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Whiskey

Whiskey is a distilled grain alcohol that originated in Scotland during the 1400s. It is now produced worldwide.

1,043 Questions

Where can you find a recipe for corn whiskey?

My father was a pilot, working with the Alabama Alcoholic Beverage Control Board Enforcement Unit, helping to locate illegal stills in the woods and rural areas of our state. In short, Daddy was a revenuer. I sort of followed in his footsteps, eventually working with the ABC Board as a secretary in the Information Systems Division. Dad used to come home and tell us stories about some of the stills they would find, and the people who ran them. Most of these illegal operations were truly nasty! They found one tunneled under a pig sty. Perfect undercover place because the smell was hidden by the pig smells. I suppose, because the product distilled was so high in alcohol, most of the germs and disease were killed off. But I wouldn't touch one of those bottles for anything! I digress....I want to tell you that, most likely, the Alcohol Boards of every state have recipes for making moonshine. When I was working with Alabama's ABC Board, I worked with some of the Enforcement people off and on, and several of them told me they could make a still anytime they wanted. Apparently, it's very easy to do. The difficulty comes when you have to hide it. In Alabama, it is legal to make your own alcoholic beverage for personal consumption only. It must be enough beverage for one person, and one person only. Any more would be considered an intent to sell illegally. That includes making homemade wine (such as muscadine, scuppernong, blackberry, etc.). People are allowed to make wine for their home consumption only. (Ever hear of sloe gin? Sloe is the name of a certain plum, and sloe gin has a reputation for packing a latent punch that'll knock your socks off!) Ever heard of bathtub gin? That's one of the booze products that were popular during Prohibition. The days of Prohibition are a fine example of our government carrying out the wishes of a few loud people, while they ignored the silent majority and common sense, and the Constitutional rights of the individual. By all means, get in touch with your State Alcoholic Beverage Control Enforcement Office, or Central Administrative Office. Alabama has a Responsible Vendor Program that publishes a small book of recipes and information, and they may have the recipe for making mash, or corn liquor. Or, try the Enforcement Office, to see whether any of the Enforcement Agents can give you some good information. They can certainly tell you what your state's laws are concerning making your own white lightning! If any of those should fail to provide what you want, call up your local liquor store and see whether any of the store's clerks may be able to help you, or get you pointed in the right direction. First -- what a great answer! I have nothing to correct but I would like to add a little... First the chemistry: When you take starches -- carbohydrates -- and mix them with water and the right amount of heat, bacteria come to feast. The bacteria convert the sugars into heat, some various byproducts, and... ethanol, grain alcohol. The problem with ethanol or grain alcohol, is that it's eventually toxic to the same bacteria that creates it. This means that a basic fermentation process can't get much above 12%-14% ethanol, give or take a point. At that time, the bacteria dies off. Most states are relatively lenient about making fermentations. They like to tax them, have some health concerns but in most cases, and especially for personal consumption, they aren't too concerned. This includes mostly beers, wines and meads (basically fermented honey -- you have to have a taste for it :P} ). So -- up until this point your ferment is alive. This is why the age of wine is calculated from the date it was laid down in the cask until the present day, whereas the age of whiskey stops going up once it hits the bottle. In the bottle, wine is alive; whiskey is dead. Whiskey gets flavor from the casks it's stored in (if it IS stored that way, but once it hits the bottle it never really changes). This brings us to the next step -- fermentation. The idea is that alcohol boils into a vapor at a lower temperature than water, so if you heat the mash (the brew with the alcohol in it), the alcohol will vaporize. All you have to do to bring it back to alcohol is cool it, so a still has a cooker and a cooling network, and alcohol drips out the end. In a factory with scientifically controlled conditions, that first distillation is pretty good -- it can get close to pure ethanol (that's 90% -- higher than that and it evaporates at room temperature). But a home still often gets contamination, including fusel oils, which can be pretty toxic. You can get rid of them by filtration, redistillation, or both, but this is beyond most home distillers. After a while, the distillation process starts to remove everything but water and alcohol. At this point, it doesn't really matter what you started with; corn, wheat, rye, potatoes, prunes --- all contain carbohydrates, all are food for fermentation, and all are basically tasteless at high concentration (or proof). This isn't to say that good white lighting (American) or vodka (RUssian) or Poteen (Ireland and 1930's US) don't have a slightly different taste, but it generally comes from the water that's blended with it. Whiskey's are different. They typically get a lot of their flavor from the container they were aged in. So, in answer to the question, there are a variety of recipes, both approved and secretive, handed down and guarded. There was a huge scandal some years ago when they heir to the Drambuie distilleries in Scotland may have died without passing the recipe on. But the truth is, while distilling is on the edge of illegality, it's also hard chemistry and somewhat dangerous if you misproduce a batch. Unless you're doing this purely for the fun of it, and enjoy the expense of a 'stil and the curious, usually local laws about such things, I'd aim you at the commercial, totally legal stuff.

