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Mike And Matt Taste Hayner Whiskeys

Hayner is an old brand of whiskey. The 1899 Mida’s Criteria registry of trademarks has the Hayner trademark registered first in 1894 by William A. Hayner. However, the trademark itself has an 1866 date on the illustration of the registered trademark. This is not unusual. Companies would often go many years before registering the trademark. This means they were a local brand and did not need the expense of registering the trademark until they expanded their market. In the 1890s. Hayner became a very large mail order brand. They had advertisements for their whiskey in many national publications and needed to protect their brand, thus they registered the trademark.

Prohibition shut down the business and the brand was forgotten by all except those who collected old bottles and advertisements. Hayner was famous for creating a bar decanter with a combination lock as a stopper. The Oscar Getz Museum has one of these bottles in their collection. When the brand was revived in Troy, Ohio in the 21st century, the new owners paid homage to those old bar decanters by designing a bottle that looks very similar to it. I recently received bottles of the Hayner Bourbon and Rye whiskeys from Matt’s partner, my niece, Becca, so Matt and I sat down and tasted them. Here are our tasting notes.

Hayner Bourbon, Batch 1 Bottled July 14, 2021

Proof: 90

Age: Three Years Old (15% 3 year old, 45% 4 year old, 40% 13 year old Bourbons)

Nose:

Taste:

Finish:

Hayner Rye Whiskey Batch 2 Bottled October 5, 2021

Proof: 90

Age: No Age Statement

Nose:

Taste:

Finish:

I would pair these whiskeys with a cigar that has a lot of vanilla and cedar spiciness to the smoke. I would reach for a Padron 1926 Series.

Photos Courtesy of Rosemary Miller

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