Moonshining is the making of whiskey surreptitiously and illegally, this is because the activity of distilling whiskey unlawfully was usually done at night under the light of the moon, the word became both a verb, meaning making the liquor, and a noun, meaning the liquor that was made. The reason it is done at night, and usually somewhere away from houses and buildings, is that the distillation process requires heat to boil the alcoholic liquor from the "mash," so it produces a considerable amount of smoke and steam, which can be visible for a great distance if it is done outdoors in the daytime. The fire can be seen at night if the still is not set up inside a building or somewhere hidden by rocks and/or trees, but buildings (and caves) are not considered as safe as outdoor locations, in case of a raid by the law enforcement authorities (or competition).
Some "shiners", as they were called, made a firebox out of stones or bricks, to keep the flames contained while concealing them, and to keep the still off the ground. Quite often, a dry creek bed was employed, particularly in Florida. Many stills were mainly made of copper, which is considered helpful in maintaining a good taste in distilled liquor. A shiner would often make his own still.
Selling moonshine or legally-made alcohol illegally is "bootlegging". One person may perform both functions. A U.S. synonym for moonshine is hooch, a word apparently borrowed into English ca. 1867 from the Hoochinoo tribe of Alaska, noted for its homemade liquor. White lightning, mountain dew, stumpholewater, liquid stumpblaster, mule-kick, white mule and panthers breath are also attested.
The production of whiskey in this area predates the federal taxation of alcoholic beverages. For farmers in remote parts of the country, it was a way to turn their corn into quick cash when grain prices were down. Furthermore, until passable roads were extended to these areas, whiskey-making also afforded a way to condense bulky, low-value crops into small, high-value loads that could be transported by mule or horse over narrow trails. The imposition of a tax on whiskey was considered an unwanted federal intervention and was largely ignored. The Department of the Treasury sent special agents — "revenuers" — to prosecute unlawful distilling. Gun battles sometimes occurred when revenuers arrived to enforce the tax. An early example of armed resistance to this taxation was the Whiskey Rebellion; later cases of armed conflict were usally far smaller and more localized, but have continued into present times.
The grain used to make the mash, which is the mixture of grain, sugar, water, and yeast that ferments to produce the alcohol, is virtually always corn, so the product is "corn liquor" (also known as "corn whiskey"), sometimes called "mountain dew" because it appears overnight, or simply "shine". (The clear, potent (i.e. high-proof) liquor is also called "white lightning" because of its effect, or "kick".) Today, commercial hog chow is often used, because it is primarily corn and readily available, and more importantly because buying it in the quantities required is a normal part of farming operations and thus does not attract the attention of law enforcement. Other corn-based animal feeds can be used instead, and differences in the other ingredients in the feed impart slightly different flavors to the finished product. Ordinary white sugar is often the chief ingredient of moonshine mash, in which case the spirit distilled is technically a rum rather than a whiskey.
The federal authorities who police moonshining are traditionally termed "revenuers" because they historically worked for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF), which was part of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service until July 1972, when it became a separate bureau within the United States Department of the Treasury. When the Department of Homeland Security was created in 2003, most of BATF was moved to the United States Department of Justice, but alcohol enforcement remained in Treasury, handled by the new Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.
Handling shipments of moonshine is often called "Ridge-Running", "Whiskey-Running", or simply "running" it, by analogy to "rum-running," which originally meant smuggling rum by ship.
Finding old moonshine stills in the backwoods of the mountains and piedmont area of North Carolina is not uncommon. Wilkes County, located in the Blue Ridge foothills of northwestern North Carolina, was particularly well known for its moonshining operations. The first NASCAR event – an offshoot of moonshine runners' hopped up cars – was held in 1947 at the North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Wilkesboro. Junior Johnson, one of NASCAR's first great drivers, was a legendary moonshiner from Wilkes County who outran and outfoxed federal agents for years before finally being caught and arrested (not on the highway, but working at his father's moonshine still). Some towns embrace their moonshine background such as Stokesdale, North Carolina * which has a moonshine still on its town seal.
Franklin County, Virginia is known as the Moonshine Capital of the world, although any remote locale in the Appalachian Mountains or the U.S. South could probably lay claim to that title.
Occasionally moonshine is deliberately mixed with industrial alcohol-containing products, including methanol and denatured alcohol. Results are toxic, with methanol easily capable of causing blindness and death. This resulted in moonshine being known as white lightning, since anyone drinking this mixture would literally be 'struck blind'.
In the past moonshine has been mixed with soap, to fool people into believing that it is of a higher proof.
Methanol and other toxic alcohols can occur naturally in distilled spirits and are called fusel oils. The methanol is concentrated in the first few percent of condensate produced in a batch. The other fusel oils are mostly found at the end of a batch or run. Ordinarily these portions are discarded; if ingested alone or included with the rest of the distilled product they may cause toxic effects. Like commercial beer, wine, and liquor, properly produced moonshine contains very small amounts of methanol at levels that are not toxic. A common way to determine the "quality control" of a batch of moonshine was to see if the moonshiner would dare to drink it.
