About
Tennessee's second whisky (spelled without the 'e', Scottish-style). Uses the Lincoln County charcoal mellowing process but chills the whisky first -- George Dickel believed cold winter whisky tasted smoother. Produces Barrel Select, Bottled in Bond, and limited single barrel releases.
Production Details
The George Dickel Tale
In the rolling hills of Coffee County, Tennessee, where the Highland Rim meets the Cumberland Plateau, Cascade Spring has bubbled from limestone bedrock for millennia. It was this water—iron-free, mineral-rich, constant in its forty-six-degree flow—that drew George Dickel to build his distillery here in 1870.
Dickel arrived with a German immigrant's precision and a conviction that would define his whisky: winter whisky tasted smoother than summer whisky. While other distillers accepted seasonal variation, Dickel refused. If cold weather improved his product, he reasoned, then he would make winter whisky year-round. He began chilling his whisky before filtering it through ten feet of sugar maple charcoal, a practice that continues today in the same Tennessee hills.
The Lincoln County Process—that slow drip through charcoal that distinguishes Tennessee whisky from bourbon—becomes something different in Dickel's hands. Where others filter at barrel proof and ambient temperature, Dickel chills first. The cold whisky moves differently through the charcoal, emerging with a character that George Dickel believed captured the essence of those perfect winter batches.
The distillery sits where Cascade Creek winds toward the Duck River, surrounded by the same hardwood forests that provide the sugar maple for charcoal. Inside the stillhouse, copper column stills work with methodical precision, while outside, the Tennessee seasons cycle through extremes that would have driven George Dickel to his chilling innovation.
Dickel spelled his whisky without the 'e'—a nod to the Scottish tradition he admired—but everything else about the operation speaks to Tennessee's particular genius. The mashbill, the charcoal mellowing, the limestone-filtered water, the barrel warehouses built into hillsides where temperature swings create the expansion and contraction that drives flavor deep into the wood.
Today, under Diageo's ownership, the distillery produces Barrel Select, Bottled in Bond expressions, and limited single barrel releases, each one carrying forward George Dickel's cold-weather revelation. The Cascade Spring still flows at forty-six degrees, the charcoal still comes from sugar maple, and somewhere in the maturation warehouses, barrels rest in the same Tennessee climate that first inspired a German immigrant to reinvent winter.
The whisky emerges as George Dickel intended—smooth as a cold January morning, distinctive as the limestone hills that cradle its creation.