-
A new Kentucky law allows alcohol confiscated from closed criminal investigations by the state’s alcoholic beverage control agency to be auctioned. Online bidding on one sale with some tough to find bourbons opens Wednesday and closes at midnight on Dec. 11.
-
Scientists in Kentucky are on the lookout for the invasive spongy moth, which love white oaks. Those trees are the source material for bourbon barrels.
-
A new tourism and marketing strategy for Kentucky's most famous spirit was unveiled this week in Louisville. The Kentucky Bourbon Trail has a new logo and a new digital marketing campaign to help tourists plan bourbon trips to the state.
-
Bourbon makers are celebrating after the European Union lifted tariffs on bourbon and whiskey imposed during the Trump administration.
-
Louisville has met the national standard for sulfur dioxide for the first time since 2013, but struggles with unhealthy levels of ozone.
-
Nowadays, if you watch bourbon being made, you’re likely to see scientists in white coats right along with farm types in boots and overalls.
-
The new welcome center will serve as a starting point for official bourbon tourism in the state. It features a map of distilleries and a concierge to help plan trips.
-
Could drinkers at home and abroad fall out of love with Kentucky's famous brown liquor?
-
This week in Kentucky politics, Rand Paul was one of the few politicians to defend Donald Trump’s summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
-
Kentucky bourbon is in the crosshairs of retaliatory tariffs from the EU, Mexico and Canada after President Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum.