


We fill a flour tortilla with macaroni ‘n’ cheese and barbecued pulled pork, and wrap it up like a burrito.
#Blackened whiskey truck mac#
It’s our take on Canadian poutine, but we actually turned it into some real Southern kick-ass! MAC ‘N’ CHEESY-CHANGA™
#Blackened whiskey truck full#
Check back each Friday for his latest review.A big ol’ plate full of tots (or fries) topped with our homemade white sausage gravy, shredded cheese and crumbled bacon bits.

After all, that’s what it’s all about, regardless of which famous entity has a stake in a brand or what special process was used to deliver an extra boost of flavor. The bottom line is whether it really affects the flavor of the whiskey. If you view this technique with the same dubious eye you might cast upon things like ocean aging, unusual mash bills or sticking custom-cooked staves inside of a barrel, so be it. Would the whiskey’s character be altered if the finishing process took place in a silent room, or perhaps while being serenaded by the finest ‘80s Billy Joel ballads? Of course, but it seems that the goal here is to fast-track the whiskey-wood relationship via heavy metal sonic vibrations, as opposed to the tried and true method of time + patience + temperature fluctuations. Essentially what this means is the whiskey is dumped into charred Spanish brandy barrels that are blasted with Metallica’s chugging power chords and quickfire drum riffs to vibrate the liquid and increase interaction between the wood and whiskey, thereby picking up more flavor and color. Blackened is a blend of sourced bourbon and rye aged for about eight years that has been “finished in black brandy casks to the low hertz frequencies of Metallica’s music through the BLACK NOISE™ sonic-enhancement process,” according to the brand. San Francisco’s Oldest Craft Brewery Is Shutting Down After 127 YearsĪs with any celeb-backed spirit, it’s reasonable to wonder how much input the band actually had into the makeup of the whiskey, but in this case it’s all about the music. Robb Report Editors’ Favorite Blender Is on Sale for Amazon Prime Day Atlanta Is Getting Its First Michelin Guide
