Rating Breakdown
Flavor Profile
Tasting Journey
Nose
Toasted oak, caramel, roasted nuts, vanilla pudding, honey, dark cherry, dried dark fruit, barrel char
Palate
Cinnamon, black pepper, sweet caramel, toasted pecan, dark chocolate, crème brûlée, peppermint, table syrup, substantial mouthfeel
Finish
Length: Very LongVery long—cocoa, dried dark fruit, oak, baking spice, woody and peppery close that refuses to end
Specs
Price / Value
MSRP: $60
Your Rating
Click to rate
Our Score: 89/100
Pairings
Food
- Dark chocolate fondant
- espresso-rubbed steak
- aged Gruyère
- pecan pie
- bourbon-glazed short ribs
Cocktails
- Barrel-proof Old Fashioned
- after-dinner neat pour
- Manhattan with chocolate bitters
Our Verdict
Old Forester 1920 is the high-proof bourbon that nobody fights over—and everyone should. Rich, chocolatey, and possessed of one of the longest finishes in bourbon, it embarrasses many bottles at twice the price. The dark horse that keeps winning.
Buy NowThree Perspectives
Our editorial panel weighs in.
Marcus Chen
The Explorer
Rich caramel, oak, chocolate, cherry. Prohibition-style intensity.
Bold oak, dark caramel, baking spice, hint of leather. 115 proof shows up.
Long, oaky finish with lingering heat and spice.
“Bought this at Total Wine for $55 after a bartender recommended it for Manhattans. The 115 proof makes it perfect for cocktails—cuts through everything without disappearing. Neat it's almost too oaky for my taste, like drinking a well-seasoned whiskey barrel. Made Manhattans for a dinner party and they were incredible, but I caught myself wishing I'd just used $30 Elijah Craig and saved $25. It's good bourbon, definitely above average, but at this price I'm comparing it to Wild Turkey Rare Breed and I think I prefer that. Still, the Prohibition-era branding is cool and it makes a solid gift.”
William Hayes
The Connoisseur
Intense caramel, vanilla, and oak with dark fruit and baking spices. The 115 proof delivers aromatic power that commands attention.
Full-bodied and rich—brown sugar, chocolate, cinnamon, and charred oak with excellent complexity. This is high-proof bourbon done with finesse.
Long, satisfying finish with oak tannins, spice, and lingering sweetness. The proof delivers warmth without harshness.
“Old Forester's Whiskey Row series launched in 2015, and the 1920 Prohibition Style immediately caught my attention—115 proof bourbon that actually tastes like pre-Prohibition whiskey would have. I attended a master distiller dinner with Jackie Zykan in 2017 where she explained how they reverse-engineered recipes from Old Forester's archives, and the attention to historical detail impressed me. This isn't marketing nostalgia; it's legitimate bourbon archaeology. I've been drinking Old Forester since the 1980s when nobody considered it premium, and watching them reclaim their heritage as America's first bottled bourbon has been deeply satisfying. This expression proves they deserve to be mentioned alongside Buffalo Trace and Heaven Hill.”
Sophia Laurent
The Host
Rich and intense—caramel, chocolate, oak, and dark fruit. The high proof is evident but there's real complexity underneath.
Big and bold with layers of toffee, espresso, leather, and baking spices. It demands your attention.
Long and warming with lingering oak and spice. It evolves as it fades.
“I bought Old Forester 1920 for a bourbon-focused tasting dinner I hosted for four serious whiskey nerds last month, and it was a huge hit—everyone loved the big, bold flavors and the historical Prohibition-style approach. But when I tried serving it at a regular dinner party the following week, it was too much for most of my guests. My friend Rachel took one sip and said it tasted like 'drinking a bonfire.' It's a fantastic bourbon for the right audience, but it's not versatile enough for everyday entertaining. I save it for bourbon lovers only.”
How We Score
Every spirit is tasted blind in a Glencairn glass across multiple sessions on different days. We score on a 100-point weighted scale, recording notes before the label is revealed to eliminate brand bias.
Rating Criteria
Aroma complexity, intensity, and appeal
Flavor depth, balance, and mouthfeel
Length, evolution, and lingering notes
Quality relative to price point
Layered character and uniqueness
Why Trust This Review
Boozemakers is an independent spirits publication built by passionate enthusiasts. Every bottle is purchased at full retail — never gifted, never sponsored. We use a structured blind-tasting methodology, scoring across five dimensions before revealing the label. We maintain complete editorial independence: no brand has ever paid for coverage, and affiliate links never influence our scores.
Editorial independence notice: Boozemakers maintains full editorial independence. We purchase all products at retail and are never compensated for our reviews. Affiliate links may earn us a commission at no extra cost to you.
Old Forester 1920 Prohibition Style exists in bourbon's most rewarding category: the high-proof bottle that sits on shelves, priced fairly, while the whiskey world chases phantoms. Named for the year when Prohibition shut down most of America's distilleries—Old Forester famously survived by producing "medicinal whiskey"—this 115-proof expression channels all the boldness and defiance that kept bourbon alive through its darkest chapter.
The nose is immediately captivating: toasted oak and caramel create a rich foundation, with roasted nuts, vanilla pudding, and honey adding layers of sweetness. Dark cherry and dried dark fruit emerge with time, alongside barrel char that signals serious oak interaction. It's a nose that promises indulgence, and the bourbon delivers on every count.
On the palate, 1920 is a chocolatier's dream bourbon. Cinnamon and black pepper provide an initial pop, quickly followed by sweet caramel, toasted pecan, and a dark chocolate richness that defines the entire mid-palate. There's crème brûlée sweetness, peppermint, and a table syrup quality that makes each sip feel almost dessert-like. At 115 proof, the mouthfeel is substantial without being punishing—this bourbon drinks remarkably below its proof, a quality it shares with only the best barrel-proof offerings.
But the finish is where 1920 plants its flag. Very long and intensely flavorful, it evolves from cocoa and dried dark fruit through oak and baking spice, finally settling into a woody, peppery close that simply refuses to end. This is one of the longest, most satisfying finishes available at any price point—a finish that justifies the entire pour.
At approximately $60, Old Forester 1920 is the dark horse that keeps winning races. It belongs in the same conversation as Rare Breed and Booker's, and some nights, after a particularly perfect pour, it might just be the best of the three. The good people at Brown-Forman have created something special here. We're grateful they haven't figured out how to charge more for it.
My blind tasting notes for Old Forester 1920 contained an embarrassing number of exclamation points. At 115 proof, this bourbon arrived in the Glencairn like it had somewhere important to be—bold, layered, and completely uninterested in being approachable. I tested it three times across different sessions and it consistently scored in the high 80s, competing toe-to-toe with bourbons at nearly double the price. The dark chocolate and cherry interaction on the mid-palate is unlike anything else in its class.
In the $55-65 barrel-proof-adjacent category, Old Forester 1920 faces Booker's ($100), Stagg Bourbon ($55), and Wild Turkey Rare Breed ($45). Each is excellent; 1920's edge is its dessert-like richness paired with genuinely available shelf presence. No hunting, no lottery, no breathless social media posts—just walk into a store and buy one of the best high-proof bourbons made in America. Brown-Forman doesn't get enough credit for that.
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