Distillery: Chicken Cock Whiskey – Bardstown, Kentucky
Proof: 94.0 (47.0% ABV)
Age: Five Years
Mashbill: 68% Corn, 20% Wheat, 12% Malted Barley
MSRP: $55
Smooth, steady, and made for everyday sipping
Chicken Cock Wheated Kentucky Straight Bourbon replaces their Small Batch expression with a significant and deliberate shift. Crafted and aged in Bardstown, Kentucky, this 5-year-old bourbon carries a mash bill of 68% corn, 20% wheat, and 12% malted barley. Bottled at 94 proof. On paper, that signals a move away from their typical rye-influenced profile toward something softer, rounder, and accessible to a wider audience of consumers.
At $55 MSRP, it lands in a competitive space where expectations start to stretch beyond simple drinkability. This is not positioned as an entry-level bottle on price, even if the profile suggests it may aim for a broader audience. With that, the question becomes increasingly about how it performs.
This is a bourbon that leans into a wheated mash bill, lower proof structure, and a focus on integration rather than intensity. Whether that approach delivers enough distinction at this price point ultimately defines the experience.
Chicken Cock Wheated Bourbon Review: Tasting Notes

Nose – 4.0/5
Soft sweetness. Muted buttered popcorn. Light caramel. Gentle oak.
Strengths: The Nose is balanced. Nothing feels out of place or overly sharp. The buttered popcorn note (more muted than freshly popped) gives it some recognizable note without pushing too far into sweetness.
Why It’s Not Higher: The Nose lacks significant definition. It leans more blended than expressive. For an enthusiasts, this will not land well. For beginner-to-light experienced drinkers, this won’t matter.
Rating Justification: A Nose that invites repeated visits, but it doesn’t offer enough clarity or intensity to push higher.
Palate – 4.1/5
Soft caramel. Honeyed sweetness. Light grain. Subtle cinnamon warmth.
Strengths: The Palate is smooth and holds together. Sweetness cleanly carries the sip. The slight cinnamon warmth toward the back half provides just enough lift to keep the sip from feeling flat or one dimensional.
Why It’s Not Higher: Like the Nose, the Palate is more integrated than defined. Flavors are present but not sharply outlined. There is limited development across the sip.
Rating Justification: The balance and ease of drinking are clear strengths. It delivers exactly what the profile suggests, but without significant complexity or contrast.
Finish – 4.2/5
Lingering sweetness. Soft cinnamon warmth. Gentle oak.
Strengths: The Finish holds together better than expected at 94 proof. No dryness or collapse. The warmth spreads nicely across the entirety of your tongue.
Why It’s Not Higher: While it maintains continuity, it doesn’t evolve significantly. The Finish simply stays steady rather than building.
Rating Justification: Medium-length Finish. No tannic dryness is a strong outcome at this proof. Reinforces the whiskey’s core identity of consistency.
Value – 3.8/5
At $55, this bourbon sits above traditional entry-level pricing while delivering a profile designed for ease of consumption. Compared to many wheated bourbons in this range, it offers a reliable sipping experience. But, it does not clearly separate itself in terms of complexity, uniqueness, or intensity.
If you prioritize smoothness, the Value will feel justified. For those seeking higher proof or more defined flavor profiles, it will likely feel priced slightly above what it delivers.
Chicken Cock Wheated Bourbon Review: The Verdict
Chicken Cock Wheated Kentucky Straight Bourbon is built around consistency. From Nose to Finish, it holds steady without sharp edges, dramatic shifts, or aggressive influence from the barrel. The result is a whiskey that is easy to return to sip after sip, with a Finish that performs better than expected for its proof.
For drinkers looking for a casual, reliable pour with a softer profile, it succeeds at a high level. For enthusiasts seeking definition, intensity, or complexity, it will likely feel limited.
This is a whiskey designed to be enjoyed, not analyzed. Whether that’s a strength or a limitation depends entirely on what you’re looking for in your glass.
Verdict – 4.0/5

We score each bourbon based on nose, palate, finish, and value.
Scoring System:
- Platinum – 4.5 – 5
- Gold – 4 – 4.5
- Silver – 3 – 4
- Bronze – <3

Mike Long is a staff writer at Bourbon Inspector and has an Executive Bourbon Steward designation from the Stave and Thief Society. He’s a former “wine guy” who discovered his love for bourbon years back at a spur-of-the-moment bourbon tasting he attended. He also loves traveling throughout America with his wife of over 37 years, Debby.