crazyoz said:
so really all they did was mash up some apple and freeze it? Or so you think?
Probably a little more involved than that...this is what I found
Good luck and save me some (just to have since I don't drink)! I'll quote my sources just so there's no copyright issues
If I make a 'faux pas', please feel free to let me know.
No coyright here, just asked around to some friends...
Jersey Lightning
1/2 oz sweet vermouth
1 1/2 oz apple brandy
juice of one lime
Shake all ingredients with ice, strain into a cocktail glass, and serve.
http://blake.montclair.edu/~olsenk/ACETIC ACID.htm
"ACETIC ACID, INDUSTRIAL VINEGAR, AND JERSEY LIGHTNING
Reprinted with the permission of the Indicator, the news magazine of the North Jersey Section, American Chemical Society.
By Kevin Olsen
For most of us, Jersey Lightning conjures up memories of the thunderstorms that sweep through this region on humid summer afternoons. Yet for more than 300 years, the name referred to a potent fermented apple liquor. In time, the same technology that fermented beverages was used for the production of acetic acid.
By 1685, New Englanders settling in New Jersey were busy establishing apple cultivation on a large scale. Cider had been their favorite drink. It could be fermented for a hard cider or fermented and distilled to make brandy, or if you prefer, Jersey Lightning. A method popular in New England was simply to freeze the cider and discard the ice. Some of the cider was made into vinegar which was used in cooking and preserving. "
Also, this article goes on to say that it was also called applejack (?)
"... None remained in Essex County, the one time home of Newark Applejack which was a widely popular name, especially in the south..."
http://www.bearcreekberries.bigstep.com/generic25.html
"...Enterprising businessmen took cider a few steps further. First, as sweet cider fermented, hard apple cider was produced. Hard cider was about 60 proof. When a second distillation was made, the resulting 120 proof liquor was then diluted down to 100 proof, and the barrels aged. The result was an 80 proof product that, when bottled, became known as Apple Brandy, or Apple Jack, or “Jersey Lightning.†A booming business was born, Wilkie said."
So, maybe freezing the fermented cider and throwing out the ice (like someone posted earlier) is the way to do it.
Heather in SJ