LOL! OZ Taylor? The infamous gimmicky shaking barrels?!!!! No thanks for any NDP that doesn't source from MGP, BT, or Tennessee. OZ Taylor means overpriced 3 year old whiskey. No thanks. OZ Taylor doesn't age anything 6 years that I know of. I need proof to believe this. Please provide proof that OZ Taylor is aging anything 6 years. Seems they're part of Bardstown Bourbon now. My! how times have changed.
OZ is now (back to) Green River.
Kentucky-based OZ Tyler Distillery has returned to its original name, Green River Distilling Company, to celebrate the site’s heritage
www.thespiritsbusiness.com
For starters here's a Green River that's 6:
Green River Distilling Co. is the perfect marriage of a historic backstory backed up by great whiskey. Green River was originally established in 1885 but closed down before Prohibition due to a fire. It wasn't until 2014 that the property was acquired and renovations began. In 2020, the company...
seelbachs.com
Think all of the oldest stuff out there is 6-7 years. I have several Shortbarrel OZ Tyler Picks and several of these Green River Picks that are 6+ years. I think you're referring to when they were trying to do the 1 year 1 day thing and then the TerrePure process and then sell it. This is not that.
The SB OZ Ryes have outblinded some other favorite ryes (Sagamore 8 yr, multiple OF cask strength SiBs, Michter's BS, Prideful Goat, Redwood Empire Cask, etc) several times. The bourbon holds it's own with some of my better bottles as well. I'm not sure if all of the stuff at OZ Tyler utilized that TerrePure process or if Green River is using it currently, but the stuff I've had that's been sourced from there is damn good. I'd recommend you try before you write it off. The Green River base stuff is really good too. I really like the Full Proof for an easy to find, well priced full proof bourbon.
SB does have some MGP stuff too (from 5 to 12 years that I've seen), but honestly I've preffered the OZs to most of them.
According to this, that TerrePure process was abandoned pretty quickly:
The TerrePURE process was developed by the Terressentia Corporation back around 2007. It is used to rapidly age bourbon. But, does it work?
bourbonobsessed.com