It was pure alcohol, more deadly than moonshine, and with none of the distiller's art applied to its flavour. |
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Ruth orders four rounds of quadruple ryes, Faulkner orders four rounds of moonshine. |
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None of them had eaten anything all day so, as usual they were trying to fill their stomachs with beer and moonshine. |
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It is not without a certain aptness, then, that the Southerner's chosen drink is called moonshine. |
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The current owner often tells tales of her mother, who opened the bar, making her own moonshine and beer. |
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The age-old secrets of distilling witblits, a traditional local moonshine will be revealed. |
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I was about to treat myself to a sip of Lewis' finest moonshine when the door opened and Jimmy entered followed by James and Jesse. |
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Of course they spoke of their brew as if it were a medicinal cure-all when in reality they produced highly refined and greatly prized moonshine. |
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Then an overall wearing reject would wander up to the Appalachian Jezebels and offer them a jug of moonshine for a little slap and tickle. |
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When we got older we sat around and drank rum or moonshine out of coke bottles. |
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But I think it is moonshine to say that the photos were released out of a desire to show how his medical care is going. |
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Why is this moonshine in a book that asks itself to be taken seriously on the solar system? |
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The proprietor, a sloe-eyed mestizo named Julio, set them up with local nut liqueurs and moonshine pinga. |
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Then an overall wearing reject would wander up to the local women and offer them a jug of moonshine for a little slap and tickle. |
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He and his friend Willie Brown would often sit on tombstones, writing ominous melodies and drinking moonshine. |
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They just built their stills and made up moonshine or any other liquor that they could. |
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This has always been moonshine, put forward by the drinks industry and gullibly accepted by successive governments. |
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Someone had apparently set up a still that produced a potent form of moonshine and a yeasty homemade beer. |
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However, starvation broke out again the same year, and at the same time a new increase of moonshine distilling, due to lack at grain. |
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Street gaslights add their glow to the swimming moonshine and are reflected in the siren's diamond coronet and huge dark eyes that know the secrets of the deep. |
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They raid the bounteous Gulf for food, and then stage saturnalian feasts of shrimp, crab, and moonshine. |
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The moonshine being imbibed, the catalogue of African beers, African-branded cigarettes, the hookers even watching the screen not the customers. |
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Would we find him bearded and crying, swigging moonshine and wearing a punched-through top hat with a mouse in it? |
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Instead, this group includes brandy, whisky, rum, aquavit, and could easily also include our bootleg or moonshine vodka. |
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Mr. Alphonse Boucher of Baker Brook knew all the secrets of the moonshine recipe and shares his secrets. |
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He owned a small distillery in Glen Feardan, and the others moonshine distillers considered him as a traitor and set fire to his business. |
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This situation, combined to a increasing demand or good whisky from the Lowlands encouraged the rebirth of moonshine distilling and smuggling. |
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Another reason for him to open a distillery was to cut the ground under the moonshine distillers who were legion in the area in those days. |
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The area in the North of the River Dee was one of the most popular places for moonshine distillery. |
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The idea was to encourage the small moonshine distilleries to become legal ones. |
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It was rather difficult to get barley, because it was massively bought by lots of moonshine distillers who were operating in the same area. |
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But even still, moonshine was easier to make, move, and afford than wine. |
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There would not be enough for a huge supply of moonshine that winter. |
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In Tennessee caves, moonshine whiskey production was the most prevalent of this type of industrial activity, although other examples also existed. |
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During the Civil War excise taxes were imposed and this drove the making of corn whiskey underground, which eventually led to the production of moonshine. |
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Irish farmers hid their stills and kept on making moonshine. |
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While having a shot of whiskey, they talk about their moonshine operation. |
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Such moonshine, which is commonly purchased in the countryside across the Baltic states, is much less expensive than anything sold in Latvian stores. |
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Villa Hayes is nearly asleep, under a light moonshine. |
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The polished stainless base reflects the moonshine like a mirror of water. |
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Sitting on a rough bench in his moonshine bar in a banana grove, a tipsy Bernard Okumo says his wife used her windfall to bail him out of jail, where he was facing a murder charge. |
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In the minds of many people he is the most successful revenue agent in the history of a state that has always been enormously productive of moonshine. |
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And we aren't singing about moonshine, we're proud to be British and we have a song called Made in England that's all about fish and chips and pints. |
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In time this gave birth in time to American whiskey and Kentucky bourbon, and its infamous later cousins moonshine and Everclear. |
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It wasn't just the violent Prohibition-era gang wars that were dangerous to Americans drinking homemade moonshine and bathtub gin. |
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Based on a 1978 observation by mathematician John McKay, Conway and Norton formulated the complex of conjectures known as monstrous moonshine. |
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Monstrous moonshine theory has now been revealed to also have deep connections to string theory. |
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Another effect was a new important extension of moonshine distillery. |
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The authorities began to understand that the only way to kill moonshine distilling was a liberalisation of the rules and a significant decrease of the taxes on whisky. |
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Daryl, insulted, smashes it to bits and finds her moonshine instead. |
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Some nut job from the government actually thought he could tax our moonshine! |
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Angry crowds demolished a moonshine still in the region and several local shebeens soon after the first victims fell ill on Wednesday, NDTV said. |
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Having read about a moonshiner who cut off a rival's testicles and sent them to him in a jar of moonshine, Bondurant bequeathed that eloquent gesture to his relatives. |
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That's when the officious middle-aged lawyer from Washington appeared, like a federal revenuer who had just discovered a still making moonshine. |
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Or take a shot of moonshine, with an apricot shrub as a chaser. |
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While the government was fighting hard against the moonshine distillers, the legal distilleries experienced a significant improvement of their activities. |
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Corn whiskey is usually unaged and sold as a legal version of moonshine. |
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Readers learn what monsters, moonshine, and 24-dimensional oranges have in common, how one infinity can be larger than another, and why you can't drink from a Klein bottle. |
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Where downhill skiers have slopes illuminated by flood lamps to boost their vertical mileage, snowshoers and cross-country skiers rely on moonshine. |
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