Whenever I share my post about Tennessee Whiskey, I get a lot of comments claiming that Tennessee Whiskey is Bourbon. One person quoted the Master Distiller at Jack Daniel stating that Jack Daniel’s whiskey is Bourbon. When I started in the industry in the early 1990s, those would have been fighting words. They were proud of the fact that they were not Bourbon and Tennessee whiskey was different than Bourbon. Have they lost that pride in the uniqueness of Tennessee Whiskey?

When Jack Daniel started making whiskey in the 19th century, he called his whiskey “Tennessee Whiskey”. I have never seen a label from that period in which they used the word “Bourbon”. Other Tennessee distillers did the same. George Dickel’s Cascade and Nelson Greenbrier also called their whiskey Tennessee Whiskey. When Lem Motlow applied for label approval in 1941 under the Bourbon category, his application was rejected. He in turn, made a point that they were not a Bourbon, but a Tennessee whiskey. He took a lemon and made lemonade. 

Jack Daniel’s Old No. 7 grew quickly in popularity. It was so popular that in the 1960s they had to allocate their whiskey as they expanded the distillery. It was a Tennessee Whiskey distillery and they were proud of that fact. By the time I started in the whiskey business, it was the most popular American whiskey in the world, second only to Johnnie Walker Scotch Whisky. Jim Beam was the most popular Bourbon and the sales of Beam lagged behind Jack Daniel by several million cases a year. Jack Daniel’s Old No. 7 is still the largest selling American whiskey in the world, so it puzzles me as to why they would start calling themselves a Bourbon.

Even when Bourbon became a product of the United States in 1964 and Jack Daniel’s Old No. 7 was categorized as a “Bourbon” for the international market, the distillery still insisted that they were a Tennessee Whiskey, not a Bourbon. It was in fact this same period when Jack Daniel’s whiskeys became the largest selling American whiskey in the world. They did not need the moniker of “Bourbon” to reach that height. It has only been in the last ten years that some have decided to call it a Bourbon.

The fact is it is a Tennessee whiskey. Like Bourbon, Tennessee Whiskey is a subcategory of Corn Whiskey. They both grew out of the corn whiskey style that was being distilled in America in the 19th century. I would say that it is cousin of Bourbon, related to Bourbon, but distinctly different. The people who make Tennessee Whiskey should be proud of that difference and once again, to call Tennessee whiskey Bourbon should be fighting words.  

Photos Courtesy of Rosemary Miller