FRANKFORT, Ky. — The long history of bourbon production at Buffalo Trace Distillery has been connected to the Kentucky River — summed up as a blessing and curse by a plaque on the grounds.
The Buffalo Trace Distillery is seen Sept. 16 in Frankfort, Ky.
In the 1800s, long before the Buffalo Trace name was attached to the distillery, the river served as a floating highway to bring in grain and other production essentials and to transport barrels of whiskey to markets along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. Even today, river water cools down production equipment. But the river flowing past the distillery flashed its destructive side in April.
A massive flood, caused by days of unrelenting rain, sent the Kentucky River surging over its banks, inundating most of the 200-plus-acre distillery grounds on its main campus in Frankfort. Nearly every phase of production was impacted, as were several warehouses where whiskey is aged.
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“It was just something that was hard to process, but we knew we couldn’t take too much time to process it," said Tyler Adams, a distillery general manager. He said they had much to do to recover from the reservoir of murky water that swamped the bourbon-making campus.
Danny Kahn, Master Distiller and Distillation/Aging Operations Director at Sazerac, Buffalo Trace's parent company, looks at bottles in the lab at Buffalo Trace Distillery on Sept. 16 in Frankfort, Ky.
Five months later, production at the distillery is back to normal, including of some of the most sought-after bourbons. Its lineup includes the namesake flagship brand, Buffalo Trace, as well as Eagle Rare, W.L. Weller and Blanton's. Pappy Van Winkle bourbons are distilled and aged at Buffalo Trace while the Van Winkle family remains in control of the coveted brand.
The distillery recently filled its 9 millionth barrel of bourbon since Prohibition, just two and a half years since filling the 8 millionth barrel. It has also introduced new whiskeys to its catalog and is renovating a campus building into a cafe and events center.
The cleanup enlisted hundreds of plant employees and contract workers. Buffalo Trace fans swamped the distillery with offers to pitch in, Adams said. The distillery politely declined and suggested they might assist area residents instead.
Crews removed debris, sanitized equipment and pumped out what was left after floodwaters receded. Bourbon barrels swept into the parking lot caught some attention, Adams said. No chance for sneak samples, though — the barrels were empty.
Few visible reminders remain of that mud-caked, debris-strewn mess.
Some filled whiskey barrels touched by floodwaters were still being cleaned and tested, but the meticulous task of examining thousands of barrels was nearly complete, the distillery said. Quality control assessments found only small amounts of aging whiskey were impacted. High water marks are etched into some buildings and tour guides casually remind visitors of the epic event.
Danny Kahn, a master distiller for Buffalo Trace's parent company, says he still experiences "a little PTSD” when recalling those frantic days. River flooding has been a sporadic part of the distillery's history — including big ones in 1937 and 1978, but in early April, the floodwaters surged to previously unseen heights. Buffalo Trace had also just completed a decadelong, $1.2 billion expansion to double distilling capacity.
“It actually looked kind of calm, but I knew that it was not calm because we could see buildings were under 10 feet of water," Kahn said. "It was really quite overwhelming.”
Activating their flood plans, workers shut down the distillery and did what they could to safeguard equipment. After that, all they could do was watch and wait. Distillery officials observed the devastation from higher ground and via drone footage.
Once the river crested, it took a few days for the floodwaters to fully recede, but operations gradually sprung back to life. Finished whiskey shipped out the day after the rain stopped. Bottling soon resumed and a makeshift gift shop opened until the visitors' center was repaired. Tours eventually resumed. But bourbon production halted for about a month as the cost for cleanup and repairs surpassed $30 million.
Workers process freshly filled bottles of Blanton's bourbon in a bottling area at Buffalo Trace Distillery on Sept. 16 in Frankfort, Ky.
Several storage tanks shifted off their foundation. Some were repaired, others replaced. Dozens of electrical control panels were destroyed. About three-fourths of gift shop inventory was lost.
“It was just defeating to watch all this flooding and to realize that we’re going to be down for a while," Kahn said. “Just the apprehension of how much work this is going to be to fix. And when we finally got it done, it was really a sigh of relief and we get back to business as normal."
For the American whiskey industry as a whole, it's been anything but business as usual.
After years of growth, prospects turned sour for the sector amid sluggish sales and trade uncertainties as President Donald Trump imposed sweeping tariffs.
In 2024, American whiskey sales in the U.S. fell nearly 2%, the first such drop in supplier sales in more than 20 years, the Distilled Spirits Council said. Initial data for the first half of 2025 showed a continued decline, it said. American whiskey exports dropped more than 13% through July of this year compared to the year-ago period, it said. The American whiskey category includes bourbon, Tennessee whiskey and rye whiskey.
