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Even Better than Sweet Mash Bourbon
Gary,
Your gracious note was posted while I was still tramping around the barbecue joints of North Carolina and slipped past me.
I happened upon the attached image on ebay at Yellowstone ad). I found it funny that at least three marketing buzzwords are trotted out in the copy: sweet mash, sour mash, and mellow mash. These all have real meanings, but did the adwriter really have a clue what they meant?
I find "swank" advertising from the '50s and '60s a perpetual source of amusement.
Roger
Re: Even Better than Sweet Mash Bourbon
Roger, thanks. These old ads do evoke a seemingly bygone time, one when style and "sophistication" ruled the roost. Today ads promote more informal styles of living, a legacy of the social revolution of the 1960's. I think Bobby once explained what mellow mash as used by Yellowstone was. I think it was a term they came up with to describe a cleaner distillate resulting from a reflux extension on their column still. This simply put the distillate through more analysis. So it wasn't (apparently) a variation on the mashing procedures of sweet and sour mash bourbon. Ad writers look for tags of this sort, Michter's Original Sour Mash apparently did this when it referred to its whiskey as "pot still". The fruity candy-like flavor of Yellowstone can't be attributed though to a reflux feature of the still, probably it derived from the yeasts used. Think of a fruity beer such as Sierra Nevada or any traditional-tasting top-fermented ale (especially English types). These beers taste of soft fruits due to their ester content, which derives from the higher fermentation temperatures used (higher than for lager beers, which are bottom-fermented). This is why brandy tastes fruity, for example, or applejack or Calvados in France taste appley. So if you had a fruity cereal ferment, one that if made into a beer would taste of strawberry or cherry, it stands to reason the bourbon made from its distillate would have those flavors. This is why many of the older bourbons had a rich taste, in my opinion, I think they had proprietary yeasts which imparted a particular character. This may still be true today but if so the effects imparted rarely have an estery note (occasionally one comes across a fruity bourbon or rye, though).
Gary
Re: Even Better than Sweet Mash Bourbon
Quote:
I think Bobby once explained what mellow mash as used by Yellowstone was. I think it was a term they came up with to describe a cleaner distillate resulting from a reflux extension on their column still.
Oddly today an Obit came up for Robert McLean Nash who was Frank Thompsons' Grandson In Law and a VP of Glenmore. Now I won't do it, because it would offend sensibilities on different levels, but it did cross my mind to go to the visitation to see if I could find an old Glenmore person that could shed light on the "Mellow Mash" process( If that's it) or the angle the marketers were going for.
Re: Even Better than Sweet Mash Bourbon
Maybe I didn't recall corectly, I thought you had printed that note about mellow mash and reflux, Bobby. I'll try to search and pull it up to see who said that.
Gary
Re: Even Better than Sweet Mash Bourbon
I did post that, it was from Krolls book, but what he says and what their marketers present seem like 2 different things. By the mention of Sour and Sweet Mash it seems again a process of fermentation and Kroll has it happening squarely at the Still.