Applejack is a strong alcoholic drink produced from apples. Popular in the American colonial era, the drink's prevalence declined in the 19th and 20th centuries amid competition from other spirits.[1][2][3]
Apple brandy was first produced in colonial New Jersey in 1698 by William Laird, a Scots American who settled in Monmouth County.[4] The drink was once known as Jersey Lightning.[4] Laird's great-grandson, Robert Laird, who served in the Continental Army, incorporated Laird's Distillery in 1780,[4] after previously operating a tavern.[5] The oldest licensed applejack distillery in the United States, Laird & Company of Scobeyville, New Jersey, was until the 2000s the country's only remaining producer of applejack, and continues to dominate applejack production.[4][6]
Once popular in early America, applejack declined in popularity due to the rise of other spirits that were easier to manufacture on a commercial basis, including rum and whiskey (especially bourbon) in the 19th century and gin, vodka, and tequila in the 20th century.[1] In 1920, with the beginning of the Prohibition era, Laird's ended the production of liquor and began producing apple juice. In 1931, John Evans Laird received permission to produce apple brandy for "medicinal purposes" and stockpiled its product until the repeal of Prohibition in 1933.[5]
When commercial production began, applejack was also starting to be produced through evaporative distillation.[12]
Modern commercially produced applejack is often no longer produced by jacking but rather by blending apple brandy and neutral grain spirits.[5][2][3]
Home-made
The name applejack derives from the traditional method of producing the drink, jacking, which is the process of freezing fermented cider and then removing the ice, increasing the alcohol content. [1]Cider produced after the fall harvest was left outside during the winter. Periodically the frozen chunks of ice that had formed were removed, thus concentrating the unfrozen alcohol in the remaining liquid.[3] An alternative method involved placing a cask of hard cider in snow, allowing ice to form on the inside of the cask as the contents began to freeze, and then tapping the cask and pouring off the still-liquid portion of the contents. Starting with the fermented juice, with an alcohol content of less than ten percent, the concentrated result can contain 25–40% alcohol.[3] Because freeze distillation is a low-infrastructure method of production compared to evaporative distillation, and does not require the burning of firewood to create heat, hard cider and applejack were historically easier to produce,[3] though more expensive than grain alcohol.[13]
The disadvantage of freeze distillation, also called fractional crystallization, is that the substances remaining after the removal of the water include not only ethanol, but also harmful methanol, esters, aldehydes, and fusel alcohols.[14] In modern times, reducing methanol with the absorption of a molecular sieve is a practical method for production.[15]
Comparison to calvados
Applejack is somewhat similar to calvados, an apple brandy from Normandy, France,[1] to which it is often compared.[16] However, calvados is made from cider apples, while applejack is made from apples such as Winesap.[1]
^ abcdefKen Albala (2010). "Applejack". In Rachel Black (ed.). Alcohol in Popular Culture: An Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. p. 10. ISBN978-0-313-38048-8.
^ abMichael Foley, Drinking with the Saints: The Sinner's Guide to a Holy Happy Hour (2015, ISBN1-62157-383-4): Perhaps the most interesting option is applejack, the first distilled liquor native to North America and a great favorite among the colonists. [Now] usually a blend of apple brandy and neutral spirits that retains the flavor of the apples[.]
^ abcdeSanborn Conner Brown, Wines & Beers of Old New England: A How-to-do-it History (1978, ISBN0-87451-148-8)
^Scott C. Martin, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Alcohol (2015, ISBN1-4833-3108-3): The evaporative technique was used when commercial applejack production began.
^Lew Nichols, Annie Proulx, Cider: Making, Using & Enjoying Sweet & Hard Cider, 3rd Edition (2015, ISBN1-60342-839-9)
^Matthew B. Rowley, Moonshine! (Lark Books, 2007), p. 141.