Tuesday, April 1, 2014

DAY 131 - COUNTING DOWN TO THE 50TH

GOOD MORNING, CLASS OF '64
The Moonshiners - Arie Reinhardt Taylor - NC Folk Artist
The Moonshine Runner

 David Ronald Bruce Pekrul
 
Deep in the thick of an woodland grove,
A man stands next to a pot-bellied stove,
A grizzled old man hiding out in this cove,
The moonshine is flowing again.
 
He heats the mash and squeezes the corn,
Distilling the liquid from evening ‘til morn’,
Just like his father, before he was born,
The moonshine is flowing again.

“I’ll take this booze and spread it around,
To the boys in the woods and the men in the town,
Don’t care if the ladies all wear a big frown,
The moonshine is flowing again.”

He loads up the trunk of his ’39 Chev,
He runs all the lights, even though they are red,
The revenue taxmen all want him for dead,
The moonshine is flowing again.

They're hot on his trail and there’s nowhere to run,
He heads down the highway and follows the sun,
The cops cut him down ‘cause he’s wearing a gun,
The moonshine is flowing again.

“I’ll take this booze and spread it around,
To the boys in the woods and the men in the town,
Don’t care if the ladies all wear a big frown,
The moonshine is flowing again.”

He lies all alone in an unmarked grave,
The cops shot him down ‘cause he wouldn’t behave,
The booze that they captured, they figured they’d save,
The moonshine is flowing again.

A voice is heard, coming up from the ground,
“My life is now over, to Hell I am bound,
Just leave me some liquor, where it can be found,”
The moonshine is flowing again.

“Now take this booze and spread it around,
To the boys in the woods and the men in the town,
Don’t care if the ladies all wear a big frown,
The moonshine is flowing again.”

Moonshine Running

Sundays with Larry


The Still 

Moonshine Still - Eric Cunningham
Sometime before my birth, during World War II, a gentleman named Lester had a moonshine still on the farm. I know it was during the war because Lester gave Mom a large amount of sugar so she could can her fruit. He, of course, got it on the black market, but Mom really appreciated it.

Moonshine Still Sketch - Dodeone

Mom and Dad were both honest and conscientious about obeying the law but being able to can the food needed for their family had precedent over wartime sugar rationing. I believe the still was located near the head of Indian Run; that’s one of the few places on the farm with enough water to operate a still. I don’t think Dad ever worked the still, but he carried the product in a burlap bag to Valley Head each Saturday. Apricot brandy was made at least one time.

Moonshine in Mason Jar
One Saturday, Dad carried the prearranged number of Mason jars of moonshine to Valley Head. He literally carried them because we didn’t have a car then. The still owner had a beer joint in Valley Head, and as Dad approached it, he saw a State Police car in front. Dad went around to the rear and went into the back room. When he got Lester’s attention, Lester brought the two State Policemen into the back room and gave each of them a quart jar of “shine.”

Moonshine Express - Debra & Dave Vanderlaan
After they left, he told Dad that if he were ever stopped by the law while carrying the moonshine, he should just tell them who it belonged to. Dad said that he didn’t realize that Lester was so tight with the law.

Moonshine Still - Daniel Eskridge
Lester then explained exactly how tight he was with the law. He reminded Dad that he had a new still that year, one more than twice as large as the one he had used earlier. Lester had not had someone make the new still for him; he had exchanged the small one for a bigger one from the evidence room at the county court house.

All confiscated stills were inventoried by number not by size. Like any successful businessman, he was simply trying to expand his business, aided and abetted by the members of the Randolph County Court!
An interesting sidelight of this is that for many years my cousin was the Clerk of the Circuit Court in Randolph County. I’m not sure if he was in the courthouse when this happened, or if he was party to it if he was there.


The entire courthouse crowd had a reputation for severely bending and sometimes breaking the law. Dad used to call them “that d--- crooked courthouse gang.” 



Many of them became rather wealthy from their “public service,” just as so many of our elected non-representatives do today.



White Lightning
Written by the rockabilly artist J. P. Richardson, 
best known by his stage name, 
The Big Bopper.
Released as a single in February 1959. 
On April 13, 1959, Jones' version 
became the first Number One 
single of his career.
White Lightning - George Jones - 1959

 Thunder Road
Robert Mitchum
A black and white 1958 film 
about running moonshine 
in the mountains of Kentucky and 
Tennessee in the late 1950s.
Thunder Road (1958) Car Scenes Part 1 

The Ballad of Thunder Road
Robert Mitchum co-wrote the song with Don Raye.
The Ballad of Thunder Road - Jim & Jesse
 
Moonshine
The name comes from the distillation process being done at night so as not to get caught distilling.
 When shaken, if large bubbles form with a short duration 
this indicates a higher alcohol content, while smaller bubbles that disappear more slowly 
indicate lower alcohol content.
 
