A deeply mature 95/5 rye that trades youthful brightness for layers of black tea, chocolate, oak, and lingering spice.
Stats
- Age: 13 year
- Proof: 116 (58% ABV)
- Mashbill: 95% Rye │ 5% Malted Barley
- Origin: Ross & Squibb (MGP) — Lawrenceburg, Indiana
- Finish: Straight
- Release: Limited release (180 bottles), single barrel
- MSRP: $130 (Silverthorn Reserve)
Tasting Notes
- Nose: The nose is intensely dark and inviting with maple syrup, milk chocolate, black tea, and mature oak. Hints of anise, baking spice, and spearmint linger in the background.
- Palate: A dense, coating mouthfeel delivers concentrated black tea tannins, rich oak, and dark sweetness. Tobacco spice begins emerging toward the end of the mid-palate, adding welcome structure.
- Finish: Rye spice finally takes center stage on the finish where it intertwines with chocolate ice cream, vanilla frosting, fig, and mature oak. The result is long, indulgent, and unmistakably mature.

This isn’t a bright, herbal rye.
Silverthorn’s 13 Year Rye Single Barrel leans heavily into maturity, delivering a profile built around oak, tea, chocolate, and deep sweetness. While rye spice remains present, it plays a supporting role for much of the experience before reasserting itself late.
For rye lovers who chase age and complexity, this is a rewarding pour.

Presentation
Silverthorn’s presentation leans into a minimalist, commandingly restrained aesthetic that immediately signals intent. The flattened cylinder bottle shape feels deliberate rather than decorative, with typography and labeling that place key information front and center without distraction. There’s a quiet confidence in how everything is laid out. Nothing is trying to compete for attention, yet everything feels considered.
The design language mirrors the whiskey itself: process-driven, not performance-driven. It avoids the temptation toward excess or ornamentation, instead emphasizing clarity and structure. Even at a glance, you understand this is a brand that prioritizes what’s inside the bottle over visual theatrics.
What stands out most is how the presentation reinforces the personality behind the whiskey. It’s minimal, thoughtful, and slightly reserved, but undeniably premium. Much like the craft behind the blends, it doesn’t need to announce itself loudly to be noticed. It simply earns attention through restraint and precision.


Distinctiveness
This rye occupies an interesting middle ground.
While not as unique as the High Malt Bourbon Blend in the second wave of Silverthorn’s releases, it offers a profile that is considerably more tannic, tea-driven, and oak-forward than most modern rye releases. The heavy black tea character creates a distinctive experience that seasoned rye drinkers will likely appreciate.

“…arguably one of the most distinctive bourbons I’ve tasted this year.”
Transparency
Silverthorn continues to set a standard few independent bottlers match.
Every component of the blend is disclosed, including distillery source, age, mashbill percentages, and blending proportions. Consumers are given virtually everything needed to understand what is in the bottle and how it was constructed.

Value
At $130 MSRP, this bottle exceeds the standard age-to-price equation.
Thirteen-year rye stocks continue to become increasingly scarce, and the quality of the whiskey itself supports the premium. For enthusiasts seeking mature rye, this represents strong value in today’s market.

Buy if:
- You enjoy heavily mature rye whiskey
- Black tea and oak are flavors you actively seek
- You appreciate dense, coating mouthfeel
- You’re looking for a contemplative sipping rye
Skip if:
- You prefer youthful, herbal rye profiles
- Heavy oak isn’t your preference
- You dislike tannic whiskey
- You want bright fruit to be the dominant note
Verdict
The 13 Year Rye Single Barrel is the bottle I kept returning to long after formal note taking ended.
Its profile leans unapologetically mature: black tea, chocolate, oak, tobacco spice, and lingering rye character woven together into a deeply satisfying pour. While some older ryes can become dominated by wood, this one still remembers it’s a rye.
For enthusiasts who appreciate age-driven complexity, this may be the standout bottle of the entire Silverthorn lineup.
For those who prefer numbers, here’s the full score breakdown:
- Nose: 6.2 / 7
- Palate: 6.4 / 7
- Finish: 6.4 / 7
- Presentation: 5 / 7
- Distinctiveness: 5.5 / 7
- Transparency: 7 / 7
- Value: 6 / 7
Bourbon Bishop Rating: 6.07 / 7 – Divine
Top-shelf. Must-buy for fans of the style.
| Score | Descriptor | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0–1 | Hell No | Drain pour. Seriously undrinkable. |
| 1.1–2 | Purgatory | Bad, but could be worse. Only in extreme cases. |
| 2.1–3 | Only Earthly | Just okay. Best used as a mixer. |
| 3.1–4 | Bliss | Passable to Good sipper. Works well in cocktails. |
| 4.1–5 | Angelic | Good to great. Often high value for the price. |
| 5.1–6 | Divine | Top-shelf. Must-buy for fans of the style. |
| 6.1–7 | Holy Heaven | Out-of-this-world. A true unicorn. |
Disclosure: This bottle was provided to me free of charge for review. All opinions are my own.
About Silverthorn Reserve
Silverthorn Reserve is the passion project of Drew Thorn — a builder at heart with over 30 years in fermentation and spirits.
His path runs through Flying Dog Brewery and the founding of Sagamore Spirit, where he helped establish modern Maryland rye. Silverthorn, though, is more personal — smaller scale, highly controlled, and rooted in precision blending and finishing.
That precision shows up in everything from barrel selection to blending technique. Even un-finished releases benefit from his approach of re-entering blends into used barrels to marry and further age, rather than bottling immediately.

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