About Journeyman Ravenswood Rye Whiskey
Journeyman Ravenswood Rye is made by distilling a mash of 60% rye and 40% wheat in a 1000-liter, copper pot still imported from Germany. Welter sources the wheat from a local farmer in Michigan and the rye from a farmer in Illinois. The grains are produced without the use of synthetic fertilizers, artificial pesticides, herbicides, antibiotics, growth hormones, feed additives, or genetically modified organisms and enable Journeyman Distillery to be certified organic by the Midwest Organic Services Association.
Following distillation, Welter ages the rye in newly charred, 15-gallon, American oak casks. The small casks, which result in more contact between the rye and the oak than traditional casks, allow for faster maturation, while at the same time, adding notes of butterscotch and vanilla to the rye. Following maturation, Welter fills and labels each bottle by hand.
The original batch of Journeyman Ravenswood Rye was made in the Chicago neighborhood of Ravenswood. While production was eventually moved to the Featherbone building, the name lives on today. Only 800 bottles of Ravenswood Rye have ever been produced. Try some today!
About Journeyman
The Featherbone Factory — built by E.K. Warren in the 19th century to manufacture women's corsets — sits on the banks of Lake Michigan just across the Indiana border in Three Oaks, Michigan. As the factory changed hands in the twentieth century, it became a production site for everything from buggy whips to pickles. Today, it's home to Journeyman Distillery and Bill Welter, Journeyman's master distiller.
Welter, who was formerly a banker in Indiana, began his journey when his family business was sold in 2006. He moved to Scotland, where he began to learn the art of craft distillation from Greg Ramsay (master distiller at Nant Distillery) and Bill Lark (master distiller at Lark Distillery). After returning to the United States, Welter spent time producing and resting whiskey using a prominent organic & kosher distiller’s facility in Chicago before opening the doors of his own distillery in Three Oaks with the intention to offer grain-to-glass spirits from day one/drop one.
About Rye
As American as the bald eagle, rye whiskey was first brewed in the American Northeast in the 1600s. Even George Washington distilled it after leaving the Oval Office, so there’s no way of denying its origin.
It’s distinguished from bourbon for its original and unique spicy notes.
By law, rye whiskey must be made from at least 51% rye grain, aged in new and charred oak barrels for at least two years, and bottled at no more than 62,5% ABV.
Check out our impressive selection of rye whiskeys, find your new favorites in The best-reviewed rye whiskeys, and explore our treasury of Best rye bottles under $100.