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A Spontaneous Libation for your Consideration

From the Knowledge Vault

Making Bourbon

This is the fourth in a series on Bourbon by Zach Pearson. Read them all: Bourbon, Bourbon After the Act, Bourbon: What it is ... and isn't, Making Bourbon, Who Makes My Bourbon, Producer Capsules., Finding the Good Stuff, Tasting the Good Stuff, Neat, Mashbills, Geeky Information and Resources.

This is really pretty simple. A distiller buys grains off the commodity market: corn, wheat, rye, whatever their recipe demands. They also buy malted barley from a supplier; none of the large Bourbon distillers grow their own grains or malt their own barley. Each grain is milled into meal, which takes specialized equipment for each grain, then everything is cooked together, with the addition of each grain happening at a different temperature. Starch to sugar conversion is allowed to take place (due to the enzymes in the malted barley), then fermentation is started, typically with a secret yeast strain. After this, everything is dumped into a column still, where a first distillation happens. This liquid (at about 80 proof) is pumped into a doubler still where a second distillation takes it to between 110 and 150 proof. The spent grain, historically fed to pigs is removed from the still and a portion of it is used to “sour” the next batch of grain, ensuring proper pH for yeast growth.

Recent Additions

  • Cornucopia (Claphamcocktails) — Corn Whiskey, RinQuinQuin a la Peche, Bianco Vermouth, Cachaça, Bitters, Lemon
  • Over the next ridge — Gin, Bianco Vermouth, Breckenridge Bitter, Brucato Amaro Chaparral, Lemon
  • Pamplemousse au Poivre — Mezcal, Pamplemousse Rose, Pepper liqueur, Grapefruit bitters, Lemon juice
  • Fall Gimlet — Gin, Pear liqueur, Lime cordial, Lime
  • Old Timer — Bourbon, Jamaican rum, Sweet vermouth, Bénédictine, Peychaud's Bitters, Bitters

Recent Discussion

  • Re Pamplemousse au Poivre, 3 hours ago Shawn C commented:

    Curated to include Ehrmann's Elixir de Poivre cordial. I made the cordial using twice as much szechuan peppercorn as called for. It worked very well in this drink, and if anything I might increase the szechuan pepper again to try to capture some of its numbing essence (which was not apparent in the cocktail.) The cocktail was very good and my wife soon requested another. She is not usually a fan of mezcal drinks, so this was high praise.

  • Re Dreaming of Oaxaca, 3 hours ago saxophonenerd commented:

    This is a good drink, but needs more acid in my opinion. I tried the recipe as written and then added some lemon juice which I think really helped. I do suggest trying it as written though because I know many of my friends would have really loved it as-is.

  • Re Washington Heights cocktail, 1 day ago BLBU99 commented:

    Enjoyed better with a bit of orgeat.

  • Re 3 Day Weekend, 1 day ago Artur B commented:

    Best way to use Italicus. Very good balance, easy to drink.

  • Re Inkwell, 2 days ago drinkingandthinking commented:

    Phenomenal! Requires a sophisticated palate. Not for the faint of heart.