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Southern Spirits: Four Hundred Years of Drinking in the American South, with Recipes Hardcover – April 12, 2016

4.5 out of 5 stars 11 customer reviews

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Southern Spirits is a broadly inclusive, meticulously researched, and beautifully written examination of a unique and uniquely important part of American culinary culture, and one that has not received enough serious attention from drink historians or historians of Southern foodways. This book should remedy that."
– David Wondrich, author of Imbibe! and Punch
 
“This is a fascinating read that deserves a prominent place on the bookshelves of anyone with an interest in our drinking culture, so much of which was born in the South.”
– Gary Regan, author of The Negroni, and The Joy of Mixology
 
Southern Spirits adds a welcome and impeccably detailed chapter to the somewhat tattered history of drinking in America. From Caribbean rum imports through Madeira and the julep and on to Pappy Van Winkle, Moss deftly parses what we drank and why. I won't lie: this book made me very thirsty.”
 – Wayne Curtis, author of And a Bottle of Rum: A History of the New World in 10 Cocktails
 
"In Southern Spirits, Robert F. Moss chronicles centuries of spirited traditions and debunks boozy tall tales in this defining look at the way Southerners have influenced the way we imbibe as a nation."
– Brad Thomas Parsons, author of Bitters: A Spirited History of a Classic Cure-All
 
“In Southern Spirits, Robert F. Moss joins a hallowed cadre of mixographers including Daniel Okrent, Wayne Curtis, and David Wondrich who’ve carefully charted how our drinking habits and history aren’t just intertwined: they’re a reflection of each other.  For Americans, and Southerners in particular, perhaps we are what we drink even more than what we eat?”
– Jim Meehan, author of The PDT Cocktail Book
 
“Just as a proper sazerac requires an absinthe rinse, America now requires context with its cocktails. Robert F. Moss slakes our cultural and historical thirst in a book that broadens and deepens our understanding of what, why, and how my people drink. From Revolutionary war hero Francis Marion, who couldn’t hold his Madeira, to the Kentucky julep fabulist Irvin S. Cobb, Moss has assembled a rogue’s gallery of characters, who unspool telling stories of the tippling South.”
– John T Edge, co-editor The Southern Foodways Alliance Community Cookbook 

"Four hundred years of drinking distilled into almost as many pages, Southern Spirits looks at the history of a culturally rich region through the lens of its drinking habits. Lest you write it off as just another book about bourbon, Moss is quick to clear up the myth that Southern drinking is limited to the brown stuff, with the likes of rum, Madeira, brandy, cider and more all seeing starring roles. History buffs and cocktail nerds alike will delight in the thorough tome, which is sprinkled throughout with recipes that have stood the test of time."
- Punch

"Dispel that image of a fine Southern gentlemen and his lady sipping mint juleps on their veranda and get prepared to hear the true story of drinking in the American South."
- The Literary South

"Southern Spirits isn’t just a cocktail recipe book—this is a cocktail book with in-depth reportage about the American South’s cocktail culture and the history behind its most iconic spirits, with recipes to boot. Written by the contributing barbecue editor forSouthern Living and Southern food correspondent for Serious Eats, historian Robert Moss proves that there’s more to the South than just bourbon and juleps. Dive in and you’ll find yourself reading about everything from Madeira wine to peach brandy."
- Saveur 

About the Author

ROBERT F. MOSS is a food and drinks writer and culinary historian living in Charleston, South Carolina. He is the Contributing Barbecue Editor for Southern Living and the Southern Food Correspondent for Serious Eats. He is a frequent contributor to the Charleston City Paper, and his work has also appeared in publications such as Garden & Gun, the Los Angeles Times, the Charlotte Observer, Texas Monthly, the Columbia Free Times, and Early American Life.

Robert is the author of The Barbecue Lover’s Carolinas, a guide to the restaurants, recipes, and traditions of barbecue in North and South Carolina; Barbecue: The History of an American Institution, the first full length history of barbecue in the United States; and Going Lardcore: Adventures in New Southern Dining, a collection of essays about dining in the modern South.

A native of Greenville, South Carolina, Robert attended Furman University and received a Ph.D. in English from the University of South Carolina.
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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Ten Speed Press (April 12, 2016)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1607748673
  • ISBN-13: 978-1607748670
  • Product Dimensions: 6.3 x 1.2 x 9.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #94,502 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
4.5 Stars // The South isn't all sweet tea and enchanting drawls. It's got a long and slightly complicated history with alcohol. And thanks to Robert Moss, the history is one you can learn about while making the actual Southern spirit. This isn't your Momma's mint julep. It's the actual history of the hard ones thrown back by our ancestors.

