A kitchen bar shows a white quartz countertop, mixed blue collage tile backsplash, and a large collection of spirits, bar accessories, and shot glasses.
Crystal bowl of green apples surrounded by bottles of Laird’s Applejack, apple brandy, and sweet vermouth on a wooden bar counter with a home bar setup in the background.

Comparing Apples To Apples

I’m not comparing apples to oranges.  I’m comparing apples (brandy) to apples (jack).  Apple brandy is featured in drinks such as the Honeymoon, applejack is featured in drinks such as the Jersey Girl, or you could use either one in drinks such as the Jack Rose and the Diamondback. As I’ve mentioned in others posts, even though they both come from fermented apple cider, the two are similar but not the same.

Apples to applesSo what’s the difference?  Traditionally it’s a matter of hot and cold.  Apple brandy uses the regular distilling process. This involves heating the cider so that the alcohol evaporates, capturing the vapor, and cooling the vapor so it becomes a liquid again.  Applejack involves freezing the cider and siphoning off the liquid alcohol after the water freezes.  Both processes separate the alcohol from the water by exploiting their different boiling or freezing points.

Why use the word “traditionally?” Because there’s a problem with the old way of making applejack.  When one freezes cider most of the impurities stay with the alcohol.  In comparison, when one heats cider most of the impurities stay with the liquid, not the alcoholic vapor.

Fortunately modern applejack doesn’t have this problem. Laird’s (the only applejack producer of which I am aware) applejack consists of  35% apple brandy and 65% neutral grain spirits. In comparison, apple brandy is exactly what it sounds like.

Now you can compare apples to apples. Cheers!

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