The Still & The Vine by School of Wine and Spirits
Issue No. 79 — June 13, 2026
Your daily discovery of 8 exceptional wines and spirits

Every producer works with what the land gives them. Water filtered through Kentucky limestone, barley grown in Scottish peat bogs, agave rooted in volcanic soil — these aren't marketing details. They're the geological fingerprints that distinguish one spirit from another, the unseen architecture beneath every sip. This issue follows that mineral thread across eight categories, highlighting bottles where terroir isn't a buzzword but a verifiable fact.

From a bourbon shaped by iron-free cave spring water to a white wine grown on ancient seabed chalk, today's lineup rewards attention to what lies underfoot. Pour slowly. The ground has something to say. See every bottle we've reviewed to date at reviews.schoolofwineandspirits.com. Don't see your special bottle? Hit the middle button on the home page and request a review — we'll get to it.

Bourbon Kentucky Peerless Distilling Rye Whiskey

Kentucky Peerless Distilling Rye Whiskey

Revived in 2015 by the Taylor family after an 80-year hiatus, Kentucky Peerless Distilling uses sweet mash fermentation and limestone-filtered Louisville water to craft whiskey entirely on-site in their compact downtown distillery.

Classification: Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey

Brand: Peerless

Distillery: Kentucky Peerless Distilling Co.

Proof: 108.7 (54.35% ABV)

Age: 4 Year

Color: Burnished copper with amber edges

MSRP: $70–$85

Mash Bill: Rye-forward (undisclosed exact proportions)

Barrel Type: New charred American oak, #3 char

Nose: Upfront rye spice gives way to caramel and charred oak. There's a persistent floral note — almost like dried carnation — woven through layers of dark cocoa and toasted pecan.

Palate: Full and assertive, with rye grain leading the charge. Butterscotch and leather develop mid-palate, balanced by a surprising burst of cherry sweetness. The mouthfeel is viscous without being heavy.

Finish: Long and warming, with charred oak and brown spices lingering well past the swallow. A whisper of maple syrup closes it out.

The Verdict: Peerless demonstrates what happens when a family-owned distillery refuses to cut corners. This rye delivers intensity without aggression, and the non-chill-filtered, barrel-strength approach lets the limestone-filtered water and sweet mash process speak clearly. A serious whiskey at a fair price.

Cocktail — Louisville Mineral — 2 oz Peerless Rye · 0.75 oz Carpano Antica Formula · 0.25 oz Cherry Heering · 2 dashes Angostura bitters · Stir over ice, strain into coupe, garnish with brandied cherry.

Pair with: Smoked duck breast with cherry compote

Awards: Double Gold, San Francisco World Spirits Competition 2023

Scotch Whisky Oban Little Bay Single Malt Scotch Whisky

Oban Little Bay Single Malt Scotch Whisky

Wedged between a cliff face and the harbor in the tiny West Highland town that shares its name, Oban Distillery has drawn its process water from Loch Gleann a'Bheàrna since 1794, producing whisky shaped by the hard, mineral-rich geology of the Scottish coast.

Classification: Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky

Brand: Oban

Distillery: Oban Distillery

Proof: 86 (43% ABV)

Age: NAS

Color: Rich gold with amber highlights

MSRP: $60–$80

Region: West Highlands

Mash Bill: 100% malted barley

Distillation: Double distilled in small copper pot stills (the smallest in Scotland by some accounts)

Maturation: Aged in ex-bourbon and refill casks, finished in small 'Little Bay' casks

Cask Type: Ex-bourbon and small cask finish

Peat Level (PPM): Low (unpeated malt)

Chill-Filtered: Yes

Nose: Sea salt and honey mingle with orange zest and a trace of peach. Beneath that, a gentle smokiness curls around malty sweetness and dried fruit.

Palate: Creamy and medium-bodied, with caramel and butterscotch at the fore. The coastal mineral note is unmistakable — a flinty, almost chalky quality that anchors sweeter tones of honey and vanilla. Light clove spice appears on the second sip.

Finish: Medium-length, with smoky malt fading into a clean, slightly briny close.

The Verdict: Oban Little Bay uses small cask finishing to accelerate wood contact, but the result doesn't taste forced. This is still recognizably Oban — maritime, honeyed, balanced — with an added layer of spice complexity. The mineral quality from the distillery's famously hard water supply comes through clearly, making this a textbook example of place in a glass.

Cocktail — Coastal Old Fashioned — 2 oz Oban Little Bay · 0.25 oz honey syrup · 2 dashes orange bitters · Stir over a large ice cube, express orange peel over surface, garnish with peel.

Pair with: Pan-seared scallops with brown butter and capers

Irish Whiskey Waterford The Cuvée Single Malt Irish Whiskey

Waterford The Cuvée Single Malt Irish Whiskey

Founded by Mark Reynier in the former Guinness brewery on the banks of the River Suir, Waterford Distillery sources barley from over 80 Irish farms and tracks each lot from seed to bottle using blockchain-verified terroir mapping.

