Bourbon Heritage Month – September 2022
19 Sep 2022
Bourbon Heritage Month – September 2022

Since bourbon is widely recognized as "America's Native Spirit," the whole month of September is designated as "National Bourbon Heritage Month" in the United States. The Senate of the United States proclaimed September 2007 as "National Bourbon Heritage Month" on August 2, 2007. The resolution urges bourbon drinkers to do so with discretion and moderation. Concurrently authorized by both houses of Congress in 1964, this bill offers added authority to the 1964 resolution that "recognized Bourbon whiskey as a distinctive product of the United States."

For 2007, and only 2007 was the scope of this resolution. To be officially honored annually, it must be re-enacted or incorporated into a statute that cannot be amended. Regarding Rare Bourbons in Ontario, the options are wide now to celebrate the month of 2022.

Bardstown, in the state of Kentucky, has celebrated America's Native Spirit and National Bourbon Heritage Month by holding the Kentucky Bourbon Festival each September since 1991. The festival honors the tradition of making Bourbon whiskey and its rich heritage. It's time to choose the bourbon that best represents this month's mood.

Love for Bourbon

If you've just been in love, you know the feeling of everything being on top of the world. To keep things interesting, there will come a moment when you need to inject a little bit of drama. This is not our first article advising on how to have a successful love relationship; instead, we'll be talking about bourbon. There is a certain charm to the first encounter with anything new, which may be found everywhere. A need for more complexity, subtlety, and variation from bottle to bottle emerges, however, as experience grows. In this context, rare and exotic bourbons come into play.

Best of Bourbon

These ten extraordinary bottles showcase the best of what can be done with bourbon in terms of flavor and production (they also expand what you can pay). Some are easily accessible if you are willing to spend the money, while others need more digging. If you do track one down, you'll not only be able to boast about your exclusive find as you pass the bottle around the campfire or fire pit, but you'll also get to try something extraordinary. For Allocated bourbons in Ontario, the options are right there.

If you hang around with whiskey aficionados for any length of time, you'll eventually hear the terms "assigned bottles," "allocated bourbon," and "the allocated market" used about whiskey. Allocated whiskies may be found on the menus of many bars and restaurants, and some general stores and bottle shops even have whole sections of their inventories dedicated to these drinks.

Conclusion

One must never forget who is in control of allocating resources. Due to the three-tier system that emerged in the United States when Prohibition was repealed in 1933 (importers or producers, distributors, and retailers), allocation is often handled by distributors rather than producers. Distributors typically decide where and how to distribute the most sought-after bottles they stock; thus, these bottles may be used as incentives for their most loyal consumers. That is to say, distributors are in charge of the bottles they ship out. Retailers claim that if you sell a large quantity of a product that the distributor is eager to shift, you will be invited to participate in a special promotion.

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