Schon vor über 20 Jahren veröffentlichten die ersten Brennereien ihre Single Barrels. Das war revolutionär, denn noch nie zuvor hatte man Whiskey aus einem einzigen Fass und einer einzigen Destillation der breiten Masse zugänglich gemacht. Was damals schon so viele Liebhaber erfreuen konnte, wollen auch heute einige Brennereien schaffen – so auch die bekannte Marke Jack Daniel’s! Der beliebte Whiskey-Hersteller Jack Daniel’s lässt sich nicht lumpen und präsentiert seit geraumer Zeit besondere Single Barrels im Rahmen der Jack Daniel’s Single Barrel-Reihe. Show Mit Jack Daniel’s Single Barrel Rye ist nun nicht nur ein weiterer Whiskey der Single Barrel-Reihe auf dem Markt gelandet, sondern auch noch der dritte und schließlich voll gereifte Rye Whiskey. Mit ihm vollendet Jack Daniel’s seinen Ausflug in die Welt der Roggen-Whiskeys, die 2012 mit dem Erscheinen des klaren Unaged Rye startete und 2014 mit dem bernsteinfarbenen Rested Rye fortgesetzt wurde. Mit 70% Roggen, 18% Mais und 12% gemalzter Gerste ist dieser Single Barrel von Jack Daniel’s ein typischer Rye Whiskey. Zuvor ausgebrannte Fässer aus Amerikanischer Weißeiche geben dem seltenen Tropfen von Jack Daniel’s für die Reifedauer ein Zuhause. Sie alle lagern im oberen Teil des Lagerhauses und sind so Temperaturschwankungen ausgesetzt, die dabei helfen, das intensive Roggen-Aroma im Single Barrel herauszukitzeln. Jack Daniel’s Single Barrel Rye ist von Master Distiller Jeff Arnett in einem langjährigen Verfahren kreiert worden, bis das perfekte Rezept gefunden war. Nun besticht dieser Single Barrel Rye der Marke Jack Daniel’s mit Noten von Vanille, getrockneten Früchten, Äpfeln und Nuancen von verschiedenen Gewürzen. Sein sanfter Abgang ist trotz der recht hohen 47% Vol. Alkohol erhalten geblieben, was Freunde qualitativ hochwertiger Rye Whiskeys freuen dürfte. Ihr solltet auch die anderen Whiskeys aus der Single Barrel-Reihe probieren! Wie wäre es mit Jack’s Silver Select Single Barrel?Bei uns im Shop gibt es die Whiskeys aus der edlen Single Barrel-Reihe von Jack Daniel’s natürlich auch. Die außergewöhnlichen Drinks wie Jack Daniel’s Silver Select Single Barrel, Jack Daniel’s Single Barrel Select Tennessee Whiskey oder Jack Daniel’s Single Barrel Barrel Proof Whiskey warten mit ihrem extravaganten Geschmack schon auf Euch. Kommen wir zum ersten des Sortiments. Jede Jack Daniel’s-Flasche präsentiert hier ein neues Geschmacks-Profil! Jack Daniel’s Silver Select Single Barrel erhält – typisch für Jack Daniel’s Single Barrel – seine exquisite Note durch Einzelfasslagerung. Die Fässer reifen alle an unterschiedlichen Stellen im Lagerhaus und entwickeln so verschiedene Noten und Farbtöne. Im Lincoln-County-Verfahren wird der zweite Single Barrel Whiskey vor seiner Reifung durch Ahornholzkohle gefiltert und lagert daraufhin doppelt so lange wie der originale Tennessee Whiskey von Jack Daniel’s. Das Resultat ist ein goldbrauner Whiskey namens Jack Daniel’s Single Barrel Select Tennessee. Süße Früchte und Kräuter vermählen sich mit einem Hauch von Gemüse. Mit Nuancen von Vanille, Gewürzen und Eichenholz gleitet er sanft am Gaumen herab. Der Abgang ist lang und cremig. Der letzte aus der Reihe, den wir Euch vorstellen wollen, ist Jack Daniel‘s Single Barrel Barrel Proof Whiskey. Hier wird Experimentierfreudigkeit großgeschrieben. Auf Fassstärke abgefüllt kann man nie genau wissen, mit wie viel Prozent Alkohol der Whiskey von Jack Daniel’s schließlich aus dem Fass fließt. Teilweise ergibt dieses Verfahren Single Barrel Whiskeys, die zwischen 62 und 70% Alkohol aufweisen, trotz allem aber geschmeidig den Gaumen hinabgleiten. Dieser bernstein- bis mahagonifarbene Jack Daniel’s verführt mit Noten von Nelken, Vanille und Karamell nachdem einem duftende Aromen von Karamell, Ahornsirup und Fasskohle das Wasser im Mund zusammenlaufen lassen. Wieder mal ist hier ein Single Barrel gelungen, der Liebhaber beeindrucken wird.
