From urban cores to rural hamlets, Kentucky chefs pride themselves on featuring locally sourced ingredients on their restaurant menus. You can find many of these products at shops and markets around the state to bring home an authentic, farm-to-table taste of Kentucky.

During our growing season (April-November), many communities host farmers markets that are worth a visit. Year-round, market stores offer Kentucky Proud foods – meaning products grown, raised or made in Kentucky. Dozens of our small-farm wineries and craft breweries sell their products on-site and at retail locations around the Commonwealth.

Many Kentucky bourbons are probably available for purchase in your hometown, but they can’t compare to buying the perfect bottle at the distillery of your choice, or discovering a rare, small-batch bourbon you won’t find anywhere else. And don’t leave Kentucky without buying some bourbon balls (yes, bourbon-flavored candy), which were invented at Rebecca Ruth Candy in Frankfort.

Trip Inspiration

Cycling the Kentucky Bourbon Experience

 

 

At any given time, the number of barrels of bourbon being aged in Kentucky is greater than the number of residents—the state produces 95% of the world’s bourbon, so it’s safe to say bourbon is a way of life out here. 46 distilleries have teamed up with the Kentucky Distillers’ Association to create the Kentucky Bourbon Trail®, which showcases the best bourbon the state has to offer. The Bourbon Trail®, combined with central Kentucky’s rolling green hills and scenic views of Thoroughbred horse farms, makes for an unforgettable—and quintessentially Kentucky—experience.

 

 

WHAT MAKES IT GREAT

 

Established in 1999, the Kentucky Bourbon Trail® includes some names you’ve definitely heard—think Maker’s Mark, Evan Williams, Jim Beam, and Wild Turkey—along with a few that only true bourbon aficionados are probably familiar with. The Kentucky Distillers’ Association has mapped and published directions for three bike tours of the Bourbon Trail®: a 50-mile tour that includes three distilleries, plus 115-mile and 150-mile tours, both of which take cyclists to six distilleries. Maximize your experience by splitting one of the longer tours into two days—the longest route travels through a couple of historically significant towns, along with the Perryville Battlefield and Old Fort Harrod State Park, where Abraham Lincoln’s parents were married.

 

Between distilleries, you’ll ride challenging terrain. Using local knowledge of the safest and most scenic routes, our local cycling experts have designed recommended routes for the self-sufficient cyclist. Each rider plans their own trip, carries their own gear/equipment and arranges accommodations.

 

 



 

WHO IS GOING TO LOVE IT

 

Anyone is welcome to ride the Kentucky Bourbon Trail®, regardless of age or interest in the bourbon itself—there’s no age limit on distillery tours, though visitors must be over 21 to sample bourbon. The ride itself is best suited to experienced and confident cyclists. In addition to long distances and challenging, hilly terrain, roads on the tour occasionally pass through heavily trafficked areas.

 

 



 

DIRECTIONS, PARKING & REGULATIONS

 

Since biking the Bourbon Trail® is officially sanctioned, distilleries won’t be fazed when they see cyclists pull up, though they do ask that visitors bring a change of shoes rather than wearing cycling cleats on a tour. There’s no fee for riding the route, but some of the distilleries charge a small fee for admission on a tour.

Related Articles

Explore Food & Spirits Shopping in Kentucky

More Attractions & Experiences in Kentucky