Basil Hayden's
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Type | Bourbon whiskey |
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Manufacturer | Beam Suntory |
Country of origin | Kentucky, United States |
Introduced | 1992 |
Alcohol by volume | 40.00% |
Proof (US) | 80 |
Related products | Jim Beam |
Website | basilhaydens.com |
Basil Hayden's is the lightest bodied bourbon whiskey in the family of Jim Beam small batch bourbons produced by Beam Suntory. It is 80 proof, in contrast with its three sibling brands of higher alcohol concentration (Knob Creek, Booker's, and Baker's).
The Basil Hayden's bourbon brand was introduced in 1992 and is named in honor of Basil Hayden, Sr. Hayden Sr. was a distiller, and he used a larger amount of rye in his mash than in some other bourbons. Later, Hayden's grandson Raymond B. Hayden[citation needed] founded a distillery in Nelson County and named his label "Old Grand-Dad", in honor of his grandfather, [1] which bears a rendering of Basil Sr.'s likeness. When Beam Industries introduced their "small batch" collection, among the four was "Basil Hayden's," which the company says uses a mash similar to that originally utilized by Hayden in 1792. In 2014, Basil Hayden, due to the ever increasing demand for Bourbon Whiskey, removed the "Aged 8 Years" from the label, and replaced it with "Artfully Aged". There is no noticeable difference, even though it is no longer aged for 8 years.
History of the Haydens
Basil Hayden, Sr. was a Maryland Catholic that led a group of twenty-five Catholic families from Maryland into what is now Nelson County, Kentucky (near Bardstown) in 1785.[citation needed] There Hayden donated the land for the first Catholic church west of the Alleghenies and the first Catholic church in what is now the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
The Heydons (original spelling) emigrated to the Virginia Colony in the 1660s, when much of Britain became inhospitable to Catholics. Francis Hayden, Basil Sr.'s great-grandfather and the first Heydon (then switching to Hayden), moved from Virginia to Maryland in 1678, settling in St. Mary's County on St. Clement's Bay, where the family remained until Basil led his band of Catholic families into present-day Nelson County, Kentucky. During the American Revolution, Basil Sr. supplied provisions to the Colonial Army.[citation needed]
Hayden's family can be traced back to England (Norfolk) to the period shortly after the Norman Conquest.[citation needed] One ancestor, Simon de Heydon, was knighted by Richard the Lionheart in the Holy Land during the Third Crusade in the 1190s.[citation needed] His son, Thomas de Heydon, was made Justice Itinerant of Norfolk by Henry III. Around 1400, another ancestor, John Heydon, appears to have been associated with "The Grove"[2] – a large estate in Watford (Hertfordshire), located about twenty miles northwest of London. Some researchers have speculated that John Heydon was given the estate for his father Sir Richard de Heydon's services in the French Wars, where Sir Richard perished.[3] Others are less sure. But Heydons definitely lived in Watford from the fourteenth through seventeenth centuries.[citation needed]
Reviews
Food critic Morgan Murphy said "The rye-heavy whiskey is aged 8 years and carries a buttery flavor and smooth, tannic finish."[4]
In popular culture
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- In the Friends episode "The One with the Girl from Poughkeepsie", Chandler Bing is bribed by a co-worker with some "Basil Hayden's" before the game, to set him up with Rachel, and he has no idea what it is.
- The Fountains of Wayne song "Red Dragon Tattoo" from the album Utopia Parkway features the line "Drink down a lot of Basil Hayden/Get kicked out when I can't see straight."
- Basil Hayden's whiskey—presumably the Old Grand-Dad variety first bottled in 1840—is mentioned at various times on the HBO series Deadwood as a high-class brand of bourbon served at Le Chez Amis and the preferred drink of Francis Wolcott. The madam Joanie Stubbs breaks a bottle over his head during the episode "Childish Things."
- In the 2011 James Bond novel by Jeffery Deaver, Carte Blanche, Bond's bourbon of choice at his flat is Basil Hayden's.
References
- ↑ Beam Suntory: Old Grand-Dad History
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- ↑ Hayden Family History: The Watford/Hertfordshire Branch
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