Old Crow Reserve Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Old Crow Reserve Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey

 

Old Crow Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey

 

 

 

 

Old Crow

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Old Crow Bourbon whiskey
Old Crow
Old Crow
Type Bourbon whiskey
Manufacturer Fortune Brands
Country of origin Kentucky, United States
Introduced 1835
Alcohol by volume 40.00%
Proof 80
Related products Jim Beam

For the community in Yukon, see Old Crow, Yukon.

 

An advertisement for Old Crow Rye Whiskey in the December 31, 1909 edition ofThe New York Times.

Old Crow is a low-priced brand of Kentucky bourbon whiskey, distilled by Fortune Brands, which also

produces Jim Beam and several other brands of bourbon whiskey. The Old Crow brand has a venerable

 history as one of Kentucky's earliest bourbons,[1] and is distinctive for being the first sour mash 

process bourbon whiskey. Old Crow is aged for three years, and in the United States is 80 proof.

 

Origin

James Crow, a Scottish immigrant, started distilling what would come to be Old Crow in Frankfort, Kentucky,

 in the 1830s. Reportedly a very skilled distiller, he made whiskey for various employers, which was

sold as "Crow" or, as it aged, "Old Crow"--the brand acquired its reputation from the latter.[2] He died

in 1856, and while W.A. Gaines & Company kept the name and continued to distill the bourbon according

 to his recipe, the original distillation died with its creator.[1] The last remaining stock of Old Crow

(of which there seemed to have been quite a bit[2]) acquired near-legendary status, and offering drinks

of it reportedly secured a re-election for Joseph Clay Stiles Blackburn, senator for Kentucky.[1] A dispute

 over ownership of the name "Old Crow" was decided in 1915 in favor of the Gaines company.[2] 

Old Crow's logo, a crow perched atop grains of barley, is rumored to stem as a symbol bridging the

North and South during the Civil War. A Pennsylvania brigade training at State College, Pennsylvania

 thought Old Crow was the only good thing to ever come out of the south. Fearing never being able

to drink Old Crow again, the soldiers wrote Lincoln proclaiming "We must not let the fine gentleman

Old Crow escape. Remember Mr. President, the crow with the sharpest talons holds on to barley

forever." After the Civil War Old Crow's logo was changed from a picture of James Crow to a crow

holding on to barley.

Famous drinkers of Old Crow

Besides Blackburn, many American politicians have declared their love for Old Crow. It was the drink

of choice for American general and 18th President of the United States, Ulysses S. Grant. An

apocryphal story about Grant's drinking has the general's critics going to President Lincoln, charging

the military man with being a drunk. Lincoln is supposed to have replied, "I wish some of you

would tell me the brand of whiskey that Grant drinks. I would like to send a barrel of it to my

other generals."

Another famous politician who preferred Old Crow was Henry Clay, of Kentucky.[1] Common

apocrypha of the Senate holds that he would sit through Senate sessions, boots upon his desk,

whittling and sipping from a jug of Old Crow within easy reach.[citation needed]

Old Crow in popular culture

A quick glance at American culture reveals that Old Crow has made quite an impact, and is often

lovingly portrayed as the drink of choice for characters who might be down and out but are often

still sympathetic. Reportedly the archetypically American writers Mark Twain and Hunter S. Thompson 

loved this bourbon. Twain reportedly visited the distillery in the 1880s, and Old Crow advertised

this heavily;[3] John C. Gerber sees in this commercial exploitation a sign of Twain's continuing

popularity.[4] As for Thompson, the frequent occurrences of the drink in his writing,

semi-autobiographical[5] as well as fictional[6][7][8] have led to similar associations.

The manufacturer actively pursued such publicity: in 1955, they took out an ad in College English,

the journal of the National Council of Teachers of English, offering $250 for every literary

reference to their product.[9]

In popular music, Old Crow is to be found in many different genres--from hip-hop, in the

 Beastie Boys song "Slow Ride" (on the album License To Ill), to rockabilly, in The Reverend Horton Heat 

song "That's Showbiz" (on the album It's Martini Time), which contains the lines "You could have a

fever and the dry heaves / From that left handed cigarette / And shot of Old Crow you did between

the first and second show", through punk-rock in Suits and Ladders from NOFX on Coaster album.

Stereotypically a favorite of the lower classes, Old Crow is used in the very name of the old-time

string band Old Crow Medicine Show, and in the song "Doreen" by alternative country band Old 97s.

In the song "Gin Soaked Boy," Tom Waits presents Old Crow as a definitive blue-collar bourbon:

 "I come home last night, full a fifth of Old Crow / You said you goin' to your Ma's, where the hell

did you go?"

Brad Paisley and Alan Jackson team up in a song named "Out in the Parking Lot," originally written

 by Guy Clark and Darrell Scott. Lyrics include: "I'm sittin' on the fender of someone else's truck

 Drinkin' Old Crow Whiskey and hot 7 Up Out in the parkin' lot"

In an episode of Beavis and Butt-head titled No Laughing, Beavis and Butt-head are sent to the

principal's office for disrupting their class by their continuous laughing. After deciding on the boys

punishment, Principal McVicker removes a bottle of Old Crow from his desk drawer and begins

drinking heavily from it.

David Spade's character in Grown Ups drinks Old Crow.