Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Tennessee - Lynchburg

We decided to take a day trip to Lynchburg which is the 'home' of Jack Daniel Distillery.

We arrived about 2 hours before our tour time so we stopped in the historic town for a visit and some lunch.

A little too much street and not enough buildings

There was a cute place where we decided to have lunch.  I'm always anxious to find some funky place and this fit the bill.


It was one of those places where, for the most part, there are long tables and people just seat themselves wherever they find a spot.  And things to look at everywhere you turned.


We laughed when the food showed up on Styrofoam plates.

I don't remember what the dishes were called but mine was pulled pork and beans on top of mac & cheese.  I would never order mac & cheese but I was curious to know what this dish tasted like - it was good (but not sure I'd order it again).

Jack Daniel is a prominent figure in town.


The "official" Jack Daniel store was pretty cool.  We left without buying a thing (at least not at this store).



From there we went to the Distillery for our tour.


The building is lovely.


And listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The original marble Jack Daniel statue was in the lobby area.  Originally he was outdoors but since marble doesn't do well in the weather, they brought him inside.


We met our guide, Courtney, and headed outside.



This is sugar maple lumber.....


...which is burned and made into charcoal.....

see it under there?

...every ounce of Jack Daniel's Whiskey passes through the important step of mellowing, drop by drop, through ten feet of hard sugar maple charcoal.

An underground spring supplies the clear and pure water.


Remember that marble Jack statue in the lobby?  They replaced it with a bronze statue outdoors and he has been nicknamed "Jack on the Rocks".  


Here is where the mash is made.


The original office is still standing.  


Inside is this safe.  The story is told that Jack came in to work early for the first time ever in 1906 and when no one was there, he didn't know how to open the safe.  He tried and tried but finally got frustrated and kicked the safe and broke his toe.  The toe got infected and the injury took his life in 1911.


It was a fascinating tour but even though it is an active distillery, I never saw any workers.  Until we got to the bottling rooms.



And the finale was a whiskey tasting.  I don't even like whiskey but I felt like I needed to at least take a sip of each.


If you are in the area, I highly recommend the tour.  Just be sure to make a reservation in advance.


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