PA Rye

America's True Spirit

Before Kentucky was even a state, Pennsylvania rye was America's first whiskey, and the country’s premier spirit before Prohibition.
Bourbon may have garnered the hype, but Pennsylvania rye didn’t chase the trend — it remained true to its roots and now has what few spirits can boast of today: a nation-changing heritage, a dedication to authentic craft distilling, and a unique spicy flavor that only comes from rye grain grown in the Pennsylvania region.
rows of unlabeled filled and corked bottles

The Original

Spicy, compelling, built with a backbone. This was the whiskey of taverns and traders and people who flatly refused to abandon making a living on the frontier. That’s not a brand story we invented. It’s the actual one.

straining liquid

The Monongahela

Along the Monongahela Valley, distillers built a style the whole country drank: high-rye, full-flavored, made to stand on its own. Wigle, Liberty Pole, Mingo Creek, Iron City, Dad’s Hat, and Ponfeigh are making it again — not as a gimmick, as the real thing.

wigle reserve bottles being filled

The comeback is already here.

Dad’s Hat and Wigle reopened the door in 2011. Stoll & Wolfe carries the legacy of master distiller Dick Stoll. Growers are bringing back heritage Rosen rye from saved seed. The grain and the methods are coming home.

two barrels on a rack
Coming soon

The PA Rye Whiskey Trail

A statewide rye trail — West, Central, and East — is on the way, connecting the distilleries keeping this whiskey alive. Be there when it launches.

Get trail updates

Taste the legacy.

Find it where it’s made — no permission required.

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