Our signature Single Barrel offering.
Our first new grain bill since Prohibition.
Whiskey as nature intended it.
Bottled in Bond.
Select your very own barrel of Jack Daniel's Single Barrel Select and have it individually bottled and personalized.
Lynchburg, Tennessee U.S. Area served Key people
Production output 16.1 million cases (38,300,000 US gal or 144,900,000 l) (2017)[3]Net income $121,700,000Number of employees over 500[4]ParentBrown–Forman CorporationWebsitejackdaniels.comJack Daniel Distillery U.S. National Register of Historic Places LocationTN 55Lynchburg, TennesseeNRHP reference No.72001248Added to NRHPSeptember 14, 1972 Jack Daniel's is a brand of Tennessee whiskey. It is produced in Lynchburg, Tennessee, by the Jack Daniel Distillery, which has been owned by the Brown–Forman Corporation since 1956. Packaged in square bottles, Jack Daniel's "Black Label" Tennessee whiskey sold 12.5 million nine-liter cases in the fiscal year ending on April 30, 2017. Other brand variations, such as Tennessee Honey, Gentleman Jack, and Tennessee Fire, added another 2.9 million cases to sales. Sales of an additional 800,000 equivalent cases in ready to drink (RTD) products brought the fiscal year total to more than 16.1 million equivalent adjusted cases for the entire Jack Daniel's family of brands.[3] The Jack Daniel's brand's official website suggests that its founder, Jasper Newton "Jack" Daniel, was born in 1850 (his tombstone bears that date[1]), but says his exact birth date is unknown.[5] The company website says it is customary to celebrate his birthday in September.[5] According to the Tennessee state library website in 2013, records list his birth date as September 5, 1846. It maintains that the 1850 birth date seems impossible since his mother died in 1847.[1] In the 2004 biography Blood & Whiskey: The Life and Times of Jack Daniel, author Peter Krass said his investigation showed that Daniel was born in January 1849 (based on Jack's sister's diary, census records, and the date of death of Jack's mother).[6] Jack was the youngest of 10 children born to his mother, Lucinda (Cook) Daniel, and father Calaway Daniel. After Lucinda's death, his father remarried and had three more children.[6] Calaway Daniel's father, Joseph "Job" Daniel, had emigrated from Wales to the United States with his Scottish wife, the former Elizabeth Calaway.[7] Jack Daniel's ancestry included English, and Scots-Irish as well.[8][better source needed] Jack did not get along with his stepmother. After Daniel's father died in the Civil War, the boy ran away from home and was essentially orphaned at a young age.[2][6] Jack Daniel, founder As a teenager, Daniel was taken in by Dan Call, a local lay preacher and moonshine distiller. He began learning the distilling trade from Call and his Master Distiller, Nathan "Nearest" Green, an enslaved African-American man. Green continued to work with Call after emancipation.[2] In 1875, on receiving an inheritance from his father's estate (following a long dispute with his siblings), Daniel founded a legally registered distilling business with Call. He took over the distillery shortly afterward when Call quit for religious reasons.[2][6] The brand label on the product says "Est. & Reg. in 1866", but his biographer has cited official registration documents, asserting that the business was not established until 1875.[1][2] After taking over the distillery in 1884, Daniel purchased the hollow and land where the distillery is now located.[2][7] By the 1880s, Jack Daniel's was one of 15 distilleries operating in Moore County, and the second-most productive behind Tom Eaton's Distillery.[9] He began using square-shaped bottles, intended to convey a sense of fairness and integrity, in 1897.[2][6] According to Daniel's biographer, the origin of the "Old No. 7" brand name was the number assigned to Daniel's distillery for government registration.[2][6] He was forced to change the registration number when the federal government redrew the district, and he became Number 16 in district 5 instead of No. 7 in district 4. However, he continued to use his original number as a brand name, since the brand reputation had already been established.[2][6] An entirely different explanation is given in the 1967 book Jack Daniel's Legacy which states that the name was chosen in 1887 after a visit to a merchant friend in Tullahoma, who had built a chain of seven stores.[10] Jack Daniel's had a surge in popularity after the whiskey received the gold medal for the finest whiskey at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. However, its local reputation began to suffer as the temperance movement began gaining strength in Tennessee.