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Whiskey�s Kingdom (Pop. 361)
March 17, 2004
  By R. W. APPLE Jr.
LYNCHBURG, Tenn.
COULD this possibly be the place where the nation's - and
soon, perhaps, the world's - best-selling whiskey is
distilled? This cluster of anonymous, uninspiring
buildings, not in Kentucky or in Scotland but in a remote,
silent valley in Moore County, Tenn.?
Yes, indeed. As it has been since 1866, every single drop
of Jack Daniel's, seven million cases a year, is made here
in Cave Spring Hollow, amid the gentle hills about 75 miles
south of Nashville. Trucks laden with grain roll off I-24
into Lynchburg (pop. 361, as attested on every bottle), and
four years later aged whiskey is ready for shipment by
truck, train, and ship all over the earth.
Lynchburg's pride, the preferred hootch of bikers and
rockers, is familiar in England, Spain, South Korea and
other countries, either sipped on its own or in mixed
drinks like Jack and ginger. Only Johnnie Walker Red Label
Scotch sells more, worldwide, and Jack Daniel's Old No. 7
is gaining fast, according to Frank Walters, senior vice
president for research at M. Shanken Communications in New
York, which publishes the beverage trade journals Impact
and Market Watch.
The dramatic story of Jack Daniel's, which accounts for
better than half of the profits of the Brown-Forman
Corporation, the Louisville company that owns it,
epitomizes the continuing evolution of American and foreign
tastes in whiskey.
While generic bourbon, an old-fogy, old-stogie drink, has
lost ground in recent years, single-barrel and small-batch
bourbons have scored huge gains in popularity. So have rye,
the original, long-disdained American spirit, and Jack
Daniel's, one of two Tennessee sour-mash whiskeys on the
market, together with George Dickel.
Many Jack fans think that they are drinking bourbon when
they are not, and Jack Daniel's is an anomaly in other ways
as well. Not only has it beaten bourbon at its own game,
outpacing Jim Beam, its nearest competitor, it has done so
from a base in a dry county.
You can eat candied apples laced with Mr. Jack's best at
Miss Mary Bobo's Boarding House, Lynchburg's best
restaurant, but you cannot order a highball.
I got a taste of the country-boy approach that has served
Jack Daniel's so well when I went to see Roger Brashears,
the whiskey's spokesman.
Stocky and rubicund, wearing a gray brush cut and red
galluses, he sat at a desk piled high with papers that all
but engulfed a computer. On a nearby conference table, a
second, larger mound of papers was crowned with an ax
handle, a battered old Rolodex, a box of cigars and a new
biography of Andrew Carnegie.
Why, I asked, has the company stuck so close to its roots?
"We don't believe in kicking pulling mules," he answered,
making the dubious assumption that a city-bred stiff like
me knew about pulling mules.
In fact, there are hard-headed business reasons. Like their
colleagues everywhere - in Ireland, Scotland, Canada and
Kentucky - master distillers here consider water crucial to
the quality of their product. Theirs, iron-free, flows
downhill from a limestone cave at a constant 56 degrees.
Jack Daniel's is made from a recipe not very different from
those used in most bourbons: 80 percent corn, 12 percent
malted barley, 8 percent rye. What sets it apart is a
special charcoal filtration method developed in the 19th
century, before Moore County existed. At that time,
Lynchburg was in Lincoln County, so the mellowing is called
"the Lincoln County process."
Rye whiskey is different, in that it contains at least 51
percent rye, usually with lesser amounts of corn and malted
barley, which gives it a delicacy, a spiciness and often a
crisp, tart edge that bourbon and Tennessee whiskey lack.
It dates back to the very earliest days of the Republic.
George Washington made it at Mount Vernon, and he provoked
the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania by imposing a tax on
rye in 1791.
During the 19th century and part of the 20th, rye produced
in Pennsylvania (known as Monongahela rye) and in Maryland
competed vigorously with bourbon for Americans' affection.
In 1874, it gained new popularity as the main ingredient in
a now-classic cocktail, the Manhattan. The new drink was
created at the Manhattan Club in New York at the behest of
Jenny Jerome, a socialite better known in later years as
the mother of Winston Churchill, for an elaborate party
celebrating the election of Samuel J. Tilden as governor.
BUT Prohibition clobbered American rye. Supple,
easy-drinking Canadian whiskey, which was easily smuggled
across the border, by land or by sea, became the tipple of
choice on the Eastern Seaboard for those who did not drink
bathtub gin, and after Repeal the domestic product never
recovered. Americans began referring to blended Canadian
whiskey as rye, whether or not it contained rye, and using
it (or bourbon) to mix Manhattans and old-fashioneds.
Only a few die-hards, widely caricatured as lushes and
rubes, stuck to American rye. Don McLean gave the
traditional stuff a brief mention in his song "American
Pie" - "good ole boys were drinkin' whiskey and rye" - but
otherwise it was forgotten.
In their 1995 book "Bourbon and Other Fine American
Whiskies," Gary and Mardee Haidin Regan could find only
four straight ryes to mention.