What is the difference between single and double barrel whiskey?

When whiskey is bottled a number of oak barrels are dumped and blended together and bottled. Single Barrel Whiskey is bottled from one single oak barrel. Double barrel whiskey is aged in oak barrels then they are dumped and sometimes the proof is lowered and then put into a second new oak barrel to be aged again.

What brands of whiskey do Jameson distill?

The brand is Jameson Irish Whiskey the types are:

  • Jameson Original
  • Jameson 12 Year Old Special Reserve )
  • Jameson 12 Year Old Distillery Reserve
  • Jameson Gold Reserve
  • Jameson 18 Year Old Limited Reserve
  • Jameson Rarest Vintage Reserve
  • Jameson Signature Reserve
  • Jameson Select Reserve Black Barrel

Where can you get the value of 1945 whiskey?

Contact a dealer (obviously), but be prepared for a disappointment. They will likely tell you that your bottle is probably spoiled because it's too old. Unlike many fine wines, whisky does not get better with age in the bottle. But don't give up. Put it up for auction online in Japan, India or the Middle East, where people will pay silly money just to have the bottle on display, regardless of whether it's drinkable or not.

Does VO whiskey ever go bad?

no whiskey is distilled so it will never go bad so drink up .

I would like information on Copper Goose whiskey It was available as of 40 years ago but I cannot find anything on it recently?

I have the same question. In the mid-1960s, Copper Goose was being promoted in Little Rock, Ark. They had some dealings with my father's shop because I ended up with a copper token slightly larger than a quarter bearing a flying goose on one side and the following verse on the other: "Catch a copper goose Pluck a copper feather Next day will be better for health and wealth and weather." I have that memorized to this day, and I also still have the token somewhere. I was about 10 years old back then, so I never got a taste of the stuff, but I am still curious about the history of the product.

What do Kesslers Whiskey claim to do?

They claim to be "Smooth as Silk" Please visit www.theliquorsaver.com Our site should be up and running by June, 1 2009

What causes low sodium?

Great question! The cause of low sodium is not having enough things that contain sodium! Like fries, crackers (saltine, RITZ, etc..) and it could cause some problems when you don't have enough sodium. Like headaches, nausea/vomiting, drowsiness, muscle weakness/spasms. But these are nothing to worry about! Talk to a doctor or family member to see what you could do.

~Nei-Mio

What is the best Bourbon whiskey?

Basil Hayden's Small Batch, 8 Years Old (40.00% Kentucky)

Blanton's (46.50% Kentucky)

Blanton's Original Bourbon (49.50% Kentucky)

Booker's 6 to 8 Years Old (6 Years Old 62.50% Kentucky)

Booker's 6 Years Old (63.25% Kentucky)

Booker's Bourbon (63.40% Kentucky)

Buffalo Trace American Straight Bourbon (45.00% Kentucky)

Buffalo Trace Experimental Collection 10 Years Old Zinfandel Aged (45.00% Kentucky)

Buffalo Trace Experimental Collection 6 Years Old Zinfandel Aged (45.00% Kentucky)

Buffalo Trace Experimental Collection Chardonnay , 6 Years Old (45.00% Kentucky)

Buffalo Trace Experimental Collection Chardonnay, 10 Years Old (45.00% Kentucky

Jose Elidney Pinto Junior

zeito52@terra.com.br

How much sugar is in Scotch?