Starting each section is a recipe and while I didn't have the opportunity to partake myself, it would be perfect to create and sip on each cocktail while reading about it's main ingredient. The purpose of Southern Spirits is to highlight what we drink and why (or in some cases, how it was made), the book gives such a great glimpse into the historical South, that both drinkers and those who abstain will both be intrigued and delighted. There's no softening of the facts and Moss doesn't hesitate to take on incorrect perceptions or knock a tall tale down to size.

I'm not sure if there is any other book nearly as complete as Southern Spirits for the social and drinking culture of the American South, but I doubt there is another that is as charming. By avoiding reading like a history book, it's easy to get engrossed and read almost a hundred pages before finally giving in and tracking down everything needed to make an Antebellum Mint Julep. I personally enjoyed the sections on New Orleans and the North Georgia Moonshine War (who knew) the most. I recommend picking up a copy and indulging.

Review first appeared on my blog, Monograms & Margaritas.
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Format: Hardcover
I found this book by Robert F. Moss offers a unique sampling of history, lore, culture and a splash of whimsy along with selected recipes for cocktails and spirits. This book can serve double duty for antidotes if you find yourself hosting or entertaining at a cocktail party or Drink clubs. The recipes provided range from single serving cocktails to the likes of, The Charleston Light Dragoon Punch, which serves 28.
Robert Moss researched many aspects of the culture and history that shaped southern drinking and the formulas that came out of the Civil war, Prohibition, Rebellions - to the Rum Runners, Bootleggers, and Moonshiners. The book offers black and white photos of historical places and people and general fodder of the era.
An excerpt from the chapter on The Whiskey Rebellion tells of George Washington, "Ironically the very man who suppressed the Whiskey Rebellion became a distiller himself not long after.”. [1796] I found this is all too often a common thread: The people who railed against alcohol often not only ended up indulging in the once forbidden elixir, but producing it themselves. And who knew that French Wine Cola, which was panned in Atlanta, would then go on to become Coca-Cola?!
Wither you are a connoisseur or a novice of whiskey, bourbon, brandy, and cognac, (the main focus of the recipes of this book) Robert Moss offers up these spirits as characters in predominately Southern American history. This 315 page book will definitely give you a taste of the journey these spirits have had in the South. In Addition you can relish 40 of the same recipes for refreshments as our southern ancestors did back in the day.
The two things I wish this book had included were 1.
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Format: Hardcover
Today's review is for a book called Southern Spirits. It covers 400 years of drinking in the American South and it contains recipes. The only thing better than reading a book about alcohol is discovering new ways to drink it!

This book is part history and part mixology. There are 20 chapters and each covers a different form of alcohol or some history or an event surrounding alcohol. Do you know what our earliest American ancestors drank? I didn't. Know I know it was rum. I learned about different kinds of distilling. I learned what fortified wine is. I learned about the Whiskey Rebellion.

Alcohol was used for trade and for intoxication. American soil didn't grow good grapes for wine until new cultivars were developed. Rum came from the byproducts of sugar cane processing. Cocktails and toddies were a way to disguise the taste of harsh liquors.

I enjoyed this book mainly because I learned something new. And here, to help you learn something new, is a recipe for a a Southern drink.

Moonshine Margarita

1 1/2 ounces white whiskey (moonshine)

1 ounce Cointreau

1 ounce freshly squeezed lime juice

1 lime slice

Shake the whiskey, Cointreau, and lime juice in a cocktail shaker filled with ice until well mixed. Pour into a rocks glass filled with ice. Garnish with a slice of lime. Enjoy!
I received this book from Blogging For Books in exchange for an honest review.
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Format: Kindle Edition
Is this the best book I will read in 2016? It's only May so it's hard to predict, but believe me, "Southern Spirits" will be hard to beat. This is a scholarly book written with humor and style. Mr. Moss, an historian and journalist living in Charleston, South Carolina, crams plenty of detail into a graceful and easy to read text.

Each chapter begins with an authentic drink suggestion to celebrate the period or fashion under discussion. There are a few appealing suggestions, but most reflect the rough and tumble and hugely alcoholic habits of the American past. Consider this tidbit from the website of Colonial Williamsburg, "in 1790, United States government figures showed that annual per-capita alcohol consumption for everybody over fifteen amounted to thirty-four gallons of beer and cider, five gallons of distilled spirits, and one gallon of wine." Yikes! But when there isn't any clean water, alcohol will suffice.

The whole book is a treat to read but I, who grew up in a wet county next to a dry county, found the extensive history of Prohibition to be particularly interesting. The rise and fall of Maderia wine was also fascinating. The descriptions of the adulterants commonly used to "improve" rough alcohol reminded me happily of our modern food safety laws. And now as I watch Kentucky Derby hoopla, I can sneer knowingly at the sissified modern Julep.

This is a tremendous book and I urge you to read it.

I received a review copy of "Southern spirits: Four hundred years of drinking in the American South, with recipes" by Robert Moss (Random House) through NetGalley.com.
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