I would be remiss not to point out that Bourbon only comes from Kentucky, everything else is whiskey. Now read this from Thrillist then watch the video:
Excessive reliance on imports can ruin your economy, an idea that's all Greek to Greece. Now making in Texas what Texans consume most, Garrison Brothers Distillery.
A homegrown Hill Country operation from a former GSD&M-er, Garrison has proudly crafted TX's first bourbon, strictly following our national spirit's standards (distilling sub-160 proof, barreling sub-120 proof, 51% corn, maturing in white American oak), while dispelling the myth that the stuff must be Kentucky-made the same way Champagne must come from Champagne, and Wild Irish Rose must come from C-Mart. The raw materials: 200ac of organic grain grown on-site, corn from the Panhandle, Pac-NW barley, and limestone-heavy groundwater tested to meet Bourbon County specs by Maker's and Buffalo Trace reps, all combining in the barrel to create a long velvety finish and a complex flavor profile dominated by smoked butterscotch, which fortunately tastes nothing like the butterscotch Kids' Telly smoked. Although they've been quietly distilling for a bit (under the pre-release name Young Gun), they've now expanded capacity (up to 5000gal of mash a day), and've just begun visitor programs: the quick "Whiskey Road Trip" (walk-through + tasting), the more intensive "Sit and Sip" (tastes at various stages of distilling), and, promising a full-on education + a take-home barrel, a package called "Old 300" -- also the pre-green-screen-era version of the movie, which basically involved naked guys running around fighting no one.
Finding a bottle of Garrison on the shelves is rare, so your best bets beside the distillery are hooch-houses like tenOak and Trifecta on 3rd -- where you can wreck your economy, throw up your hands, and say you can't pay, and hope someone bails you out in the morning.
Excessive reliance on imports can ruin your economy, an idea that's all Greek to Greece. Now making in Texas what Texans consume most, Garrison Brothers Distillery.
A homegrown Hill Country operation from a former GSD&M-er, Garrison has proudly crafted TX's first bourbon, strictly following our national spirit's standards (distilling sub-160 proof, barreling sub-120 proof, 51% corn, maturing in white American oak), while dispelling the myth that the stuff must be Kentucky-made the same way Champagne must come from Champagne, and Wild Irish Rose must come from C-Mart. The raw materials: 200ac of organic grain grown on-site, corn from the Panhandle, Pac-NW barley, and limestone-heavy groundwater tested to meet Bourbon County specs by Maker's and Buffalo Trace reps, all combining in the barrel to create a long velvety finish and a complex flavor profile dominated by smoked butterscotch, which fortunately tastes nothing like the butterscotch Kids' Telly smoked. Although they've been quietly distilling for a bit (under the pre-release name Young Gun), they've now expanded capacity (up to 5000gal of mash a day), and've just begun visitor programs: the quick "Whiskey Road Trip" (walk-through + tasting), the more intensive "Sit and Sip" (tastes at various stages of distilling), and, promising a full-on education + a take-home barrel, a package called "Old 300" -- also the pre-green-screen-era version of the movie, which basically involved naked guys running around fighting no one.
Finding a bottle of Garrison on the shelves is rare, so your best bets beside the distillery are hooch-houses like tenOak and Trifecta on 3rd -- where you can wreck your economy, throw up your hands, and say you can't pay, and hope someone bails you out in the morning.