
A little background
The Elijah Craig Single Barrel 21 Years Old marks a milestone for Heaven Hill — the return of the age statement on Elijah Craig for the first time since 2013. Built on Heaven Hill’s well-established mashbill of 78% corn, 10% rye, and 12% malted barley, this expression carries two-plus decades of barrel time and arrives bottled at 94 proof — a slight bump from the original 90-proof release that gives the whiskey a touch more structure without overwhelming its refined character. Retail price sits at $300, and this review covers barrel 62 specifically.
The jump from no age statement back to a declared 21 years is a bold move, and Heaven Hill isn’t shy about letting that time in wood speak for itself. The Elijah Craig Single Barrel 21 Years Old is positioned as a premium, limited release that leans fully into the complexity that only comes from serious barrel age. At 47% ABV, it sits in that sweet spot where the proof supports the whiskey without masking what the years have built — and from the first pour, it’s clear this bourbon has something to say.
(Tasted neat from a Glencairn Glass)
Color
Caramel
| Mash Bill | Nose | Taste | Finish |
|---|---|---|---|
| 78% Corn / 10% Rye / 12% Malted Barley | Lovely and inviting with notes of honeysuckle, oak, and cherry. There isn’t a hint of ethanol, allowing every aroma to shine. | Velvety and oily, coating the entire mouth with sweet oak, vanilla, hints of mint, and marshmallow. Rich, balanced, and refined. | The mint carries into the finish, becoming cool and refreshing alongside a delicate floral note. The cherry returns with more intensity, while sweet oak and cherry linger long between sips. |
In closing
At the end of the day, the Elijah Craig Single Barrel 21 Years Old is about as complete a bourbon as you’ll find on the market right now. From an inviting nose free of any harsh ethanol to a velvety, oily palate that coats the mouth with sweet oak, vanilla, and marshmallow, every stage of this whiskey delivers. The finish is a genuine standout — cool mint transitions into floral delicacy before cherry and sweet oak settle in for a long, satisfying close. The oily viscosity that runs through the entire experience elevates the Elijah Craig Single Barrel 21 Years Old well above what its 94 proof might suggest on paper.
Yes, $300 is a steep ask, and in a bourbon market crowded with inflated price tags that don’t always deliver, skepticism is reasonable. But Heaven Hill earns it here. This level of complexity and refinement — the kind that only comes from two decades in a barrel and a distillery that knows exactly what it’s doing — is increasingly hard to find. The Elijah Craig Single Barrel 21 Years Old isn’t just a noteworthy comeback for the age statement; it’s a bourbon that justifies every dollar of that investment.