At Buffalo Trace, its future is entrenched alongside the Kentucky River, realizing that more floods could come in the years ahead. The distillery learned lessons to be even better prepared next time.
“This area being a National Historic Landmark, being right on the river, there’s only so much you can do to hold back that water," Adams said. "Your best bet is to prepare for it, do what you can. But holding back that water? It’s really inevitable it’s going to make it into some spaces.”
Bourbon legends: These Kentucky inns offer a taste of history along with the famous drink
Old Talbott Tavern, Bardstown
The bar at this six-room historic inn on Bardstown’s Courthouse Square claims the granddaddy of all bourbon bars. The rustic tavern has been satisfying thirsty customers since 1779, the year the inn opened as the oldest stagecoach stop west of the Allegheny Mountains. Yep, that makes this the oldest bourbon bar in the world.
Their inventory includes more than 300 bourbons, but many visitors opt for the bar’s signature cocktail, the Sidecar Named Desire. This concoction made up of Woodford Reserve Bourbon, house-made strawberry simple syrup, lemon juice, apple cider and Cointreau and garnished with raw sugar around the rim of a martini glass won Cocktail of the Year at the 2014 Kentucky Bourbon Festival.
By all means, indulge, but don’t overindulge as did one of the bar’s most famous customers.
Outlaw Jesse James was a bourbon lover, and following a night of heavy drinking, he stumbled upstairs to his room. Seeing painted birds on a wall mural, he mistook them for real birds and got off a round of shots before realizing his error. The bullet holes still remain in the wall.
107 W. Stephen Foster Ave., Bardstown; (502) 348-3494; talbotttavern.com
The Samuels House, Loretto
Who knows more about bourbon than the Samuels family? Visitors to Maker’s Mark Distillery in Loretto learn their contribution to the industry, but guests who check into The Samuels House get a more up-close and personal bourbon experience.
The Federal-style house dates to 1820 when it was built by John Samuels whose father, Robert, made whiskey for George Washington’s troops during the Revolutionary War.
The house was the site of the surrender of the last armed guerrilla group following the Civil War. That group, which included future outlaw Frank James, surrendered to Sheriff T.W. Samuels — yes, a family member.
For history of a different kind, the house contains the Samuels family’s personal memorabilia, including the deep fryer used by Margie Samuels to perfect the signature red wax seals on Maker’s Mark bottles.
Today, the Samuels House operates as a three-bedroom Bed & Breakfast for the true bourbon aficionado. Rooms are luxurious with two of them having fireplaces and vintage wardrobes. There’s a stocked chef’s kitchen, dining room with a 200-year-old original mural, a stone patio with a fire pit, and a parlor with a custom crafted bar displaying more than 50 bottles of whiskey produced by the Samuels family (sorry, these are for looking at, not drinking).
However, drinking is encouraged during a private talk and sipping with Bill Samuels Jr. or a bourbon dinner with the Samuels House’s private chef (both add-ons to the price of a stay).
This is the ultimate insider’s bourbon experience coupled with a good night’s sleep.
160 S. St. Gregory Church Road, Samuels; (502) 906-2076; thesamuelshouse.com
Hermitage Farm, Goshen
Spend the night in a five-bedroom mansion on a farm owned by Brown-Forman (whose portfolio includes Woodford Reserve Bourbon), heiress Laura Lee Brown and her husband, Steve Wilson.
Guests must rent out the entire house, and they have a choice of several bourbon-related activities as add-ons: a build-your-own Old Fashioned class with one of the farm’s bourbon stewards, a single barrel pick upon arrival, or, if you time your visit right, one of the quarterly distillers’ dinners.
One thing guests can enjoy any time is a meal at Barn8 Restaurant, a unique experience combining the commonwealth’s two signature industries: bourbon and horses.
Book dinner Wednesday through Saturday or Sunday brunch, and reserve one of the three stalls once occupied by a famous Thoroughbred. (I dined in the stall of Isolde, dam of 1953 Kentucky Derby winner Dark Star.)
Enjoy a house old-fashioned or Cowgirl Coffee (Rittenhouse rye, spiced coconut cream and walnut syrup) with your meal, and then have a nightcap in the cozy bar that Wilson stocked with 160 bourbons and 32 ryes.
Afterward, retreat to your accommodations surrounded by stately pin oaks and lush green farmland, and decorated with a mix of antique furnishings and contemporary art from the 21c Museum Hotel collections (Brown and Wilson also own the upscale contemporary hotels).
