(the west point grad in my office sends this to me every year. I always roll my eyes - "Simon Bolivar Buckner"? really? - but must admit it is amusing & makes me a bit thirsty every time.... )
This is a letter written by General Simon Bolivar Buckner, then Lt. Colonel. General Buckner was killed by Japanese artillery fire while commanding the Tenth Army in Okinawa.
March 30, 1937
My dear General Connor,
Your letter requesting my formula for mixing mint juleps leaves me in the same position in which CPT Barber found himself when asked how he was able to carve the image of an elephant from a block of wood. He replied that it was a simple process, consisting merely of whittling off the part of the block that did not look like an elephant.
The preparation of the quintessence of gentlemanly beverages can be described only in like terms. A mint julep is not the product of a formula. It is a ceremony and must be performed by a gentleman possessing a true sense of the artistic, a deep reverence for the ingredients, and a proper appreciation of the occasion. It is a rite that must not be entrusted to a novice, a statistician, or a Yankee. It is a heritage of the Old South, an emblem of hospitality, and a vehicle in which noble minds can travel together upon the flower-strewn paths of a happy and congenial thought.
So far as the mere mechanics of the operation are concerned, the procedure, stripped of its ceremonial embellishments, can be described as follows:
Go to a spring where cool, crystal-clear water bubbles from under a bank of dew-washed ferns. In a consecrated vessel, dip up a little water at the source. Follow the stream through its banks of green moss and wildflowers until it broadens and trickles through beds of mint, growing in aromatic profusion and waving softly in the summer breeze. Gather the sweetest and tenderest shoots and gently carry them home. Go to the sideboard and select a decanter of Kentucky bourbon, distilled by a master hand, mellowed with age, yet still vigorous and inspiring. An ancestral sugar bowl, a row of silver goblets, some spoons, and some ice, and you are ready to start.
In a canvas bag, pound twice as much ice as you think you will need. Make it as fine as snow, keep it dry, and do not allow it to degenerate into slush.
Into each goblet, put a slightly heaping teaspoon of granulated sugar; barely cover this with spring water and slightly bruise one mint leaf into this, leaving the spoon in the goblet. Then, pour elixir from the decanter until the goblets are about one-fourth full. Fill the goblets with snowy ice, sprinkling in a small amount of sugar as you fill. Wipe the outside of the goblet dry and embellish with mint.
Then come the important and delicate operation of frosting. By proper manipulation of the spoon, the ingredients are circulated and blended until Nature, wishing to take a further hand and add another of its beautiful phenomena, encrusts the whole in a glistening coat of white frost. Thus harmoniously blended by the deft touches of a skilled hand, you have a beverage eminently appropriate for honorable men and beautiful women.
When all is ready, assemble your guests on the porch or in the garden, where the aroma of the juleps will rise heavenward and make the birds sing. Propose a worthy toast, raise the goblet to yours lips, bury your nose in the mint, inhale a deep breath of its fragrance, and sip the nectar of the gods.
Being overcome by thirst, I can write no further.
Sincerely,
S B. Buckner, Jr.