[2][6][7] The replica home of Lem Motlow, proprietor from 1911 to 1947; the original home was demolished in 2005 and rebuilt at the distillery in Lynchburg[11] Jack Daniel never married and did not have any known children. He took his nephews under his wing – one of whom was Lemuel "Lem" Motlow (1869–1947).[2][6] Lem, a son of Daniel's sister, Finetta,[7] was skilled with numbers. He soon took responsibility for the distillery's bookkeeping. In failing health, Jack Daniel gave the distillery to Lem Motlow and another nephew in 1907.[2][6] Motlow soon bought out his partner, and went on to operate the distillery for about 40 years. Tennessee passed a statewide prohibition law in 1910, effectively barring the legal distillation of Jack Daniel's within the state. Motlow challenged the law in a test case that eventually worked its way to the Tennessee Supreme Court. The court upheld the law as constitutional.[12][13] Daniel died in 1911 from blood poisoning. An oft-told tale is that the infection began in one of his toes, which Daniel injured one early morning at work by kicking his safe in anger when he could not get it open (he was said to always have had trouble remembering the combination).[14] But Daniel's modern biographer has asserted that this account is not true.[2][6] Because of prohibition in Tennessee, the company shifted its distilling operations to St Louis, Missouri, and Birmingham, Alabama. None of the production from these locations was ever sold due to quality problems.[15] The Alabama operation was halted following a similar statewide prohibition law in that state, and the St. Louis operation fell to the onset of nationwide prohibition following passage of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1920. While the passage of the Twenty-first Amendment in 1933 repealed prohibition at the federal level, state prohibition laws (including Tennessee's) remained in effect, thus preventing the Lynchburg distillery from reopening. Motlow, who had become a Tennessee state senator, led efforts to repeal these laws, which allowed production to restart in 1938. The five-year gap between national repeal and Tennessee repeal was commemorated in 2008 with a gift pack of two bottles, one for the 75th anniversary of the end of prohibition and a second commemorating the 70th anniversary of the reopening of the distillery.[16] The Jack Daniel's distillery ceased operations from 1942 to 1946 when the U.S. government banned the manufacture of whiskey due to World War II. Motlow resumed production of Jack Daniel's in 1947 after good-quality corn was again available.[15] Motlow died the same year, bequeathing the distillery to his children, Robert, Reagor, Dan, Conner, and Mary, upon his death.[17] A plaque on Jack Daniel's office recognizing the distillery's status in the National Register of Historic Places The company was later incorporated as "Jack Daniel Distillery, Lem Motlow, Prop., Inc.", allowing the company to continue to include Motlow in its tradition-oriented marketing. Likewise, company advertisements continue to use Lynchburg's 1960s-era population figure of 361, though the city has since formed a consolidated city-county government with Moore County. Its official population is more than 6,000, according to the 2010 census. The company was sold to the Brown–Forman Corporation in 1956.[18] The Jack Daniel's Distillery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. In 2012, a Welshman, Mark Evans, claimed to have discovered the original recipe for Daniel's whiskey,[19] in a book written in 1853 by his great-great-grandmother. Her brother-in-law had emigrated to Tennessee. An ad for Old No. 7 from a 1908 edition of The Nashville Globe Until 1987, Jack Daniel's black label was historically produced at 90 U.S. proof (45% alcohol by volume).[20] The lower-end green label product was 80 proof. However, starting in 1987, the other label variations also were reduced in proof. This began with black label being initially reduced to 86 proof. Both the black and green label expressions are made from the same ingredients; the difference is determined by professional tasters, who decide which of the batches would be sold under the "premium" black label, with the rest being sold as "standard" green label. A further dilution began in 2002 when all generally available Jack Daniel's products were reduced to 80 proof, thus further lowering production costs and excise taxes.[21][22] This reduction in alcohol content, which was done without any announcement, publicity or change of logo or packaging,[22] was noticed and condemned by Modern Drunkard Magazine, and the magazine formed a petition drive for drinkers who disagreed with the change.[21] The company countered that it believed consumers preferred lower-proof products, and said that the change had not hurt the sales of the brand.[21][22] The petition effort garnered some publicity and collected more than 13,000 signatures, but the company held firm with its decision.