Southern U.S. distillery to legally sell moonshine

rockin'robin

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Related ContentUnidentified moonshiners are pictured near Glassy Mountain Township in the Dark Corner …
CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) - Two entrepreneurs are taking advantage of new micro-distillery laws in South Carolina to make and sell traditional moonshine whiskey legally for the first time in the southern state.

The Dark Corner Distillery will open next month in Greenville, where engineer Joe Fenten, 27, and longtime home beer brewer Richard Wenger will produce and sell small batches of 100-proof moonshine from a custom-made copper still.

The distillery, housed in a 1925 building, will also include a tasting bar and a museum dedicated to the history of the Dark Corner, the local mountains that were once full of moonshiners, feud and mayhem, Fenten told Reuters.

The area was settled, along with the nearby Smoky Mountains of Tennessee and Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, by Scots, Irish and Welsh who migrated down through the Appalachian mountain chain from Pennsylvania in the 1700s.

"They thought it was their inalienable, God-given right to make whiskey," said Fenten, a Dark Corner native. "It was a hard life. If you could make an extra 10 cents more for a gallon of whiskey than you could for a bushel of corn, then why not?"

Moonshine traditionally was the term used to describe illegally distilled corn whiskey often made covertly by the light of the moon. The product made at the new distillery will be un-aged corn whiskey, but will be taxed and regulated.

The area came to be called the Dark Corner in 1832 by South Carolina politicians seeking to nullify federal law and who cursed the people of the mountains as Unionists, said Dean Campbell, a Dark Corner native who is the distillery's official historian.

Whiskey taxes after the Civil War and then Prohibition in the 20th century made the place more lawless, Campbell said.

News accounts in the 1920s called the Dark Corner "a little Chicago" because of federal agents' raids on stills, killings, and gun and knife fights that broke out after church, he said.

Illegal moonshine is still being made there, Campbell said. In June, sheriff's deputies busted a still in Landrum, South Carolina, and confiscated 2,000 gallons of illegal white liquor along with $150,000 in cash.

State lawmakers in 2009 altered existing liquor laws in a way that lessened the financial burden on small distilleries, paving the way for the Dark Corner Distillery to set up shop.

Despite the drink's reputation, legal moonshine makers also have popped up in other states, including Oregon, Wisconsin, Montana, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, New York and North Carolina.

Southern U.S. distillery to legally sell moonshine - Yahoo! News
 
I think it's a funny marketing thing they're getting onto here.

Moonshine is basically whiskey that was made without taxation, and is illegal.
 
I own one while is legal to purchase and yet, it's not same as the original moonshine is.
 
It's not moonshine if it is legal... and it is only 100 proof.
 
I think it's a funny marketing thing they're getting onto here.

Moonshine is basically whiskey that was made without taxation, and is illegal.

That was my question. If it is now legal, is it really moonshine?
 
It has to meet food safety standards throughout the process. Illegal distelleries were often notorious for making moonshine that was contaminated and sometimes made people sick. But then again as drunk and inebriated as you were, you probably don't even recall the contamination effects. :lol:
 
It has to meet food safety standards throughout the process. Illegal distelleries were often notorious for making moonshine that was contaminated and sometimes made people sick. But then again as drunk and inebriated as you were, you probably don't even recall the contamination effects. :lol:

Yup, there are some interesting stories about moldy wash that were distilled...:shock:
 
you mean those stuff can kill you?
100 proof is nothing I got a rum that is 151 proof (over proof) they call it
 
you mean those stuff can kill you?
100 proof is nothing I got a rum that is 151 proof (over proof) they call it

let me ask you this - can you run a hot rod on 151 proof rum?
 
let me ask you this - can you run a hot rod on 151 proof rum?

dunno i havent tried, and i wouldnt cus hot rods are fucking expensive speed equipment im not messing with 75.5% alcohol, it might even ping too much, Methanol is better run colder that gives better compression and less melting point on the plugs...
 
dunno i havent tried, and i wouldnt cus hot rods are fucking expensive speed equipment im not messing with 75.5% alcohol, it might even ping too much, Methanol is better run colder that gives better compression and less melting point on the plugs...

not a problem for these hillbillies :lol:
 
not a problem for these hillbillies :lol:

I recall someone making an old beat up truck here run entirely off of alcohol. He was a mechanic for 20+ years. He got sick of how expensive gas prices were going up, so he took his old Datsun truck, did some mechanic work on it, and converted it over to run on alcohol. I'm not sure what he uses but you know its him when it's this fat scraggly looking guy with a beard, driving a small Datsun truck with this tank looking thing mounted to the front of the grille. :lol: You know that had to take a certain amount of intelligence to do.
 
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