Nebraska Posted October 20, 2006 Share Posted October 20, 2006 I wouldn't do this again (probably), but in honor of Gary, instead of a link I'm posting the whole damn thing.an exerpt from "Bourbon by Percy Walker"Bourbon does for me what the piece of cake did for Proust.1926: As a child watching my father in Birmingham, in the exurbs, livingnext to a number-6 fairway of the New Country Club, him disdaining boththe bathtub gin and white lightening of the time, aging his own Bourbon ina charcoal keg, on his hands and knees in the basement sucking on thesiphon, a matter of gravity requiring cheek pressed against the concretefloor, the siphon getting going, the decanter ready, the first hot spurtinto his mouth not spat out.1933: My uncle's sun parlour in the Mississippi Delta and toddies on aSunday afternoon, the prolonged and meditative tinkle of silver spoonagainst crystal to dissolve the sugar; talk, tinkle, talk; the talk mostlypolitical: "Roosevelt is doing a good job; no, the son of a bitch isbetraying his class."1934: Drinking at a Delta dance, the boys in bi-swing jackets and tabcollars, tough-talking and profane and also scared of the girls andtherefore safe in the men's room. Somebody passes around bootleg Bourbonin a Coke bottle. It's awful. Tears start from eyes, faces turn red.'Hot damn, that's good!'1935: Drinking at a football game in college. UNC versus Duke. One has ablind date. One is lucky. She is beautiful. Her clothes are the color ofthe fall leaves and her face turns up like a flower. But what to SAY toher, let alone what to do, and whether she is 'nice' or 'hot' -- adistinction made in those days. But what to SAY? Take a drink, by nowfrom a proper concave hip flask (a long way from the Delta Coke bottle)with a hinged top. Will she have a drink? No. But that's all right. Thetaste of the Bourbon (Cream of Kentucky) and the smell of her fuse withthe brilliant Carolina fall and the sounds of the crowd and the hit of thelinesmen in a single synesthesia.1941: Drinking mint juleps, famed Southern Bourbon drink, though in theDeep South not really drunk much. In fact, they are drunk so seldom thatwhen, say, on Derby Day somebody gives a julep party, people drink themlike cocktails, forgetting that a good julep holds at least five ounces ofBourbon. Men fall face-down unconscious, women wander in the woodsdisconsolate and amnesiac, full of thoughts of Kahil Gibran and thelimberlost.Would you believe the first mind julep I had I was sitting not on a columnedporth but in the Boo Snooker bar of the New Yorker Hotel with a Bellevuenurse in 1941? The nurse, a nice upstate girl, head floor nurse, brisk,swift, good-looking; Bellevue nurses, the best in the world and this onethe best of Bellevue, at least the best-looking. The julep, an atrocity,a heavy syrupy Bourbon and water in a small glass clotted with ice. Butgood!How could two women be more different than the beautiful languid Carolinagirl and this swift handsome girl from Utica, best Dutch stock? One thingwas sure. Each has to be courted, loved, drunk with, with Bourbon. Ishould have stuck with the Bourbon. We changed to gin fizzes because thebartender said he came from New Orleans and could make good ones. He couldand did.They were delicious. What I didn't know was that they were made with rawegg albumen and I was allergic to it. What a lovely fine strapping smartgirl!And thinking of being invited into her apartment where she lived alone andof her offering to cook a little supper and of the many kisses and thesweet love that already existed between us and was bound to grow apace,when on the Brooklyn Bridge itself my upper lip began to swell and littlesparks of light flew past the corner of my eye like St. Elmo's fire. Inthe space of thirty seconds my lip stuck out a full three-quarter inch,like a shelf, like Mortimer Snerd. Not only was kissing out of the questionbut my eyes swelled shut. I made it across the bridge, pulled over to thecurb, and fainted. Whereupon this noble nurse drove me back to Bellevue,game me a shot, and put me to bed.Anybody who monkeys around with gin and egg white deserves what he gets.I should have stuck with Bourbon and have from that day to this.POSTSCRIPT: Reader, just in case you don't want to knock it back straightand would rather monkey around with perfectly good Bourbon, here's myfavorite recipe, "Cud'n Walker's Uncle Will's Favorite Mint Julep Receipt."You need excellent Bourbon whiskey; rye or Scotch will not do. Put halfan inch of sugar in the bottom of the glass and merely dampen it with water.Next, very quickly--and here is the trick in the procedure--cruch yourice, actually powder it, preferably with a wooden mallet, so quickly thatit remains dry, and, slipping two sprigs of fresh mint against the insideof the glass, cram the ice in right to the brim, packing it with your hand.Finally, fill the glass, which apparently has no room left for anythingelse, with Bourbon, the older the better, and grate a bit of nutmeg on thetop. The glass will frost immediately. Then settle back in your chairfor half an hour of cumulative bliss." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gillman Posted October 20, 2006 Share Posted October 20, 2006 Thanks Mark. Of Walker Percy one truly could say, he was a bourbonian ahead of his time. With Bernard De Voto, H.L. Mencken, Gerald Carson, Frederic Martin, Michael Jackson, Jim Butler and a few others he blazed the path towards recognition of bourbon as a world class spirit worthy of connoisseur and socio-historical interest.Gary Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gillman Posted October 20, 2006 Share Posted October 20, 2006 I take this opportunity to note that Walker was not a partisan of the speed-drinking method of consuming Mint Juleps.Gary Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TNbourbon Posted October 20, 2006 Share Posted October 20, 2006 I take this opportunity to note that Walker was not a partisan of the speed-drinking method of consuming Mint Juleps.GaryTake that, Chuck!:duel: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barturtle Posted October 20, 2006 Share Posted October 20, 2006 Take that, Chuck!:duel:LOL.:drink: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cowdery Posted October 20, 2006 Share Posted October 20, 2006 Well, take this, fellows. The gentleman's name is Walker Percy, not Percy Walker. He also put nutmeg in it. He is nothing if not idiosyncratic.I've always loved that essay, especially the first line. