Champagne Tastes®

  • About
  • Travel
    • Food Travel
    • Outdoor Adventure
  • Recipe Index
    • Garden To Table
    • Seafood
    • Camping Recipes
    • Ferment
    • Backyard Foraging + Wild Game
    • Cooking Basics
  • Subscribe
menu icon
go to homepage
subscribe
search icon
Homepage link
  • Recipe Index
  • Garden To Table
  • Seafood
  • Ferment
  • Foraging + Wild Game
  • Cooking Basics
  • Camping Recipes
  • Outdoor Adventure
  • Food Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • About
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
  • ×
    Home » Travel » Food Travel » Kentucky » Bourbon Trail

    Angel's Envy (Louisville, KY)

    Published: Feb 6, 2024 · Modified: Nov 15, 2024 · Leave a Comment

    This post contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

    Angel's Envy offers distillery tours and tastings of their finished whiskeys in Louisville, within easy distance of other downtown attractions!

    Angels Envy Distillery brick building.

    Angel's Envy is one of several Kentucky Bourbon Trail distilleries located in downtown Louisville. You could easily make your own mini Bourbon Trail itinerary out of these spots alone! A few of them are less than a mile apart.

    The Bourbon District of Louisville is also just a short walk from the NuLu district, where you can visit Lou Lou (a Cajun restaurant) and Quills Coffee.

    Wondering what sets Angel's Envy apart from other distilleries? Here's what we found on a recent visit!

    For more tips on Kentucky distilleries, read our Bourbon Trail guide!

    Distillery Facts

    The Angel's Envy location is on Main Street, right across from Louisville's baseball stadium.

    There are no rickhouses on site, but you'll be able to tour all other aspects of the distilling process.

    Angel’s Envy focuses on finished whiskeys — traditional bourbons and ryes that are aged from four to six years and then poured into a port wine barrel or rum cask to age for several more months.

    Barrels of bourbon at Angels Envy.

    The name "Angel's Envy" is a playful take on the term "Angel's Share," which is the small amount of whiskey lost to evaporation during the aging process.

    In other words, the angels got their share, but what’s left is for the angels to envy.

    Touring Angel's Envy

    The Signature Tour lasts about an hour and includes a couple of tastings. They keep each tour group small, so booking in advance is a good idea.

    You could instead opt for the Private Select Tour, or a more in-depth tasting, or a bottle-your-own experience. There are also cocktail classes sometimes.

    We chose the Signature Tour, which started with a brief history of the distillery.

    Next we walked through the area with the mash tanks and distilling tanks. We got to taste their sour mash (it was extremely sour).

    Small cup of sour mash for tasting.
    Sour Mash Tasting

    The guide also educated us on the bottling line, the large still, and the spirits safe.

    Copper column still at Angels Envy Distillery.
    Column Still + Spirits Safe
    Computer display showing fermentation status of tanks.
    Tanks inside warehouse at Angels Envy Distillery.

    Whiskey Tastings

    We were given samples of a bourbon and a rye.

    The bourbon (finished in a port wine barrel) was paired with an orange chocolate.

    The rye whiskey (finished in a rum barrel) was paired with a white chocolate. (I liked this one a lot: the rum barrels made the rye a little mellower.)

    Flight of bourbon samples and two candies on napkin.

    Pairing whiskey tastings with chocolate is a fun trend that some distilleries have jumped on board with: Lux Row in Bardstown and Limestone Branch in Lebanon do something similar.

    We ended the tour in the gift shop.

    Rows of bourbon bottles for sale.

    There we browsed rye flavored coffee, barrel aged honey, drinkware, and Angel's Envy merch.

    Bags of rye-flavored coffee for sale.
    Gift shop at Angels Envy Distillery.

    If you're planning to be in Louisville, I hope you get to tour Angel's Envy! Their approach to double-matured whiskey makes them a bit out of the ordinary, and worth a visit.

    More Bourbon Trail

    • Exterior of New Riff Distilling with a tall modern facade.
      New Riff Distilling (Newport, KY)
    • Bourbon still at Hartfield & Co.
      Hartfield and Co. (Paris, KY)
    • Willett Distillery stone and wood building.
      Willett Distillery (Bardstown, KY)
    • Exterior of Jeptha Creed Distillery, a red wood-sided building with black roof.
      Jeptha Creed Distillery (Shelbyville, KY)

    About Sarah Trenalone

    Sarah is the primary creator at Champagne Tastes. She's a photographer, food writer and traveler, and is certified in Backcountry Kitchen and Backcountry Navigation from the Colorado Outward Bound School and Identifying Wild Plants from Backpacker.

    Leave a Comment: Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Recipe Rating




    bio

    Hi, I'm Sarah! I'm a traveler who loves to eat.   Follow along to join me on my next adventure-- in food or on the road.

    Learn More →

    Currently Trending

    • langostino lobster rolls on a serving tray.
      Langostino Lobster Rolls
    • pan-seared rockfish on a plate
      Pan-Seared Rockfish
    • pan-seared red snapper on plates
      Pan-Seared Red Snapper
    • crab butter sauce on a platter with crab legs
      Crab Butter Sauce

    Footer

    About

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Supplemental Privacy Notice For California Residents
    • Supplemental Privacy Notice For Nevada Residents

    Newsletter

    • Sign Up! for emails and updates

    Contact

    • Contact
    • Recipe and Photo Reuse Terms + FAQ

    Copyright ©2015-2025 Champagne Tastes
    All Rights Reserved.