You've never tasted real Cognac until you've had this

This stuff makes your big brands, the ones with the big money and big advertising, taste like caramel-flavored sugar water, with an alcoholic bite — which, upon delving deeper into the ingredients, is somewhat in line with what these larger distributors are shilling as "Cognac." L'Artisan, a smooth, smoky Scotch-like liquor that leaves a coat of otherwise wine grapes lingering in your mouth, is a Cognac region-sourced hometown original, coming straight from the private reserves of the peasant farmers that provide most of their super drunk grapes to these major players. 

This brandy is aged from the "extra" barrels they keep hidden away from overreaching buyers and embargo-levying executives, hidden within cellars hidden inside bigger cellars hidden inside even bigger cellars tucked away on their family farm. Jewelry scion Evan Yurman and his partner/importer Nicolas Palazzi (whose family is from Bordeaux and is extremely familiar with the regions) approached these farmers looking for the most prized barrels — generally passed down from grandfathers and fathers — ending up with this inaugural 43.6% ABV batch, simply named No. 50, of 485 bottles dating back to the early sixties.