Americana in a jar. · Ah... the smell of Grandma’s apple pie cooling on the windowsill. Ole Smoky’s ® Apple Pie Moonshine ™ captures the same delicious combination of flavors - made with pure apple juice, ground cinnamon and other spices - blended with our homemade moonshine, an authentic recipe loved for ages in Appalachia. At 40 proof, it’s very drinkable and goes down as easy as a forkful of sweet apple pie. Some like it cold, some like it hot... personally, we like it straight out of a mason jar. Ole Smoky’s Apple Pie Moonshine ™ : two great tastes of Americana that taste great together.Here in the Smoky Mountains, our moonshine tradition runs strong. Our Scots-Irish ancestors brought their knowledge and skills of whiskey-making with them as they came to Appalachia. Conditions in the area were good for growing corn, but it didn’t take long to realize a lot more money could be made off of a gallon of corn liquor than a bushel. Once the law began cracking down on the industry, the nature of our people and the rugged mountain terrain made way for the hay day of bootlegging.
People here have always had a healthy mistrust of government. Families in our small mountain communities would often sound warnings to others upon sight of a strange vehicle. Folks weren’t real welcoming of federal “revenuers” seeking to shut down local stills. As evidenced by the lyrics of one of our State Songs, “Once two strangers climbed Ole Rocky Top looking for a moonshine still. Strangers ain’t come down from Rocky Top. Reckon they never will,” people here in the mountains didn’t want the government to interfere. The fiercely independent spirit of our people and the rough terrain of the mountains allowed our great whiskey tradition to flourish. Prohibition made the craft of making moonshine even more profitable.
With Prohibition came a great demand for moonshine in the big cities. Hiding an operation in the mountains was easy compared to the challenges of transporting your wares into town. Agents would hide out along backcountry roads, waiting for the chance to nail a moonshine runner. The mountains are full of stories of young men who ran liquor.