A common quality test for moonshine was to pour a small quantity of it into a metal spoon and set it alight. Safe distillate burns with a blue flame, but tainted distillate burns with a yellow flame. If a radiator coil had been used as a condenser there would be lead in the alcohol, which would give a reddish flame. This led to the phrase: "Lead burns red and makes you dead." Of course, these tests should not be solely relied upon to test the purity of moonshine or any distilled alcohol.
In addition, moonshine that is over 100 proof (i.e. 50%) is very flammable and easily ignitable. This is especially true during the distilling process in which oxidized vaporized alcohol can accumulate in the air if there is not enough ventilation.
Iron poisoning can sometimes result from uncoated iron tubs in which the mash has been boiled.
Unlicensed moonshining is illegal in Finland, but it is often considered a challenge or hobby. In practice prosecution follows only if authorities become aware that the product is being sold. Most Finnish moonshiners use simple pot stills and flash distillation. Some have constructed sophisticated reflux or rock stills for fractional distillation, containing plate columns or packed columns, with reflux filling components of Raschig rings, crushed glass, nuts, glass pellets or steel wool. Finnish city Kitee is most famous Finnish "moonshine-city". A legitimate brand of moonshine called "Kiteen kirkas" ("Kitee´s Clear") is available commercially.
Potato-based moonshine made illegally in Ireland, is called poitín (IPA , anglicized as poteen or potcheen) or formerly potheen (IPA but in Ireland ). The term is a diminutive of the word pota 'a pot'.
In Poland, the simplest recipe for producing moonshine by fermentation of yeast with the use of 1 kilogram of sugar, 4 liters of water, and 10 dkg of yeast is jokingly abbreviated as 1410 - the year of the Battle of Grunwald, most famous victory of Kingdom of Poland, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and their allies over the Knights of the Teutonic Order in the Middle Ages.
Swedish moonshine is often used for the drink "Höger, vänster", meaning "Right, left", in which you have moonshine in the right hand and soda in the left, and drink one mouth-full each, in that order.
The 1958 movie Thunder Road was about running moonshine. During Prohibition cars were "souped-up" to create a more maneuverable and faster car. Many of the original drivers of NASCAR were former Ridge-Runners in the cars they raced in.
One of the official state songs of Tennessee, "Rocky Top", was written in the 1960s and makes several references to moonshine.
The official fight song of the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech) includes the line "Like all the jolly good fellows, I drink my whiskey clear," which refers to the drinking of moonshine.
Granny from the 1960s television series The Beverly Hillbillies runs a moonshine still by the Clampett family swimming pool and refers to the product as rheumatism medicine and as an ingredient in her "spring tonic" and claims to drink only a thimbleful at a time. Several subplots of the show's episodes focused on a humorous situation involving Granny's liquor.
In the popular television series M*A*S*H (TV series), the characters Hawkeye Pierce and Trapper John, later replaced by B. J. Hunnicutt, made moonshine (which they usually referred to as gin) in a make-shift distillery in their tent.
In The Great Escape (1963), Hilts (Steve McQueen) and Hendley (James Garner) brew moonshine to help celebrate the Fourth of July. The product is so strong, upon tasting it, they can only comment "Wow!" very hoarsely.
In the John Denver song "Country Roads" moonshine is mentioned in the lines "Misty taste of Moonshine, Teardrop in my eye"
In the 1980s television show (and 2005 movie) The Dukes of Hazzard, both based on the 1975 movie Moonrunners, moonshine was a central element of the backstory. The Duke family were covert moonshiners, until the nephews were caught running moonshine out of the county. "Uncle Jesse" made a deal with the government to shut down the moonshining operation; in exchange, his nephews were released and were on probation for most of the series. Many of the early episodes center around moonshine made by someone else, usually associates of Boss Hogg, planting said liquor on Duke property in an effort to revoke the younger Dukes' probation. This series plays off of a large number of the stereotypes commonly associated with the Appalachian moonshiners.
Moonshining (along with alcohol in general) is a common theme in American Country music. It is also the subject of New Zealand rapper Savage's (feat. Akon) hit single "Moonshine".
American country-roots singer/songwriter Gillian Welch released a moonshiner's dying lament, "Tear My Stillhouse Down", on her 1996 debut album "Revival" (produced by T-Bone Burnett).
In 2004, the American rock group, Drive-By Truckers recorded a song about moonshining written by Trucker Mike Cooley's, uncle, Ed Cooley. The song, "Where the Devil Don't Stay", became the first track on their 2004 LP, "The Dirty South".
Crimes | Whiskies | Distillation | Illegal occupations
密造酒 | Hjemmebrent | Heimebrent | Bimber | Самогон | Pontikka | Hembränning | Самогон
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Moonshine".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world