Glencairn Ganadian Whisky Glass
Canadian Whisky is made primarily from corn or wheat, with a supplement of rye, barley, or barley malt. There are no Canadian government requirements when it comes to the percentages of grains used in the mash bill. Unlike Bourbons, they are aged, primarily in used oak barrels. The minimum age for Canadian Whisky is three years, with most brands being aged four to six years. Virtually all Canadian whiskies (except the pot-distilled malt whiskies of Glenora in Nova Scotia) are blended from different grain whiskies of different ages. Bulk Canadian Whiskies are usually shipped in barrels to their destination country where they are bottled. These bulk whiskies are usually bottled at 40% ABV (80 proof) and are usually no more than four years old. "Bottled in Canada" whiskies generally have older components in their blends and are bottled at 43.4% ABV (86.8 proof).

Canadian whiskies, as with their American cousins, originated on the farm. These early whiskies were made primarily from rye. In time most Canadian distillers turned to corn, wheat, and other grains, but Canadians continue to refer to their whisky as "Rye" even though the mash bill for most Canadian Whisky is now predominantly a mix of corn, wheat, and barley, with only a modest proportion of rye for flavor, which results in a lighter-bodied spirit.