Classification: Single Malt Irish Whiskey

Brand: Waterford

Distillery: Waterford Distillery

Proof: 100 (50% ABV)

Age: NAS

Color: Pale straw with gold glints

MSRP: $55–$70

Mash Bill: 100% Irish-grown malted barley (multi-farm blend)

Distillation: Double distilled in Copper Pot Stills

Maturation: Predominantly first-fill American oak bourbon barrels with French oak influence

Chill-Filtered: No

Nose: Green cut grass and honey open the nose, followed by ripe peach and a subtle floral rosewater note. There's a faint nuttiness — almost hazelnut — lurking beneath a layer of vanilla.

Palate: Medium-bodied and bright, with malt sweetness balanced by an earthy, almost chalky minerality. Peach and honey dominate mid-palate, giving way to light clove spice and vanilla. A slight buttery quality rounds the edges.

Finish: Clean and moderately long, with green grass and malt fading into a gentle warmth.

The Verdict: Waterford's entire project is built on the idea that barley provenance matters, and The Cuvée blends multiple single-farm-origin distillates to create a composite portrait of Irish terroir. The mineral backbone here isn't accidental — it's the thesis statement. Non-chill-filtered and bottled at 50%, this is Irish whiskey treated with winemaker logic.

Pair with: Smoked trout with dill crème fraîche on brown bread

Awards: Gold, International Wine & Spirit Competition 2023

Tequila G4 Extra Añejo Tequila

G4 Extra Añejo Tequila

Fourth-generation tequilero Felipe Camarena distills G4 at his family's El Pandillo facility in the Jalisco highlands, using tahona-crushed agave, natural spring water from a volcanic aquifer, and a steadfast refusal to add any colorants or sweeteners.

Classification: Extra Añejo Tequila

Brand: G4

Distillery: El Pandillo Distillery (NOM 1579)

Proof: 80 (40% ABV)

Age: 3 Year minimum

Color: Deep amber with mahogany edges

MSRP: $130–$165

Agave: 100% Blue Weber Agave, highland-grown (Jesús María)

Cooking Method: Tahona and roller mill, natural spring water fermentation, no diffuser

NOM: 1579

Additives Free: Yes

Nose: Rich cooked agave and butterscotch greet the nose immediately. Toasted oak and dark chocolate follow, with quieter notes of vanilla and dried tropical fruit. A subtle mineral quality — like wet river stone — threads through the sweetness.

Palate: Viscous and layered, with caramel and cinnamon dominating the entry. Mid-palate brings leather, coffee, and a savory earthiness that anchors the oak-driven sweetness. The agave is still clearly present despite three years in barrel — a hallmark of additive-free production.

Finish: Long and complex, with tobacco, oak, and a final flicker of cooked agave lingering on the palate.

The Verdict: Felipe Camarena's G4 line is renowned for transparency and traditional methods, and this extra añejo proves that extended aging doesn't have to erase the agave. The volcanic soil of the Jesús María highlands contributes a mineral depth that distinguishes G4 from sweeter, more commercial extra añejos. This is tequila for whiskey drinkers who want to understand what oak does to agave.

Pair with: Mole negro with slow-braised short ribs

Awards: Gold, Tequila Matchmaker Awards

Gin Brighton Gin Pavilion Strength

Brighton Gin Pavilion Strength

Distilled in small copper pot stills in the seaside city of Brighton, this gin uses water naturally filtered through the chalk beds of the South Downs and was created by Kathy Caton, who left a career in documentary filmmaking to pursue juniper-driven gin-making.

Classification: Navy Strength Dry Gin

Brand: Brighton Gin

Distillery: Brighton Gin Distillery

Proof: 114 (57% ABV)

Age: NAS

Color: Crystal clear

MSRP: $60 - $65

Style: Navy Strength London Dry

Botanicals: Juniper, coriander seed, angelica root, orange peel, locally foraged botanicals

Base Spirit: Neutral Grain Spirit

Distillation: One-shot distillation in copper pot still

Nose: Bold juniper leads with a distinctly piney, resinous character. Fresh coriander seed and orange peel emerge behind it, followed by a whisper of angelica root and a chalky, almost flinty mineral note from the South Downs water.

Palate: Intensely juniper-forward without tipping into harshness. The higher proof amplifies the citrus — grapefruit and lemon come through clearly — while peppery spice and a touch of orris root add complexity. Remarkably smooth for navy strength.

Finish: Long and warming, with pine juniper and cracked black pepper persisting. A clean, dry close.

The Verdict: Brighton Gin's navy strength expression is unapologetically about juniper, and at 57% ABV it has the backbone to stand up in any cocktail without losing its identity. The chalk-filtered water from the South Downs aquifer gives it a clean, mineral quality that separates it from many navy strength competitors. This is structured gin with terroir you can taste.

