At WSWA’s Access LIVE, Edmond’s Honor Vanilla Madagascar Bourbon won the 2026 Brand Battle by pairing flavor with history, showing how storytelling and cultural context increasingly shape success in a crowded spirits market.
Edmond’s Honor Vanilla Madagascar Bourbon emerged as the 2026 Brand Battle winner at WSWA’s Access LIVE in Las Vegas, a result that says as much about narrative as it does about taste. The competition, hosted by the Wine & Spirits Wholesalers of America, places emerging brands before industry decision-makers, making the outcome a signal of what resonates across today’s distribution landscape.
What distinguished Edmond’s Honor was its decision to center the product on the legacy of Edmond Albius, the enslaved teenager who developed the hand-pollination method that made vanilla commercially viable. By grounding a modern bourbon in this largely overlooked history, the brand reframed a familiar flavor as a story of innovation, loss, and recognition rather than novelty. In a market where differentiation is often incremental, this approach offered something harder to replicate than a flavor profile.
The Brand Battle format itself helps explain why that approach mattered. With only minutes to pitch, brands must convey purpose, clarity, and market readiness at once, under scrutiny from wholesalers, retailers, and hospitality leaders. Edmond’s Honor’s presentation aligned product, provenance, and positioning in a way that felt cohesive, accessible, and commercially realistic rather than aspirational.
This year’s finalists reflected a broader shift in beverage innovation, spanning sake-based cocktails, agave spirits, THC beverages, and purpose-driven vodka. The range underscored how quickly the category is diversifying, while also highlighting a growing expectation that brands articulate values and context alongside liquid credentials. Winning in that environment suggests an ability to speak across tiers, not just to niche audiences.
As Brand Battle marked its tenth year, the result reinforced its role as a barometer for where the industry is headed. Edmond’s Honor’s win points to a future in which compelling origin stories and cultural acknowledgment are not ancillary, but central to market success. For wholesalers and buyers navigating an increasingly crowded field, that combination of meaning and approachability may be as important as what’s in the glass.