
I have a confession to make. The first time I ever heard the word ‘bourbon’ was as a teenager, freshly home from school, watching The Vampire Diaries. Damon and Stefan Salvatore on-screen, a crisis in Mystic Falls brewing, and a glass of bourbon in hand.
I’m not sure I even knew what bourbon was at that age, but something about it stuck. Years later, when I found my way into the whiskey industry, bourbon was the category I fell hardest for first.
Never did I imagine that I’d ever be on a train to London to meet Ian Somerhalder at the UK launch of Brother’s Bond Bourbon. When the opportunity to interview Ian and Paul came, I was nervous for two reasons: I’ve long admired both of them, and I know well enough that celebrity brands don’t always deliver.
As a fan, I desperately wanted the liquid to be good. As a journalist, I’d have to be honest if it weren’t. I wasn’t disappointed, and a few weeks later I sat down with both of them to find out how a brand built on genuine passion is making its case in one of the most scrutinising whiskey markets in the world.
Brother’s Bond on Britain: Why The UK Makes Sense
Britain is, by any measure, a Scotch country. Scotch is the default, the benchmark, the thing people reach for when they want to drink whisky seriously. Bourbon, for all its complexity and heritage, has historically occupied a secondary position in the UK market.
In recent years, however, a growing number of American producers have set their sights on British consumers, and early 2026 brought an interesting arrival: Brother’s Bond Bourbon, the brand founded by Ian Somerhalder and Paul Wesley.
From where I’m standing, the timing feels right. British drinkers are curious, educated, and increasingly willing to look beyond Scotch. The question for any American brand entering this market isn’t really whether the appetite exists, but whether the liquid is good enough to meet it.
Ian has no doubts about why the UK makes sense for Brother’s Bond. “The UK is the most sophisticated whiskey market in the world,” he tells me. “The level of understanding of whiskey in the UK is like nowhere else.”

For him, it’s personal as much as professional. He speaks about the UK with a warmth that goes well beyond market strategy, citing ancestral ties and some of his fondest memories. But he’s equally clear that sentimentality isn’t what got them through the door. “We’ve been welcomed with open arms because of the quality, not because it was some celebrity brand.”
Paul, characteristically, takes a cooler view. “The whiskey community is quite a difficult community to win over,” he says. “You have to really work hard to be taken seriously.”
Both of them, however, agree on one thing: the answer to British scepticism isn’t a marketing campaign or an elevator pitch. It’s what’s in the bottle. To understand what’s in the bottle, you have to go back to where it all started.
Brother’s Bond: Back to Basics
It starts with Covid, two actors with time on their hands, and a shared obsession with bourbon that had been building for years. Ian and Paul spent the better part of a year blending in Ian’s kitchen, late nights, meticulous notes, and by their own admission, a considerable amount of drinking.
What’s interesting is that the process was driven entirely by instinct rather than formula. Paul came to it with no technical knowledge of mash bills or grain ratios, just a clear sense of what he liked.
“I just knew what I liked,” he says. “I drank a lot of bourbon in Georgia. I preferred that sweetness, more corn.”

The pair tried blend after blend until one stopped them both in their tracks: a four-grain recipe of 65% corn, 22% rye, and 13% wheat and barley. Only then did they send it to a lab to find out what they’d actually made. It’s the reverse of how most new whiskey brands operate.
Having finally landed on the blend they loved, they sent a sample for analysis, only to realise they’d drunk almost all of it first. “They needed a hundred mls,” Ian says. “We sent them twenty-eight. We drank almost all of it!”
They scraped together what remained, the lab managed to work with it, and the rest is history. It’s a funny story in retrospect. In the moment, it was almost a very different one.
That flagship mash bill now underpins two of the four expressions in the Brother’s Bond range, with the cask strength sharing the same foundation and exploring what that profile does at full proof.
The Bottled-in-Bond is the boldest of the bourbon expressions, pushing the rye to 49% alongside malted rye, and rewards the kind of attention a BIB deserves. The American blended rye, 77% rye, 16% corn, 7% wheat and barley, is the outlier and the one, as Ian admits, they were most nervous about releasing.
Four-grain recipes are rare in flagship whiskeys. The risk of a confused, cluttered profile is a real one. Think of it like cooking: adding too many spices to a dish risks ruining it.
Ian describes what they were looking for: “We wanted equal sensory proportion. All the grains, you can taste them all in balance and harmony. Immediate approachability, but complexity that even the snootiest bearded bourbon drinker could sip and say, wait a minute, these guys are not messing about.”
The bravery paid off. It doesn’t get muddled. Across all four expressions, each grain earns its place.
Stefan and Damon, Ian and Paul
Ian and Paul lived next door to each other during The Vampire Diaries years, working on scripts morning, noon, and night. Ian invokes Malcolm Gladwell’s outlier thesis when he describes it: the thousands of hours that create a genuine fluency between two people.