None. All of the calories come from alcohol. But it tastes sweet, doesn't it? Strange.

Is it bad to go out with an older guy?

I would stick with the rule of thumb for age difference:

1. Take the man's age

2. divide it by 2

3. add seven

Example:

1. 30 year old man

2. 30/2= 15

3. 15+7= 22

A 30 year old man should stick with dating girls at least 22. Also, try to match up maturity levels.

What is best selling single malt scotch in the UK?

In the United States, it will be one of the following: Glenlivet, Glen Fiddich, or McCcallen.

How old is Evan Williams?

The whiskey brand from Heaven Hill distillery is aged 4 years.

Evan C. Williams, the founder of Twitter, is 45 years old (birthdate March 31, 1972).

Canadian actor Evan Williams (Kelly Ashoona on Degrassi High) is about 35 years old (graduated college 2003 = born circa 1982).

What is the chemical formula for whiskey?

Whiskey is mainly a mixture of ethanol (40 %) and water.

What do you you do with someones passport who has died?

Upon death the passport is cancelled. I suggest you just shred it so it cannot fall into nefarious hands.

What disease did Jack Daniel die from?

Jack Daniel (1846-1911) was a moonshiner, founder of Jack Daniel's Distillery, and maker of the famous sour mash Tennessee whiskey known by his name. He died from "blood poisoning", also known as septicemia, that was the result of an infection that spread to his entire body from an infected toe. Until penicillin was discovered in 1928, people often died of simple bacterial infections, that are not often fatal today thanks to penicillin and other antibiotics.

It is a myth that he died from alcohol poisoning. It is often said that his infected toe was the result of kicking his safe in anger when he forgot the combination and could not get the safe open.

How much could a bottle of Ss politician 1941 whiskey worth?

In 1987 8 bottles were recovered and sold for a total of £4000 - so at 1987 prices 1 bottle is £500 - but as they are just about to re-make the film Whiskey Galore I guess the value could be double that.

Is it true that someone has actually died while receiving the Pedigree?

Yes, I saw it on KaZaA one day while I was downloading old wrestling videos. Cant remember what it was called, but it was pretty old, and it was HHH pedigreeing someone and completely botching the move. The guy landed almost piledriver like and HHH covered his lifeless body.

AnswerNO the pedigreee is fake, he pushes your head away before it touches the ground. AnswerNo, nobody has died taking the Pedigree. He was hurt pretty bad in the botched one but did not die and actually is wrestling on the Indy Circuit now. Answerit is possible, i also saw that video on kazaa. but if uve noticed, triple h has changed the move a little. before hed go full on and do it, but now he moves the persons head at the last second so it doesnt deliver a deadly blow, the move he does still hurts, i tried it on my friend, he was dazed after he got up. AnswerIt is possible to be killed by the move, but no wrestler in history from day 1 has ever been killed that way, nor have they ever been completely dazed from the move. When the pedigree is applied, you have plenty of room between the legs of the opponent giving it to turn your head to fall the right way. AnswerNo, the guy did not die. And Triple was not the one that botched it.

H's opponent jumped up like he was gonna get hit with a Double Arm Suplex. HHH did not botch it.

AnswerThe pedigree performed today is a safer re-enactment of the move. The original version was a sit-out pedigree, but the match you all are talking about, the guy that received the pedigree just had a broken nose, he wasn't dead. AnswerYeah...I have the video...HHH landed it like a Double-Arm Piledriver straight to his neck...You can see his neck SNAP...

What is ratio of whisky and soda for a drink?

Whisky : Soda = 1 : 0! Whisky with soda is just wasted whisky!