[21] A few years later, Advertising Age said in 2005 that "virtually no one noticed" the change, and confirmed that sales of the brand had actually increased since the dilution began.[22] Jack Daniel's has also produced higher-proof special releases and premium-brand expressions at times. A one-time limited run of 96 proof, the highest proof Jack Daniel's had ever bottled at that time, was bottled for the 1996 Tennessee Bicentennial in a decorative bicentennial bottle. The distillery debuted its 94 proof "Jack Daniel's Single Barrel" in February 1997. The Silver Select Single Barrel was formerly the company's highest proof at 100, but is available only in duty-free shops. Now, there are 'single barrel barrel proof' editions, ranging from 125–140 proof. Sales and brand value statusJack Daniel's Black Label Tennessee Whiskey is the best-selling whiskey in the world[23] and remains the flagship product of Brown–Forman Corporation. During the fiscal year ended April 30, 2017, the product had sales of 12.5 million cases.[24] Underlying net sales for the Jack Daniel's brand grew by 3% (−1% on a reported basis).[clarification needed][3] Tennessee Honey and Tennessee Fire were also solid contributors to the total underlying net sales growth of 3% (flat on a reported basis) for the Jack Daniel's family of brands. They grew underlying net sales by 4% and 14% (3% and 18% on a reported basis), respectively. Premium brand Gentleman Jack grew underlying net sales mid-single digits, while the RTD/RTP segment increased underlying net sales by 6% (3% on a reported basis).[3] In the IWSR 2013 World Class Brands rankings of wine and spirits brands, Jack Daniel's was ranked third on the global level.[25] More recently, in 2017, it ranked at number 16 on the IWSR's Real 100 Spirits Brands Worldwide list.[26] Additionally, the brand evaluation consultancy Intangible Business ranked Jack Daniel's fourth on its Power 100 Spirits and Wine list in both 2014 and 2015.[27][28] SponsorshipsKelly Racing Holden Commodore VE of Todd Kelly at the 2010 Clipsal 500 Adelaide From 2006 until 2015, Jack Daniel's sponsored V8 Supercar teams Perkins Engineering and Kelly Racing.[29] Jack Daniel's also sponsored the Richard Childress Racing 07 car (numbered after the "Old No. 7") in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series from 2005 to 2009, beginning with driver Dave Blaney and soon moving to Clint Bowyer.[30] Jack Daniel's also sponsors Zac Brown Band's tours. Master distillersFormer Master Distillers include Nathan "Nearest" Green (1875–81),[31] Jess Motlow (1911–41), Lem Tolley (1941–64), Jess Gamble (1964–66), and Frank Bobo (1966–92).[32] Jimmy Bedford held the position for 20 years.[33] Bedford retired in mid-2008 after being the subject of a $3.5 million sexual harassment lawsuit against the company that ended in an out-of-court settlement, and he died on August 7, 2009, after suffering a heart attack at his home in Lynchburg.[33][34] Jeff Arnett, a company employee since 2001, became Master Distiller in 2008. He was the seventh person to hold the position. On September 3, 2020, Arnett announced that he was stepping down from the company.[35] On April 20, 2021, he announced that he and partners were opening Company Distilling, a new whiskey distillery, near the Great Smokey Mountains.[36] Chris Fletcher became the 8th Master Distiller in 2020 after serving as Assistant Master Distiller for six years prior. Fletcher is the grandson of the 5th Master Distiller, Frank Bobo.[37] Tennessee SquiresA Tennessee Squire is a member of the Tennessee Squire Association, which was formed in 1956 to honor special friends of the Jack Daniel's distillery.[38] Many prominent business and entertainment professionals are included among the membership, which is obtained only through recommendation of a current member. Squires receive a wallet card and deed certificate proclaiming them as "owner" of an unrecorded plot of land at the distillery and an honorary citizen of Moore County, Tennessee.[39] Making charcoal at the distillery, c. 1920 – c. 1935 Barrels of whiskey aging in a barrelhouse The mash for Jack Daniel's is composed of 80% corn, 12% rye, and 8% malted barley, and is distilled in copper stills.[40] It is then filtered through 10-foot (3.0 m) stacks of sugar maple charcoal.[41] The company refers to this filtering step as "mellowing". This extra step, known as the Lincoln County Process, removes impurities and the taste of corn.[7][42] The company argues this extra step makes the product different from bourbon. However, Tennessee whiskey is required to be "a straight Bourbon Whiskey" under terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement[43] and Canadian law.