Posted on 07/21/2016 3:47:59 AM PDT by Kaslin
Any idea what they actually produced and how strong? I'm imagining a kickass American bourbon ( not some Euroweenie sippy drink ). I'm guessing rye ( today there are cornfields everywhere but back then, probably very little ). They could have used wheat or other grains too.
Anyway, just wondering. Never really crossed my mind before but since this is like a hundred years before Jack Daniels came along it might be interesting to know what they drank out there and how they made it.
I just remembered something. IIRC, there was talk alleging President Washington was sympathetic to crushing the rebellion because he also made Whiskey at Mount Vernon and this was his competition. That's all I recall though. May not be true but wouldn't surprise me.
My understanding was that in the late 18th cen. PA whiskey was considered the benchmark for quality. Whiskey was consumed in vast quantities in those days.
The feds action (which was thought up and pushed for by Hamilton--Jefferson opposed it) destroyed the distilling industry in this area and it subsequently moved to Kentucky and then Tennessee. The tax was not enforced in those areas.
Its actually a fascinating era and shows that the pressures; fed vs local that roiled those days are still rampant today.
“Adelson must have taken Teds advice and voted his conscience.”
Hehehehe, good line.
“I read today that a comped suite of rooms were not available to the Cruz’s last night.”
Kuhner has said that...
...the entire Trump family stood and turned their backs to Cruz
...a senior Trump person was nose to nose with Cruz offstage
...the SS escorted Cruz out and quite literally threw him out of the building. Kuhner said someone literally put his foot to Cruz’s backside.
“Ted Cruz Fundraises off His Donald Trump Convention Snub”
Texas! We’re now just as stupid as Arizona!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.