Distillery: Heaven Hill Distillery – Bardstown, Kentucky
Proof: 100.0 (50.0% ABV)
Age: Four Years
Mashbill: 51% Rye, 37% Corn, 12% Malted Barley
MSRP: $43
When Mashbill Does the Work
Rittenhouse Bottled in Bond Straight Rye is bottled at the required 100 proof under the Bottled-in-Bond designation. Rittenhouse is a familiar label for many whiskey enthusiasts and one that is often overlooked precisely because of its availability and price.
What makes Rittenhouse particularly useful is not novelty, but reliability. With no secondary finishing, no elevated proof, and no gimmickry, it offers us a chance to evaluate rye on its own terms.
Rather than chasing intensity or refinement, Rittenhouse focuses on balance. A balance that isn’t accidental. With a mashbill that leans heavily on the support of corn, Rittenhouse behaves differently than the high-rye expressions that dominate much of the rye whiskey category. The proof enhances flavor, and the overall experience is well composed from start to finish.
Rittenhouse Bottled-in-Bond Rye Whiskey Review: Tasting Notes

Nose – 3.9/5
Caramel. Mint. Dusty grain.
Strengths: The Nose is immediately familiar in a good way. Caramel sweetness leads, followed by cool mint notes. Nothing jumps out aggressively. It noses like a whiskey that knows exactly what it’s meant to be.
Why It’s Not Higher: While pleasant and clean, the Nose stays consistent rather than revealing new depth.
Rating Justification: A well-defined, balanced Nose that sets expectations clearly, even if it doesn’t offer a surprise.
Palate – 4.1/5
Sweet entry. Mid-palate rye spice. Balanced oak.
Strengths: Quietly outperforms expectations. Sweetness arrives first, then gives way to rye spice through the middle of the sip without feeling rushed or abrupt. The proof feels perfectly calibrated and enhances the flavors rather than overpowering them.
Why It’s Not Higher: The flavor arc is familiar. There’s no deeper complexity that pushes it to be overly memorable.
Rating Justification: A well-structured Palate where balance and clarity outshines intensity.
Finish – 3.8/5
Medium length. Drying oak. Light bitterness.
Strengths: The Finish carries the rye character forward from the Palate. A touch of oak bitterness that feels intentional, not rough.
Why It’s Not Higher: The bitterness shows up slightly ahead of any lingering sweetness or spice which causes the Finish to shorten more than one might desire.
Rating Justification: A solid Finish that reinforces the quality of the Palate but doesn’t significantly enhance the overall experience.
Value – 4.2/5
Rittenhouse Straight Rye overdelivers for its price. As a Bottled-in-Bond rye with a dependable flavor clarity, it offers far more quality than its reputation might suggest. The proof enhances rather than overwhelms.
For enthusiasts looking to understand rye fundamentals, or to recalibrate your expectations of a rye whiskey, this bottle offers excellent value.
Rittenhouse Bottled-in-Bond Rye Whiskey Review: The Verdict
Rittenhouse Straight Rye is a reminder that familiarity and simplicity are not the same thing. The whiskey is balanced, composed, and more flavorful than many might assume, with a proof point that actively improves the experience rather than merely satisfying the legal requirement.
It doesn’t stretch beyond its lane, but it performs extremely well within it. For those willing to slow down and taste without bias, Rittenhouse proves that a dependable, widely available rye can offer real quality….and earn respect in the 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.