Session 19
Age, allocation & the market
Session 19 · Block F — Sourcing & Market

Age, allocation
& the market

The bourbon market runs on scarcity, age statements, and hype. This session is about reading it clearly — how it works, not how to play it.

Duration
45 min
You’ll need
Nothing required
Objective
Read the market; separate hype from quality
Reading · 1 of 2

How the market actually works

Click through the forces that set what you can find and what you pay:

A note on scope — and this moves fast

This is a how the market works session, not pricing or flipping advice. The secondary market — person-to-person resale above retail — operates in a legal gray zone: reselling alcohol without a license is illegal in most US states. Allocation practices, specific "unicorn" bottles, and secondary prices also change fast and vary by state, so treat any specific figure as dated the moment it’s written and verify locally. The durable lesson is the framework, not the prices.

Reading · 2 of 2

The antidote is your palate

Allocation and secondary prices track scarcity and marketing, not blind-tasting quality. Some allocated bottles are superb; some are ordinary whiskey with a great story. The single best defense against overpaying for hype is the skill this whole course has built: the ability to taste what’s actually in the glass, blind, and judge it on structure and balance rather than the label.

Where value really lives

Bottled-in-Bond bottles, standard single barrels, and well-made high-corn and high-rye bourbons — all at retail — routinely out-drink allocated "unicorns" selling for 5–10x more. Buy for the glass, not the label. That’s the whole game.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. What does a stated age on a label actually tell you?
  2. What is allocation, and why does it create retail scarcity?
  3. What is the legal status of the secondary market?
  4. Do secondary prices track blind quality? What do they track?
  5. Where does reliable value most often live?
Session 20 · Block F — Consolidation

Consolidation
& final

One pour, read completely — from the grain in the mash to the barrel that colored it to the market that priced it. Then the final, and a door to the wider whiskey world.

Duration
55 min
You’ll need
Your favorite bourbon
Objective
Synthesise the course; pass the final
Reading · 1 of 2

The whole arc, in one glass

Pick up any bourbon and you can now read its entire life. The mash bill (Session 4) predicts sweet vs spicy vs soft; fermentation and yeast (5) set the fruity esters; distillation proof (6) decided how much body survived; the new charred oak barrel (7) gave nearly all the color and a huge share of the flavor; the label tier (13) tells you age, origin, and proof; and the market (18–19) explains the price — which may have little to do with what’s in the glass. That causal chain, read backward from a single sip, is bourbon literacy.

Reading · 2 of 2

One step beyond — the wider whiskey world

Bourbon was the ideal place to build the method precisely because its rules are so strict. Now the same Tasting Instrument — grain, distillation, wood, proof — transfers outward. Click through where it leads:

Where to go next

Scotch is the natural next course — it earns its own twenty sessions, because used casks, peat, and regionality are whole subjects in themselves. For now: keep a tasting log, taste blind when you can, and let the palate you built here lead. Bourbon Curious (Fred Minnick) and the annual releases from serious independent bottlers are good next stops.

The final · 12 questions

Comprehensive mock

Drawn from the whole course. 75% (9/12) is a solid pass.

Capstone drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
Course complete

You can read a pour.

Twenty sessions from grain to glass to market. The palate is yours to keep training — one honest, responsible pour at a time.

Final step

Mark the course complete

Then pour something worth reading.