TASTES LIKE...

dixie reserve hats

Now, I don't go there like I used to. Not like when I was a professional college student at least. Heck, before we would even leave the house on Thursday nights to go paint the town we'd swallow down a whole fifth of that bottom shelf bluegrass brew. The kind that tasted worse than it would make you feel the next morning. All the Pedialyte in the world couldn't fight off a twelve dollar Kentucky Gentleman hangover. A man should really be awarded a medal of honor for fighting such a battle against that Bardstown, Kentucky distillery. 

But there's something about the taste of that charred oak corn liquor and spices when it hits your lips. It's a time machine. It tastes like a tailgate on a late fall afternoon. There are dogs on a charcoal grill, sundresses on every girl as far as the eye can see, and if you hadn't lost your quarterback in week one due to a late hit you'd be bowl eligible by now. It tastes like sitting around in a cold garage with your buddies all night just talking about cars and dreaming about women in a way that would make Alan Jackson proud. And in the same breath it tastes like something that wouldn't make your mama proud. Hell, it tastes like something that wouldn't make me proud come to think of it. It tastes like a round of overpriced shots that you raised to a long lost buddy.

It tastes like my life. I sure love that taste.

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KENTUCKY BOY

chris stapleton

A few years ago I got to talk about my hero, Waylon Jennings, with this guy. I had followed a guy named Chris from Kentucky for several years. From playing bars with the Jompson Brothers to writing songs in Nashville, Chris was my generation's nod to the former Waylon outlaws of country music. The system didn't matter, only the music mattered. He was already successful in his own world, but the world had yet to hear him. We took this photo at his first solo album release show. It was free and no more than a hundred people showed up to hear Chris that day. That album, Traveller, went under the radar for months...but a moment on a stage changed everything and Traveller went on to win critical acclaim including multiple Grammys. This photo will always remind me that a boy from Kentucky who holds true to his roots can make it in this world. Thanks, Chris Stapleton. You are a legend.

By the way, Chris put out a new album today: From A Room: Volume II. Go check it out and support a Kentucky boy.

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RUN BACK HOME

GREEN RIVER KY

I always make it a point to travel down some of my favorite backroads when I'm stopping through my hometown. That place isn't much to write home about. Just an old Kentucky coal town along the Green River. It's dried up a few times, but has always stayed the same. I couldn't wait to get out of that town as a kid, but we were able to pass the time that we had been sentenced on her waters. It made growing up somewhat bearable.

I can't recall a summer in my life when I didn't see this little building that sits just off the banks of the river where I cut my teeth. Every summer when school would let out, the river would open her welcoming arms to teach us things about life that a public education just couldn't. I once swam across her widest bend and nearly drowned just to prove I was a man, Randy Owen style. Over a lifetime of summers that river taught us a little about the fairer sex, a lot about our outlaw country heroes, and showed us that a cold beer tastes best on a hot summer day sitting in a bass boat. The river made me who I am. It's funny how the places we once ran from become the places we run to. Thanks, Green River.

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SOUTHERNISMS

DIXIE RESERVE

I have spent the better part of today trying to wrap my mind around how we got here. I was raised in a different world than this. I grew up when the phrase "be careful" was just a polite Southernism no different than saying, "that dog won't hunt" or "bless your heart". It was just something you said when someone left the house that really didn't mean anything, but now we truly have to "be careful" in this world. I don't know how we got here, what went wrong, or where we went off course...but it is a dark place we live in when events like what happened on Sunday are a common occurrence. I don't have much of a platform and no one is knocking on my door for my thoughts, but I do believe we are better than this. Change can start with one person. Love one another, Friends, because hate has no place in this world.

I'm praying for you, Vegas and a world where "be careful" is just a polite Southernism once again.

dixie reserve blog bryant

NEVER FORGET

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I always watch the morning news with my coffee. I like to know what's going on in the world before I start my day. It just helps to put my small piece of the pie into perspective, but I wasn't watching that day. It was a different day. I had broken my leg in a high school soccer game just a few nights before so it was a struggle just to get out of bed that day. I could barely put my jeans on, so turning the morning news on that particular day wasn't on my mind. It was a different day, but not for the reasons I had thought.

There was a blistering noise coming from the driveway. It had been sounding for several minutes. It hadn't stopped. The sound of my buddy's car horn waiting to pick me up for class didn't help me hobble through the house on my crutches any faster, but I heard it. As I finally made it out and opened the passenger door, his ghostly face could only utter, "HAVE YOU HEARD?" It had just happened minutes before, probably while he was sitting in my parent's driveway blaring that damned horn. Until that day, I had never heard anything like this. That day was a different day.

As I heard what had happened for the first time, I also saw for the first time. I saw a divided country unite as one nation. I saw a country weep together as we watched 24 hour news coverage for days on end. No one was concerned with watching the conservative channel instead of the liberal channel, they were all the same. I saw a country pray together for their fellow countrymen, despite their religion. I saw a man risk his own life crawling through the rubble to save another man, despite who he voted for or the color of his skin. I saw a country pull itself up by its bootstraps and show the world that we were one nation.

