Harman Patil (Editor)

Templeton Rye

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Type
  
Rye Whiskey

Introduced
  
2006

Proof (US)
  
80

Country of origin
  
United States

Alcohol by volume
  
40%

Templeton Rye

Manufacturer
  
Templeton Rye Spirits, LLC

Templeton Rye originally referred to rye whiskey made in Templeton, Iowa during the prohibition era as a way for farmers in the Carroll County area to supplement their income. Amber in color, it was considered to be of particularly high quality and was popular in Chicago, Omaha, and Kansas City speakeasies. It was said to be the mobster Al Capone's drink of choice.

More recently, "Templeton Rye" has become used as a brand name for whiskey that its producer formerly claimed was based on a prohibition-era recipe. Distribution of the recent branded product outside of Iowa began in August 2007.

In fact, Templeton Rye brand whiskey is distilled and aged in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, by MGP of Indiana using a recipe shared with other brands. It is combined with an "alcohol flavoring formulation" from Clarendon Flavor Engineers, and finally bottled at an Iowa facility. Pursuant to a class action settlement announced in 2015, Templeton will add the words "distilled in Indiana" to the label and remove claims of "Prohibition Era Recipe" and "Small Batch". The settlement also affords refunds to customers who bought Templeton Rye since 2006.

References

Templeton Rye Wikipedia