Now a baker's dozen are on the market, and perhaps more,
although some are difficult to find. The biggest seller, if
hardly the favorite of connoisseurs, is Jim Beam rye from
Fortune Brands, which comes with a distinctive yellow
label. The same company makes Old Overholt, an intricate,
full-bodied rye, which originated at a Pennsylvania
distillery founded in 1812. Both are now produced in
Kentucky. Another rye with clout is green-labeled Wild
Turkey Rye, bottled at 101 proof by Austin, Nichols &
Company in Lawrenceburg, Ky.
Heaven Hill Distilleries produces Rittenhouse, a
Monongahela-style rye that I find a little overwhelming,
and Pikesville Supreme, a spare and spicy Potomac- or
Maryland-style rye. Pikesville is the last survivor of a
distilling tradition that once embraced dozens of brands,
including Chesapeake, Preakness, Pimlico and Hunt Cup. H.
L. Mencken, the sage of Baltimore, took the odd sip of
Maryland whiskey in his time, and wrote that his father,
August, started every day with "a hooker of rye."
The rye that may come closest to what our ancestors drank
is Old Potrero, distilled a continent away in San Francisco
by Fritz Maytag, whose other good works include Anchor
Steam beer. It is produced in tiny quantities in a small
copper pot still like those used in Cognac, from a mash
that is 100 percent rye. One version, aged for a year in
new oak barrels, exhibits a certain (no doubt authentic)
rawness; another, with three years in charred oak barrels,
is hot on the palate as well, but smoother. It is best
diluted with water.
Enthusiasts of older whiskies will want to know about
Michter's, a legendary distillery that operated under one
name or another in Schaefferstown, Pa., near Reading, from
1753 until finally closing in 1988. Its brand now appears
on a buttery, vanilla-scented Small Batch Unblended
American Whiskey, which by law cannot be labeled bourbon
because it is aged in used bourbon casks (whence the
vanilla), instead of new, charred white oak barrels. Modern
Michter's is a joint venture of Chatham Imports, New York,
which sells it, and Kentucky Bourbon Distillers, of
Bardstown, which makes it.
Michter's also produces a velvety 10-year-old rye, a
competitor for Van Winkle's deliciously creamy 13-year-old
rye and Sazerac's chewy, perfectly balanced 18-year-old. In
a snifter, these can rival good Cognac - in taste, aroma
and in price as well.
JACK DANIEL'S has had only six master distillers in its
138-year history. The current one, Jimmy Bedford, a lean
and laconic native Tennesseean, showed me around the
operation, centered on the indispensable spring. Like
almost all distilleries, the Lynchburg buildings have a
coating of gray fungus, the result of vapors escaping from
the barrels, known as "the angels' share." Evaporation
raises the whiskey's proof and lowers the volume.
The distillery itself contains open-top stainless steel
fermenters, which turn the mash into a weak brew known as
"beer," and five steam-heated column stills, which convert
the "beer" into whiskey. Impurities are then removed by
reboiling in a large kettle called a doubler, leaving a
clear, rough whiskey a bit like moonshine.
After distillation, the new whiskey is chilled to 60
degrees and pumped through copper pipes to a building where
it drips into huge vats, 8 feet in diameter and 14 feet
tall, filled with charcoal made on the property by burning
hard sugar-maple two-by-two's in a controlled bonfire. It
takes four to six days for the liquid to seep through 10
feet of charcoal flakes, each about the size of a
fingernail. In the process it acquires its sooty, sweet,
faintly peppery taste.
Scattered around town are 70 bonded warehouses, holding
20,160 barrels each. The whiskey in one warehouse
represents $13.75 million in federal taxes, Mr. Bedford
said; no wonder they are padlocked.
Four years of aging are required to complete the production
of Jack Daniel's green label, less sophisticated (and
cheaper) than its big brother; Jack Daniel's black label,
80 proof and richer in the caramel flavors imparted by the
barrel, and Gentleman Jack, a supersmooth superpremium
whiskey that passes through the charcoal filter a second
time before bottling.
Some distillers move barrels around their warehouses, from
the warmer parts to the cooler ones, to assure uniformity
in the final product. Others, including Jack Daniel's,
leave them in one place the entire time, relying on
"melding" the appropriate barrels to achieve the desired
flavor.
As I walked around with Mr. Bedford, a deliciously sour
smell pervaded the air, stirring my appetite, which was
just as well. I had a lunch date at Mary Bobo's, owned by
the distillery, with Mary Motlow, the granddaughter of Lem
Motlow, Jack Daniel's nephew, whose name appears on every
bottle of the local booze, and her two daughters.
A dinner date, actually: in keeping with Southern rural
tradition, that's what they call the midday meal. By any
name, it was copious: Southern fried chicken, of course,
along with stuffed peppers, catfish, country-style green
beans, deep-fried okra, macaroni and cheese, mashed
potatoes, candied apples, bread pudding and pecan pie,
passed twice or even three times.
"We think the folksiness of Lynchburg is a key element in
Jack Daniel's image," Mrs. Motlow said. "It emphasizes that
this is a local product, with guaranteed integrity."
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/17/dining/17WHIS.html?ex=1080563920&ei=1&en=679f1d7887b31ab8
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