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  2. Ole Smoky Distillery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ole_Smoky_Distillery

    Ole Smoky Tennessee Moonshine is a corn whiskey distillery in Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Their downtown Gatlinburg, Tennessee facility features two working copper stills. Visitors are able to see the distilling process up close while learning about the history of moonshine production in the Smoky Mountains. [1] $5 samples are offered. [2]

  3. Popcorn Sutton's moonshine returns thanks to his widow and a ...

    www.aol.com/popcorn-suttons-moonshine-returns...

    Popcorn Sutton's self-published autobiography, 'Me and My Likker,' features portraits of the late moonshiner and photos from the day he married Pam Sutton, who is working with Ole Smoky Moonshine ...

  4. Ole Smoky Distillery founder turns University of Tennessee ...

    www.aol.com/ole-smoky-distillery-founder-turns...

    The University of Tennessee Athletics has partnered with Gatlinburg's Ole Smoky Distillery as the exclusive moonshine of the Vols. The multiyear collaboration is with all UT athletic programs and ...

  5. Spirits in the mountains: Explore moonshine and bourbon ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/spirits-mountains-explore-moonshine...

    Kentucky Mountain Moonshine. 465 Cow Creek Road, Ravenna, 859-608-4100.

  6. Forbidden Caverns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forbidden_Caverns

    Forbidden Caverns is a set of caverns and tourist attraction in Sevierville, Tennessee, near the Smoky Mountains. Flint from these caverns was used by the Eastern Woodland Indians to create arrowheads, knives, and scrapers. The cave also contains a large wall of rare cave onyx. In the early twentieth century, these caverns were used to make ...

  7. Popcorn Sutton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popcorn_Sutton

    Sutton then wrote a self-published autobiography and guide to moonshine production called Me and My Likker, and began selling copies of it in 1999 out of his junk shop in Maggie Valley. [2] [11] [12] The New York Times later called it "a rambling, obscene, and often hilarious account of his life in the trade". [2] (A woman named Ernestine ...