[44] A distinctive aspect of the filtering process is that the Jack Daniel's brand grinds its charcoal before using it for filtering.[45] After the filtering, the whiskey is stored in newly handcrafted oak barrels, which give the whiskey its color and most of its flavor.[41] The product label mentions that it is a "sour mash" whiskey, which means that when the mash is prepared, some of the wet solids from a previously used batch are mixed in to help make the fermentation process operate more consistently. This is common practice in American whiskey production. (As of 2005[update], all currently produced straight bourbon is produced using the sour mash process.[46]) Prior to 2014, the company's barrels were produced by Brown-Forman in Louisville, Kentucky. That year, the company opened a new cooperage in Trinity, Alabama.[47][48] On a state level, Tennessee has imposed stringent requirements. To be labeled as Tennessee Whiskey, it is not enough under state law that the whiskey be produced in Tennessee; it must meet quality and production standards. These are the same standards used by Jack Daniel's Distillery, and some other distillers are displeased with the requirements being enshrined into law.[49][50] On May 13, 2013, Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam signed House Bill 1084, requiring the Lincoln County process to be used for products produced in the state labeling themselves as "Tennessee Whiskey", with a particular exception tailored to exempt Benjamin Prichard's, and including the existing requirements for bourbon.[50][51] As federal law requires statements of origin on labels to be accurate, the Tennessee law effectively gives a firm definition to Tennessee whiskey, requiring Tennessee origin, maple charcoal filtering by the Lincoln County process prior to aging, and the basic requirements of bourbon (at least 51% corn, new oak barrels, charring of the barrels, and limits on alcohol by volume concentration for distillation, aging, and bottling). In 2014, legislation was introduced in the Tennessee legislature that would modify the 2013 law to allow the reuse of oak barrels in the Tennessee whiskey aging process. Jack Daniel's Master Distiller Jeff Arnett vehemently opposed the legislation, arguing the reuse of barrels would require the use of artificial colorings and flavorings, and would render Tennessee whiskey an inferior product to Scotch and bourbon.[52] The company was the subject of a proposal to locally surtax its product in 2011. It was claimed that the distillery, the main employer in a company town, had capitalized on the bucolic image of Lynchburg, Tennessee, and it ought to pay a tax of $10 per barrel. The company responded that such a tax is a confiscatory imposition penalizing it for the success of the enterprise.[53] The proposed tax faced a vote by the Metro Lynchburg-Moore County Council and was defeated 10-5.[54] Moore County, where the Jack Daniel's distillery is located, is one of the state's many dry counties. While it is legal to distill the product within the county, it is illegal to purchase it there.[55][failed verification] However, a state law has provided one exception: a distillery may sell one commemorative product, regardless of county statutes.[56] Jack Daniel's now sells Gentleman Jack, Jack Daniel's Single Barrel, the original No. 7 blend (in a commemorative bottle), and a seasonal blend (on rotation) at the distillery's White Rabbit Bottle Shop.
Statue of Jack Daniel in front of the spring from which he drew the water for producing his whiskey. The current production uses water drawn from about 150 yards (140 m) behind from the grotto. The Jack Daniel Distillery in Lynchburg is situated in and around a hollow known as "Stillhouse Hollow" or "Jack Daniel's Hollow", where a spring flows from a cave at the base of a limestone cliff. The limestone removes iron from the water, making it ideal for distilling whiskey (water heavy in iron gives whiskey a bad taste).[7] The spring feeds into nearby East Fork Mulberry Creek, which is part of the Elk River watershed. Some 1.9 million barrels containing the aging whiskey are stored in several dozen barrelhouses, some of which adorn the adjacent hilltops and are visible throughout Lynchburg.[41] The distillery is a major tourist attraction, drawing more than a quarter of a million visitors annually.[41] The visitor center, dedicated in June 2000, contains memorabilia related to the distillery and a gift shop. Paid tours of the distillery are conducted several times per day and a premium sampling tour is also offered.[59] In February 2016, a $140 million expansion was announced for the distillery, including a plan to expand the visitors center and add two more barrel houses.[60]
Dave Lewis – "Jack Daniel's Green"
Coordinates: 35°17′6″N 86°22′5″W / 35.28500°N 86.36806°W / 35.28500; -86.36806 |