“If you’re on a television show for eight years, you’re basically a professional problem solver. Whether it’s in the script or the technical side of shooting or weather fatigue, whatever it is,” he tells me. “That kind of teamwork allows you to cut through. If one of us has an idea that’s really just not great, we can easily say That’s not the best idea, and here’s why’. And you move on.” It saves, as Ian puts it, an enormous amount of time.
Paul describes the same dynamic. “I like to cut through and skip the niceties,” he says. “Time is an asset, a currency.”
He identifies himself as the cynical glass half empty to Ian’s glass half full optimist, and frames the balance as practically useful. The truth usually lives somewhere between their respective positions. It’s a “yin and yang” (as they put it) that, when you speak to them, you can see playing out in real time.
It’s also, I’ll admit, a strange and satisfying thing to witness as a longtime fan. The push and pull, the shorthand, the banter, it’s recognisable from the screen, but it belongs entirely to them rather than to the characters they once played.
Ian waxes lyrical and circles back and finds the anecdote inside the anecdote. Paul waits, says the precise thing, and moves on.
That fluency is what drives every aspect of the brand. And few aspects of Brother’s Bond reveal it more clearly than the mission they’ve built around regenerative agriculture.
From the Ground Up: Regenerative Agriculture and the Soul of Brother’s Bond
The whiskey industry is in the middle of a quiet revolution. Thanks in large part to the rise of craft producers, unburdened by the volume demands that constrain the biggest names in the category, more attention is being paid to the full picture of flavour: soil health, grain provenance, yeast strains, and water source. The barrel remains central, and rightly so. But it is no longer the only conversation worth having.
Brother’s Bond’s arrival in Britain feels timely against that backdrop. Regenerative agriculture isn’t a footnote in the brand’s story. It’s the foundation of it.
If you need more proof, look no further than Kiss the Ground, the documentary that Ian was involved in making. According to Ian, it is King Charles’s favourite film.
“He went to Parliament after he saw that film,” Ian tells me. “And they did change a lot of the UK farming bill based on these principles — which is what he’d been talking about for forty years anyway.”

It’s a conviction that extends well beyond royal endorsement. “Regenerative agriculture is not some hoity toity, high in the sky idea,” he continues. “No fertilisers, no diesel, no fungicides, pesticides, herbicides. Billions and billions of pounds a year could be saved. Just by changing the way that the UK farms.”
As for how these practices influence flavour, the proof, Ian argues, is in the distillate itself. “It tastes like fruit and soil. Like a fruit basket, and then just the loveliest soil quality. It’s magic. It’s the first form of what grains can be.”
Bourbon has sometimes been unfairly flattened in the UK imagination as sweet, simple, cask-forward. The regenerative agriculture story, told with the transparency and barely contained passion that Ian brings to it, offers British drinkers a different entry point entirely. Not just into Brother’s Bond, but into what bourbon can be when the conversation starts in the soil.
More Than a Celebrity Brand
Brother’s Bond is, technically speaking, a celebrity brand. It was founded by two of the most recognisable faces from one of the most-watched television shows of the last two decades.
It is also, technically speaking, an NDP, a non-distilling producer sourcing its distillate. he brand holds a DSP (Distillery License), meaning that they source barrels from other distilleries and add them to their own inventory. In certain corners of the whiskey world, both of those facts carry stigma. Neither tells the whole story.
Ian is clear that fame was never meant to be the selling point. “Quality first, quality first. If it’s not in the bottle, it ain’t in the bottle.”

The celebrity association was always going to open doors. But what they wanted was to deserve walking through them.
On the DSP question, the evidence speaks for itself. The sourcing model doesn’t preclude expertise or genuine creative ownership of a product. These are men who spent a year blending to the millimetre, who nearly drank their lab sample, who can articulate every mash bill across four expressions and explain precisely why each decision was made.
Paul tells me that strangers approach him now, not to talk about the show, but simply to say they love his bourbon. Nothing else. For a brand that has worked as hard as this one to be taken on its own terms, that feels like the right measure of success.
“Just Try It”
Brother’s Bond arrived in the UK this year with a lot to prove and, it turns out, the liquid to prove it.
For British drinkers willing to look beyond the label, past the famous faces, past the celebrity brand assumptions, what they’ll find is a range built on genuine craft.
As first encounters with bourbon go, Damon and Stefan Salvatore set a high bar. Somehow, Ian and Paul have cleared it.
So, if you have yet to sample a whiskey from Brother’s Bond, I will leave you with what Paul said to me when I asked him for his Scotch-converting elevator pitch: “I mean…just try it.”
Read the full article at Blood, Soil and Bourbon: Ian Somerhalder and Paul Wesley on Brother’s Bond

