Period Cherry Bounce

Here is Martha Washington's "Excellent Cherry Bounce":

Extract the juice of 20 pounds well ripend Morrella cherrys. Add to this 10 quarts of old french brandy and sweeten it with White sugar to your taste. To 5 gallons of this mixture add one ounce of spice such as cinnamon, cloves and nutmegs of each an Equal quantity slightly bruis'd and a pint and half of cherry kirnels that have been gently broken in a mortar. After the liquor has fermented let it stand close-stoped for a month or six weeks then bottle it, remembering to put a lump of Loaf Sugar into each bottle.

Martha's recipe was found in her papers, but it was not in her handwriting. Her recipe called for brandy. I have read this was one of George's favorite drinks.
 
This sound like something I would like to try. What is the best double rectified whiskey? it sounds like a long process, 3 months, shaking it everyday also. It does sound potent though.

Not sure, but John Wayne's character Ruben J. "Rooster" Cogburn in True Grit referred to his favorite moonshine as "genuine, double-rectified busthead."
 
I live in New Orleans. When I was a child back in the 60s we had a couple of wild cherry trees in our backyard. Some company would come in every year and pay my parents to harvest the cherries. I was told that they were to be used in making cherry bounce.
I've never had it before and I rarely drink hard stuff, but would be curious to try it once.
 
My parents and I recently made something similar to this when we made cherry brandy. It used sour cherries, a lot of sugar, and brandy. Couldn't find sour cherries here so we used regular cherries with less sugar...it turned out spectacularly! It had to ferment for at least a month before we could try it. It was great!
 
Here is Martha Washington's "Excellent Cherry Bounce":

Extract the juice of 20 pounds well ripend Morrella cherrys. Add to this 10 quarts of old french brandy and sweeten it with White sugar to your taste. To 5 gallons of this mixture add one ounce of spice such as cinnamon, cloves and nutmegs of each an Equal quantity slightly bruis'd and a pint and half of cherry kirnels that have been gently broken in a mortar. After the liquor has fermented let it stand close-stoped for a month or six weeks then bottle it, remembering to put a lump of Loaf Sugar into each bottle.

Martha's recipe was found in her papers, but it was not in her handwriting. Her recipe called for brandy. I have read this was one of George's favorite drinks.
This is made by a local distillery in Tamworth NH near where my folks live. It's supposedly Martha Washington's cherry bounce recipe. I bought a bottle for my brother for Christmas last year, it was quite good.
 
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My parents and I recently made something similar to this when we made cherry brandy. It used sour cherries, a lot of sugar, and brandy. Couldn't find sour cherries here so we used regular cherries with less sugar...it turned out spectacularly! It had to ferment for at least a month before we could try it. It was great!
I don't suppose you could divulge the recipe??? :D We have a plethora of cherries here in PA during the warmer months of the year. I would rather see as many as possible turned into booze than risk seeing people come down with "Soldier's Disease" that so plagued the 2 armies marching to Gettysburg from overindulgence in ripe cherries right off the tree. :roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::D:D:D:D.
 

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