What is a moonshine?
Moonshine is any kind of alcohol, usually a whisky or rum, that is made in secret to avoid high taxes or outright bans on alcoholic drinks.
The term "moonshine" came from Britain, where it originally was "moonshining," which refers to any job or activity that was done late at night. Because the operators of illegal whisky stills had to conduct their business out of the sight of legal authorities, these backwoods brew masters became known as moonshiners, and the term became exclusively theirs.
Moonshiners are the people who actually make the alcohol.
Bootleggers are the smugglers who transport it and sell it. In colonial times, these distributors would conceal their product inside their tall riding boots, where they got their name. More recently, bootleggers in the 1930s, '40s and '50s took to racing cars packed with moonshine through the night to avoid local police. Their mechanical skills developed as they learned to drastically increase the horsepower of their vehicles to outrun the authorities.
This created a culture of car afficionados in the southern United States that eventually grew into the popular NASCAR racing series. In fact, the winner of the first ever NASCAR race had used the same car to make a bootleg run just a week earlier.
Related to moonshiners and bootleggers are rumrunners. Rumrunners are basically bootleggers who smuggle their goods by sea, using fast ships with hidden cargo holds.
Moonshine differs from whiskey because it is made in a sanitized production facility and something made at night in the woods, the primary difference is aging. When whisky comes out of the still, it's so clear it looks like water. Moonshiners bottle it and sell it just like that. Commercial alcohols have an amber or golden color to them -- this is because they are aged for years in charred oak barrels. The aging process gives them color and mellows the harsh taste.
There's no such mellowing with moonshine, which is why it has such "kick."
Despite debate over liquor laws, Utah's Oktoberfest is likely to include beer after all. Read more at Fox News.
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