Cocktail — Chalk Martini — 2.5 oz Brighton Gin Pavilion Strength · 0.5 oz dry vermouth · Stir with ice for 30 seconds, strain into frozen coupe, garnish with lemon twist.

Pair with: Fresh oysters with mignonette

Awards: Gold, International Wine & Spirit Competition

Rum Clairin Sajous Ansyen 18 Mois

Clairin Sajous Ansyen 18 Mois

Michel Sajous cultivates native Haitian sugarcane on his family's estate near Saint-Michel-de-l'Attalaye, fermenting the fresh-pressed juice with ambient wild yeast and distilling it on a simple copper pot still before resting the spirit in ex-bourbon casks.

Classification: Aged Haitian Rhum (Clairin)

Brand: Clairin

Distillery: Distillerie Chelo (Michel Sajous)

Proof: 112 - 114 (56% - 57% ABV)

Age: 18 Months

Color: Pale gold with green tinges

MSRP: $65–$75

Base Ingredients: Fresh sugarcane juice (native Haitian varieties)

Distillation: pot still

Nose: Grassy, almost vegetal agricole character with tropical fruits — overripe banana and guava. Underneath, there's a distinctive mineral, almost chalky earthiness unique to Haitian sugarcane juice spirits. Light vanilla from brief cask contact.

Palate: Lean and focused, with citrus zest and tropical fruit leading into a savory mid-palate of dried herbs and muscovado sugar. The oak is restrained — just enough to add structure without overwhelming the raw cane spirit. A funky, almost fermented fruit note adds depth.

Finish: Medium-long, with banana, agricole grassiness, and a clean mineral close.

The Verdict: Clairin Sajous Ansyen represents Haitian rum at its most transparent. Michel Sajous grows his own native sugarcane varieties on volcanic and limestone soils, ferments with wild yeast, and distills on a small copper pot still. The 18 months in American oak add polish without erasing provenance. This is terroir-driven rum in the most literal sense — the mineral signature of Haitian soil is printed on every sip.

Cocktail — Haitian Ti' Punch — 2 oz Clairin Sajous Ansyen · 0.5 oz fresh lime juice · 0.5 oz cane syrup · Build in rocks glass, add single large ice cube, stir briefly.

Pair with: Grilled jerk chicken with mango salsa

Red Wine Domaine de la Mordorée Lirac Rouge La Reine des Bois 2021

Domaine de la Mordorée Lirac Rouge La Reine des Bois 2021

Founded in 1986 by Christophe Delorme in the village of Tavel, Domaine de la Mordorée farms biodynamically across Lirac and Châteauneuf-du-Pape, coaxing complex wines from ancient limestone soils studded with river-smoothed stones.

Classification: Lirac AOC Rouge

Brand: Domaine de la Mordorée

Distillery: Domaine de la Mordorée

ABV: 14.5%

Primary Varietal: Grenache

Blend: Grenache, Syrah, Mourvèdre

Vineyards: La Reine des Bois lieu-dit, limestone and galets roulés soils

Maturation: Destemmed, fermented in concrete tanks, extended maceration

Color: Deep garnet with violet rim

MSRP: $35–$50

Nose: Ripe blackcurrant and cherry dominate, layered with violet and garrigue herbs. Beneath the fruit, there's a mineral, stony quality — the limestone terroir asserting itself — and a suggestion of cedar and toasted spice from oak aging.

Palate: Full-bodied and concentrated, with dark berry fruit and a firm tannic structure. Mid-palate brings cedar, mint, and a distinctive chalky minerality that lifts the wine and keeps it from becoming heavy. The finish echoes with cherry and a faint gamey note.

Finish: Long and structured, with fine-grained tannins, cedar, and lingering blackcurrant.

The Verdict: Lirac sits across the river from Châteauneuf-du-Pape and shares much of its geology — limestone, clay, and the famous galets roulés — at a fraction of the price. Mordorée's La Reine des Bois cuvée treats its terroir with as much seriousness as any Châteauneuf grand cru. The 2021 vintage brings freshness and precision to the powerful Southern Rhône fruit profile. Outstanding value for what's in the glass.

Pair with: Herb-crusted rack of lamb with gratin dauphinois

Awards: 93 points, Wine Advocate

White Wine Domaine Patrick Javillier Bourgogne Blanc Cuvée des Forgets 2022

Domaine Patrick Javillier Bourgogne Blanc Cuvée des Forgets 2022

Patrick Javillier has farmed his family's Meursault holdings since 1974, quietly building a reputation for Bourgogne-level wines that rival neighboring Premier Cru bottlings, thanks to old vines planted on Jurassic limestone just meters from more famous plots.

