Sazerac Barrel Select tour lets fans taste straight from the barrel
Launching this November, the new SBS member tour adds cask strength sampling inside historic warehouses plus a take home sister barrel bottle
Buffalo Trace is giving bourbon enthusiasts a rare opportunity, a chance to taste whiskey straight from the barrel at the Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort, Kentucky. Launching this November, the Sazerac Barrel Select program adds a guided tour designed for club members who want hands on time with the warehouses that shaped the flavor in their glass.
The program is free to join at SazeracBarrelSelect.com. Members earn points through brand engagement and purchases, unlocking the chance to book a warehouse tasting session. Each participant leaves with a bottle from a sister barrel drawn from the same floor and aging season, a keepsake that connects the glass in hand to a specific place in the rickhouse.
The speakeasy entry and elevator shaft tasting bay
Slip behind the bookcase
When tours begin this November, guests will step through a secret door hidden behind a library shelf inside the visitor centre. The passage opens into a dimly lit tunnel leading to a historic 1907 warehouse. The temperature drops, the air thickens with the scent of sugar and oak and you know you are somewhere special.
The first pour takes place inside a decommissioned elevator shaft converted into a tasting bay. A guide draws whiskey with a copper thief and fills small glasses for each guest. The proof is high, the color deep and the flavor unfiltered which shows why warehouse placement matters as much as mash bill.
Sampling directly from the barrel
After that first pour, guests move through the ricks to compare barrels with matching fill dates but aged in different warehouse environments. Differences in airflow, temperature and humidity create distinct expressions even at the same age. Buffalo Trace notes that each warehouse has its own microclimate which can produce subtle variations that make every barrel unique.
Tasting side by side makes it clear how placement and airflow influence maturity and mouthfeel. It is a hands on way to learn why single barrel bourbon varies not only by recipe but also by where it rests.
A legacy of single barrel bottlings
Buffalo Trace helped popularize single barrel bourbon for everyday drinkers. In the 1940s Albert Blanton marked favorite honey barrels in Warehouse H for personal pours. Decades later master distiller Elmer T. Lee bottled that idea as Blanton’s which launched a premium category that collectors still chase.
The SBS tour concludes in a lounge inside Warehouse D where guests taste their bourbons again at 90 proof from sister barrels. Visitors pick the profile that fits their palate and take home a bottle the same day which mirrors the thrill of a barrel pick without a long wait.

I’ll be there Nov 1-4! I hope it’s open by then…sounds like an amazing experience!