10500 US-42, Goshen; (502) 398-9289; hermitagefarm.com
Chateau Bourbon, Prospect
This inn offers “comfort with a splash of bourbon.” For starters, your accommodation will be in one of four suites: Reserve, Single Barrel, Angel’s Share and Stillhouse. How can you have anything but pleasant dreams?
The three-course breakfasts also incorporate the Chateau’s namesake beverage – bourbon granola, anyone? And that’s just for starters.
Missy Hillock, who owns the Chateau Bourbon with her husband, John, is an executive bourbon steward and is happy to give her guests a bourbon tutorial in everything from the distilling process to sharing cocktail recipes.
She’s also happy to have them drink their bourbon and eat it too at the evening “Sip and Sweets” Happy Hour. Bourbon cocktails using fresh herbs, fruit or house-made syrups are paired with delectable treats such as bourbon toffee truffles in Ghirardelli chocolate.
Add-ons include a bottle of bottled-in-bond bourbon and two cigars to enjoy on the balcony or patio, and a craft bourbon flight — four pours from some of Kentucky’s finest craft distilleries.
10630 Meeting St., Prospect; (502) 290-6553; chateaubourbon.com
Bourbon Manor, Bardstown
Only in the “Bourbon Capital of the World” would you find as bourbon-centric a property as Bourbon Manor. Innkeepers Tyler Horton and Todd Allen believe that when they opened it in 2013, it was the first bourbon-themed bed and breakfast in the country.
Fashioned from two pre-Civil War plantation homes — an 1810 Federal-style and an 1820 Greek Revival Antebellum mansion — it was occupied by both Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg and Union troops en route to the Battle of Perryville 33 miles away.
In neither of the above was there time for bourbon drinking, but that’s not the case for today’s visitors, with the emphasis all on bourbon.
The 10 spirit-themed guest rooms are named after cocktails featured nightly in the bourbon bar. So, whether you prefer a mint julep, Manhattan or Scarlet Starlet — either the room or the drink — it’s yours).
The bar is currently set up inside the lobby of the main house, but in spring of 2023, the owners plan to reopen the Bunghole Bar, which was destroyed by a fire, in its original location in the barn.
In addition to a gourmet breakfast, the inn also offers three bourbon tours (self-driving, local excursion shuttle or private transportation and driver) which include two distilleries, Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey History, a box of Rebecca Ruth bourbon balls and two cocktails in the Manor’s bar.
Even the New York Times was impressed, heralding the property as “a stylish place to stay while touring the Kentucky Bourbon Trail.”
714 N. Third St.; Bardstown; 502-512-0122; bourbonmanor.com
Charred Oaks Inn, Versailles
This peaceful inn in its parklike setting is a slight anomaly among bourbon-themed inns. It doesn’t have a liquor license, so you won’t be able to belly up to the bar for your nightly bourbon.
You can, however, bring your own favorite bourbon and make use of the inn’s wet bar with all the necessary utensils for creating a cocktail to enjoy in the living room, on the terrace or in the privacy of your room.
Don’t worry, you will get your bourbon intake in the bountiful breakfast where dishes such as bourbon hoecakes, Woodford Pudding and Race Day Pie are on the menu.
341 Lexington St.; Versailles; (859) 513-6156; charredoaksinn.com
The Galt House, Louisville
One might not think of this historic property as being bourbon-themed, but it certainly is bourbon-centric. A visitor can drink bourbon to his or her heart’s content.
Start off with a signature drink in the Jockey Silks Lounge — maybe a Bluegrass Rose (Four Roses bourbon, blueberry puree, triple sec and lemon juice) or, if you’re really brave, a Kentucky Iced Tea (Evan Williams bourbon, Rittenhouse rye, Carpano Antica vermouth, Peach schnapps, peach puree, Goslings Ginger beer and lime).
The Jockey Silks' list of 150 bourbons is exceeded by the newly reopened Down One Bourbon Bar with its inventory of 200 bourbons.
This sophisticated New York-style eatery has a subterranean speakeasy feel and elevated American pub grub, which pairs well with one of the hand-crafted cocktails. To honor the Derby, have a Mint Julep or, if you prefer the fillies, an Oaks Lily.
To further emphasize bourbon at the Galt, the rooftop restaurant, Swizzle, offers a monthly bourbon dinner with area distilleries, and also beginning in November, America’s most celebrated chefs will present dishes cooked with bourbon.
Kicking it off will be Dallas-based celebrity chef Kent Rathbun. His dishes will remain on Swizzle’s menu until February when chef Noah Sandoval of Chicago’s 2 Michelin-star restaurant Oriole takes the helm.
Thanks to The Galt House, guests can have their bourbon and eat it too.
140 N. Fourth St., Louisville; (502) 589-5200; galthouse.com