I saw a lot of hate in the world on September 11, 2001, but I saw a whole lot more love in the world in the days, weeks, and months that followed. Sixteen years have passed. A lot has changed in the years since. That unity I felt as we wept for some 2,000+ lives lost is a distant memory to most. There is a lot of hate and division in the world and this country today, but I know that there is a lot more love and unity. I have seen it. I have heard it.

NEVER FORGET, Friends.

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TX STRONG

texas strong dixie reserve flag

I am not perfect and yesterday was not my day. If something could go wrong, it seemed like it did. As she so often does, my better half, Kate, put me in my place at the height of my frustration. She simply looked at me and said, "You're not in Texas." She was right. I wasn't in Texas, but I wish I was. I have been blown away by the amazing acts of humans loving humans the past few days during times that I cannot imagine. I wish I was there running a jon boat and a trolling motor until it was too dark to see. I wish I was there selflessly helping others who truly were having the worst day of their life.

God has a way of humbling us. Today I woke up, pulled up my bootstraps, and decided to make today better. If not for me, then for someone else. Between now and Sept. 15, 100% of the net proceeds ($50) from this limited run TX STRONG flag will be donated to help the recovery efforts of the recent Hurricane Harvey. We're a small company, but we hope this can help to make someone's bad day a little brighter. We're praying for you, Texas (and surrounding areas).

By the way, the flag was Kate's idea too. Behind every decent man is definitely a great woman. Thanks, Kate!

To purchase TX STRONG Flag, CLICK HERE.

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SKETCHES

We've been busy.

My background is Architecture. The Master's Degree hanging on my wall serves as a proof and a daily reminder of everything that field has taught me - including the ability to forge through life on only coffee and two hours of sleep. Architecture, like any design field, is an art. A building often begins as a sketch in a notebook, a post it note, or even on a spare napkin. That napkin sketch, when handled with care, slowly comes to life and becomes a building. There is nothing more beautiful or gratifying than seeing a sketch of a mere idea turn into something real and tangible.

Each Collection at Dixie Reserve is no different. We start off with an idea. Some are good. Some are bad. We do what we know. We kick, we scrap, and we fight like hell for months to figure out what's going to work and how it's going to come together. I can't predict the weather. Some of my best ideas have been flops. Even the great Thomas Edison made over 1,000 unsuccessful attempts before perfecting the light bulb. I don't keep count through the process, but I would probably give Mr. Edison a run for his money.

I am proud of this Fall/Winter Collection, damn proud. Nine months ago it began as a few sketches and some fabric in a Moleskine notebook. If you've followed us since the beginning, you've seen us evolve and find ourselves. Heck, you've seen us try to take on the world with six shirts. It's funny to even think about - luckily one was a good idea and put us on the map (Thanks, DHBB).  

There's a lot of kick, a lot of scrap, and a hell of a lot of fight in this collection (and some bourbon.) It's our story. It's our Dixie. It was a sketch and now it has come to life. We're damn proud.

Check out a few early release styles before the full collection comes out in late August!
(Click here.)

90 Proof Collection V-Neck

90 Proof Collection V-Neck

Dixie Felt Pennant and Conference Print

Dixie Felt Pennant and Conference Print

90 Proof Hoodie

90 Proof Hoodie

Waxed Hats.

Waxed Hats.

Dixie Flag

Dixie Flag

Kick. Scrap. And fight like hell for that sketch.

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SUITCASE

I had planned to post something different this evening, but sometimes you just have to listen to the good Lord when he's speaking to you. This morning my mother had sent me a message to ask about an old suitcase I had borrowed some time ago from my childhood home. Something I had assumed to be just a find from a thrift store, unbeknownst to me, had belonged to my late grandfather. Also unbeknownst... to me, today marks 35 years since he passed. Sometimes you carry roots deeper than you ever realize.

As I was responding to my mother, letting her know that the family heirloom was still in good hands, a song came on the radio that reminded me that we're all part of a bigger picture. "If Heaven wasn't so far away, I'd pack up the kids and go for the day. Introduce them to their grandpa, Watch 'em laugh at the way he talks." It may not sound like much, but those lines had already been on my mind all morning before I had ever spoke with my mother. I can't explain the feeling it gave me, but it was part of something bigger.

I'm not sure that I'll ever see the whole picture that the good Lord is working on down here, but I can see a part of the story full circle. The aged suitcase is my grandfather's. The worn-out hat is mine and a part of the beginnings of Dixie Reserve. They found one another. I bet he could have never dreamed of the places that suitcase has gone. I can't wait to see where that old hat will take me as I carry that suitcase.

Thanks for the message from Heaven, Dick. We miss ya down here!

BRYANT SIGNATURE

HOT TODDY

Have you ever stopped for a moment to think about the peculiarities in life? 