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gillman Posted October 20, 2006 Share Posted October 20, 2006 Thanks for the correction and I've amended my post since it is just a technical mistake. In stating that Walker Percy was a slow sipper, I did have in mind the Cowderian view that juleps should be consumed quickly. I might point out though that my comment was intended to show Percy's disagreement, not my own. I incline to Chuck's view. In fact (and I have said this before here) I like to drink whiskey in any form fast. I find I "taste" it better that way. I like to have one or two fast drinks - then I stop (usually ). Gary Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nebraska Posted October 21, 2006 Author Share Posted October 21, 2006 There ya go...fixed:lol: I found the grit and grist of real life in this appealing. Remembering chronologically events surrounding bourbon and savory parts of his past.Mark/NebraskaI wouldn't do this again (I did), but in honor of Gary, instead of a link I'm posting the whole damn thing.an excerpt from "Bourbon by Walker Percy"Bourbon does for me what the piece of cake did for Proust.1926: As a child watching my father in Birmingham, in the exurbs, livingnext to a number-6 fairway of the New Country Club, him disdaining boththe bathtub gin and white lightening of the time, aging his own Bourbon ina charcoal keg, on his hands and knees in the basement sucking on thesiphon, a matter of gravity requiring cheek pressed against the concretefloor, the siphon getting going, the decanter ready, the first hot spurtinto his mouth not spat out.1933: My uncle's sun parlour in the Mississippi Delta and toddies on aSunday afternoon, the prolonged and meditative tinkle of silver spoonagainst crystal to dissolve the sugar; talk, tinkle, talk; the talk mostlypolitical: "Roosevelt is doing a good job; no, the son of a bitch isbetraying his class."1934: Drinking at a Delta dance, the boys in bi-swing jackets and tabcollars, tough-talking and profane and also scared of the girls andtherefore safe in the men's room. Somebody passes around bootleg Bourbonin a Coke bottle. It's awful. Tears start from eyes, faces turn red.'Hot damn, that's good!'1935: Drinking at a football game in college. UNC versus Duke. One has ablind date. One is lucky. She is beautiful. Her clothes are the color ofthe fall leaves and her face turns up like a flower. But what to SAY toher, let alone what to do, and whether she is 'nice' or 'hot' -- adistinction made in those days. But what to SAY? Take a drink, by nowfrom a proper concave hip flask (a long way from the Delta Coke bottle)with a hinged top. Will she have a drink? No. But that's all right. Thetaste of the Bourbon (Cream of Kentucky) and the smell of her fuse withthe brilliant Carolina fall and the sounds of the crowd and the hit of thelinesmen in a single synesthesia.1941: Drinking mint juleps, famed Southern Bourbon drink, though in theDeep South not really drunk much. In fact, they are drunk so seldom thatwhen, say, on Derby Day somebody gives a julep party, people drink themlike cocktails, forgetting that a good julep holds at least five ounces ofBourbon. Men fall face-down unconscious, women wander in the woodsdisconsolate and amnesiac, full of thoughts of Kahil Gibran and thelimberlost.Would you believe the first mind julep I had I was sitting not on a columnedporth but in the Boo Snooker bar of the New Yorker Hotel with a Bellevuenurse in 1941? The nurse, a nice upstate girl, head floor nurse, brisk,swift, good-looking; Bellevue nurses, the best in the world and this onethe best of Bellevue, at least the best-looking. The julep, an atrocity,a heavy syrupy Bourbon and water in a small glass clotted with ice. Butgood!How could two women be more different than the beautiful languid Carolinagirl and this swift handsome girl from Utica, best Dutch stock? One thingwas sure. Each has to be courted, loved, drunk with, with Bourbon. Ishould have stuck with the Bourbon. We changed to gin fizzes because thebartender said he came from New Orleans and could make good ones. He couldand did.They were delicious. What I didn't know was that they were made with rawegg albumen and I was allergic to it. What a lovely fine strapping smartgirl!And thinking of being invited into her apartment where she lived alone andof her offering to cook a little supper and of the many kisses and thesweet love that already existed between us and was bound to grow apace,when on the Brooklyn Bridge itself my upper lip began to swell and littlesparks of light flew past the corner of my eye like St. Elmo's fire. Inthe space of thirty seconds my lip stuck out a full three-quarter inch,like a shelf, like Mortimer Snerd. Not only was kissing out of the questionbut my eyes swelled shut. I made it across the bridge, pulled over to thecurb, and fainted. Whereupon this noble nurse drove me back to Bellevue,game me a shot, and put me to bed.Anybody who monkeys around with gin and egg white deserves what he gets.I should have stuck with Bourbon and have from that day to this.POSTSCRIPT: Reader, just in case you don't want to knock it back straightand would rather monkey around with perfectly good Bourbon, here's myfavorite recipe, "Cud'n Walker's Uncle Will's Favorite Mint Julep Receipt."You need excellent Bourbon whiskey; rye or Scotch will not do. Put halfan inch of sugar in the bottom of the glass and merely dampen it with water.Next, very quickly--and here is the trick in the procedure--cruch yourice, actually powder it, preferably with a wooden mallet, so quickly thatit remains dry, and, slipping two sprigs of fresh mint against the insideof the glass, cram the ice in right to the brim, packing it with your hand.Finally, fill the glass, which apparently has no room left for anythingelse, with Bourbon, the older the better, and grate a bit of nutmeg on thetop. The glass will frost immediately. Then settle back in your chairfor half an hour of cumulative bliss." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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