 
 
 
 
U.S. Calvary Looking for Illicit Stills in the South
 
A Moonshine Joke
as told by Larry
A good old boy is walking down
the road carrying some
moonshine and a shotgun.
He happens to meet a city slicker.
The good old boy asks the city slicker
if he would care to try some "shine".
The city slicker tells him no,
he just doesn't care for any.
The good old boy points the gun at him
and tells him to drink.
Of course, the city slicker drinks.
When he finishes,
the good old boy says to him,
"Now, hold the gun on me."
 
Another Moonshine Joke
as told by Larry
A good old boy is walking through town 
with some moonshine stuck in his boot, 
hidden under his pant's leg, 
and carrying a sachel.
"What's that under your pant's leg?" 
he's asked by one of the townsfolk.
"That's my moonshine", he replies. 
"There's nothing better for a snake bite."
"Well, what's that in the satchel?" 
asks the curious townsfolk.
"That's my snake," 
said the good old boy.
 
Fun Facts about Moonshine 
A BRIEF HISTORY OF MOONSHINING
Moonshine Nicknames
Hootch, Shine, Booze, Kickapoo Joy Juice,  
Corn Liquor, Mountain Dew, white lightning, Hillbilly Pop
 
Good Old Mountain Dew
The terms "mountain dew" and "moonshine" 
are thought to have come 
to the United States from Ireland.
Over time, artists have added new verses, 
but the tune has remained the same 
since it was first written in the 1920s.
 Good Old Mountain Dew - Grandpa Jones
Oh they call it that ole mountain dew 
and them that refuse it are few.
I'll shut up my mug if you fill up my jug 
with some good ole mountain dew.
 
How to Make Apple Pie Moonshine

 To make Apple Pie Moonshine at home, you obviously need Moonshine! This could be purchased from a legal moonshine distiller, or you can make it yourself (Click here to learn how).

Ingredients:

  • 1 gallon Apple Juice
  • 1 gallon Apple Cider
  • 2 cups Brown Sugar
  • 8 Cinnamon Sticks
  • 2 liter Moonshine (or high-proof substitute)
  • 1 Shinny Apple

Instructions:

  1. Pour the non-alcoholic liquids (apple juice, apple cider) into a large pot
  2. Add the brown sugar + 4 cinnamon sticks
  3. Bring the pot to a boil, then simmer for 15 mins
  4. Once the liquid cools to a luke-warm temperature, add the moonshine!
  5. Stir diligently and let cool (I stick the whole pot in the fridge)
  6. Pour a glass and enjoy!

Garnish:

(optional)
  1. Remove the apply core without damaging the outside
  2. Cut the apple horizontally into slices
  3. Place the apple slice into a glass and
  4. Insert a cinnamon stick through the core hole

Apple Pie Moonshine Shots

  1. Fill shot glass with Apply Pie Moonshine
  2. Top with whipped cream and cinnamon
 Apple Pie Moonshine 
 
Dooley
"Dooley" is a song performed by The Dillards
on The Andy Griffith Show episodes
The Darlings Are Coming
and
Mountain Wedding.
Dooley

Verse 1
Dooley was a good old man, he lived below the mill
Dooley had two daughters and a forty-gallon still
One gal watched the boiler, the other watched the spout
And mama corked the bottles and old Dooley fetched 'em out


Chorus
Dooley slippin' up the holler
Dooley tryin' to make a dollar
Dooley, give me a swaller
And I'll pay you back someday


Verse 2
The revenuers came for him, a-slippin' through the woods
Dooley kept behind them all and never lost his goods
Dooley was a trader when into town he'd come
Sugar by the bushel and molasses by the drum


Verse 3
I remember very well the day old Dooley died
The women folk weren't sorry and the men stood 'round and cried
Now Dooley's on the mountain, he lies there all alone
They put a jug beside him and a barrel for his stone
 
The Andy Griffith Show
The Darlings 
Country Music Channel

I’ve been a moonshiner goin’ on seventeen year.
I spent all my money on whiskey and beer.
I’ll go to some holler and set up my still,
And sell you a gallon for a two-dollar bill.
“The Kentucky Moonshiner” (traditional)
 

1 comment:

  1. That was really good !!!! I have to make sure Danny reads this one and good jokes Larry !! still laughing!!!!!!!Jmc

    ReplyDelete