Classification: Bourgogne Blanc AOC

Brand: Domaine Patrick Javillier

Distillery: Domaine Patrick Javillier

ABV: 13%

Primary Varietal: Chardonnay

Blend: 100% Chardonnay

Vineyards: Cuvée des Forgets, Meursault-side Bourgogne appellation parcels on limestone soils

Vinification: Whole-cluster pressed, fermented in French oak barrels, aged on fine lees with bâtonnage

Color: Pale gold with green reflections

MSRP: $28–$40

Nose: Crisp green apple and citrus zest open the nose, followed by subtle white flowers and a distinctive chalky, mineral quality. A whisper of toasted almond from judicious oak use adds depth without weight.

Palate: Clean and focused, with citrus and apple flavors framed by a fine mineral backbone. The mid-palate shows a touch of honey and marzipan complexity, while the texture is creamy but never heavy. Good acidity keeps everything taut and precise.

Finish: Medium-length, with lingering citrus, a hint of toasted hazelnut, and a clean mineral close.

The Verdict: Patrick Javillier may be headquartered in Meursault, but this Bourgogne Blanc — sourced from vines on the Meursault side of the appellation — drinks well above its classification. The chalk and limestone soils stamp the wine with a mineral signature that's unmistakably Côte de Beaune. At this price point, it's one of the best introductions to serious white Burgundy available, proving that terroir doesn't require a Premier Cru price tag.

Pair with: Comté cheese soufflé with chives

Train Your Nose: Today's Aroma Spotlight

This issue's aroma theme is mineral transparency — the subtle, often overlooked signatures that geology imprints on fermented and distilled beverages. Train your nose to identify the flinty, chalky, and stony qualities hiding beneath fruit, spice, and oak.

Each product in today's lineup connects to a specific aroma profile you can train with your kit. Whether it's the charred oak of the bourbon, the coastal brine of the scotch, or the agave earthiness of the tequila — your nose is the instrument. Use the kit references below to isolate each aroma before your next pour, then see if you catch it in the glass.

Today's Kit Reference

Today's Product Key Aromas Train With
Kentucky Peerless Distilling Rye Whiskey (Bourbon) Rye, Caramel, Charred Oak, Cherry, Brown Spices Bourbon Kit
Oban Little Bay Single Malt Scotch Whisky (Scotch Whisky) Honey, Smoky, Orange, Caramel, Clove Spice, Malt Whisky Kit
Waterford The Cuvée Single Malt Irish Whiskey (Irish Whiskey) Green (Cut Grass), Honey, Peach, Malt, Vanilla Whiskey Kit
G4 Extra Añejo Tequila (Tequila) Agave (Cooked), Butterscotch, Oak, Chocolate (Dark Chocolate, Cocoa), Leather, Coffee Tequila Kit
Brighton Gin Pavilion Strength (Gin) Juniper (Pine), Coriander, Orange, Grapefruit, Peppery, Angelica Gin Kit
Clairin Sajous Ansyen 18 Mois (Rum) Agricole, Banana, Tropical Fruits, Vanilla, Muscovado Rum Kit
Domaine de la Mordorée Lirac Rouge La Reine des Bois 2021 (Red Wine) Blackcurrant, Cherry, Violet, Cedar, Mint Wine Kit
Domaine Patrick Javillier Bourgogne Blanc Cuvée des Forgets 2022 (White Wine) Apple (Green), Citrus (Generic), Honey, Toasted, Marzipan Wine Kit

Explore the School of Wine and Spirits

Sharpen your palate for these mineral nuances with the School of Wine and Spirits Aroma Training Kit, designed to isolate and teach the building-block aromas found across all eight categories. Our Aroma Masterclass Kits are designed to teach it to you, one aroma at a time.

Our books on Amazon go deeper into the science and history behind every sip — from America's Spirit, Scotland's Spirit, Ireland's Spirit, The Ultimate Northern Italian Wine Journey, The Tequila y Mezcal Revolution, Chablis, and Côte d'Or pocket guides.

Explore our Aroma Masterclass kits and books at schoolofwineandspirits.com

Join the School of Wine and Spirits Community

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The best palates aren't born — they're trained, one aroma at a time.

Know someone who'd love this? Forward this newsletter or share the link — and reply with your own tasting notes. We read every one.

Until tomorrow's pour — cheers.

Robert R. Mohr, CPA, CGMA, WSET Level 3, WSG Certified Spirits Specialist — author of America's Spirit, Scotland's Spirit, Ireland's Spirit, The Ultimate Northern Italian Wine Journey, The Tequila y Mezcal Revolution, The Definitive Pocket Guide to Chablis, The Definitive Pocket Guide to the Côte d'Or, and Strategic Tuning. Published author of the Aroma Academy Tequila/Mezcal and Distiller's training kits.

The Still & The Vine is a daily publication of the School of Wine and Spirits.

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