I'm a big fan of traditions. Always have been and that's why I will always answer Mr. Hank Williams Jr. every time he asks, "Why do you drink?" Come to think of it, that's a tradition in and of itself. Walk in to any bar in the south (actually this probably holds true anywhere, but I'm not willing to test that theory), slide a $10 bill in the cover band's tip jar and request "Family Tradition." As sure as the sun sets in the west, as soon as the first line of the chorus hits, every beer bottle in the bar will be raised and eager to answer, "To get drunk!" It's not even a lyric as far as I know, but we all do it proudly and without hesitation. I always wonder about the first drunk guy who decided to sing back to the chorus. He practically changed the world. I, for one, have made many life-long friends when bonding over this chorus. Family traditions are something else.

Now it should come as no surprise to you that I am a big fan of bourbon. That is not peculiar. There's just something about the taste of corn liquor and charred oak that makes me feel at home. What is peculiar and should come as a surprise to you is that so, too, is everyone in the Bible Belt. Jesus may have drank wine, but to my knowledge he never drank any corn liquor. I was raised in Kentucky, which is a very interesting state. It's a state where there are more barrels of bourbon in the state than there are people. I would also venture to say that the number of church pews in the state is also right up there.

It's a funny juxtaposition this state. Ever since Daniel Boone forged through the Cumberland Gap and set up camp we have been making room for both the Lord and bourbon whiskey in our blood. There is a church on nearly every corner in this fine state, all filled with the sweetest old ladies. The kind that carry Werther's Original and peppermints loose at the bottom of their purses handing them out like it's a parade route. The kind that also inscribe the family Bible with every newborn offspring's weight and measurements as each branch is bloomed on the family tree. My grandmother was no different. 

Granny lived across the street from our little Baptist church until the day she died and the good Lord lived in her house just the same. If there wasn't an afternoon baseball game on, you were sure to walk in to her house to find the sounds of an evangelical preacher on the television or the sounds of an old gospel song echoing down the hall from The Gaithers. My mother always said that Granny had her wilder days. I'm sure my grandchildren will say that of me one day as well (hopefully not knowing the worst of it), but the Granny I knew was a Godly woman. So Godly that we had to drink the good eggnog (you know what I'm talking about) in the driveway during the holidays growing up. No liquor or alcohol of any sort was permitted at Granny's house. In Kentucky; however, I cannot be certain that bourbon falls under the jurisdiction of being classified as a liquor or alcohol. Rather, it is a staple. Next to condiments like ketchup and mustard you will find in nearly every Kentucky household...bourbon.

If you should ever fall under the weather in the south, there is a magical drink that will surely cure you if it doesn't make you sicker when prescribed. I was probably only 2 years old the first time I had the drink. I don't remember it, but it's not because I wasn't old enough to remember. Granny was keeping me one afternoon while I was sick. She had been a nurse nearly all of her life and was a firm believer in home remedies and old wives tales. The drink they call 'Hot Toddy' is by all definitions a home remedy and that Godly woman, my Granny, had served me a full grown man sized dose of it. Again, I love bourbon, but there's something about the combination of bourbon whiskey, lemon juice (or crushed peppermint depending on who is serving), and honey that will surely empty the contents of one's stomach in a split second if you are sick. I don't know what it tasted like that day many years ago or even how I reacted, but what I do know is that my family has never stopped talking about the day that my God-fearing Granny got me drunk on corn liquor and cured pneumonia. I've taken some good bourbon naps in my college years, but from the stories of my family none will ever compare to when Granny was my bartender.

I'm honestly not even sure where old southern ladies get their bourbon whiskey for a Hot Toddy. I've been in a lot of liquor stores throughout my life (sorry, Granny) and I've never seen one old woman. In fact, Granny would always call my mother to stop by the liquor store and pick up a pint when she was baking something that required a special ingredient. She wouldn't step foot into a liquor store, but she would certainly use their bourbon. I got a lot of traits from Granny, this was not one of them however.

That's the thing about Kentucky, there's a worn out Bible on every coffee table. We all know every Commandment before we can even count to ten. But there's also a bottle of bourbon on the highest shelf of the kitchen cabinet just out of reach of the youngsters. If you're at the right house, there will even be an old charred oak bourbon barrel turned on its side and split open with the freshest array of spring flowers sprouting from it in the front lawn. That's Kentucky, even your grandmother who sits on the same old pew every time the church doors are open also has a little bourbon in her blood in one way or another. It's a place where bourbon can be a tradition, not a sin. That's peculiar and I love this place.

OLD HATS

DIXIE RESERVE BLOG - HAT

I like everything from old worn-out boots to a suit that fits just right. But there's something special to be said about a man's hat. If you don't believe me go find that family chest in the attic, the one with every heirloom from the family bible to the deed where the family sold the back 40 to make ends meet that hard winter. Dig through until you find your grandfather's old hat, the one he wore for years and still holds the shape of his head. Put it on and tell me that you can't feel him.

Tell me you can't feel the blood that was washed away with his sins in the river one Sunday afternoon; the only time he ever took it off. Tell me you can't feel the sweat of the sun beating down on that hat the same way it did as he drove a plow in the fields every summer nearly his whole life. Tell me you can't feel the tears of the stories that hat told on the front porch about a war that took him half way around the world and took his best friend of 20 years.

I'll tell you, there's something special to be said about a man's hat. I hope your hat has a good story, friend.

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