About 18 months ago, I learned about Moonshine from Erik M. who had seen a segment on CBS Sunday Morning show. If it were not 250 miles one-way, depending on your route, without the eccentric hours of closing at 12:30 PM, then we might have hung up the phone and driven down on a lark. Instead it got postponed into the future until it drifted off the to-do list.
Fortunately, my occasional stint as an itinerant speaker on the History of American Pies, following the
Smithsonian’s Key Ingredients exhibit around Illinois, brings me to places I would never have planned on my own. Last week, my destination was Marshall, Illinois where I had the privilege of staying overnight at the Archer House, which not only once housed Abraham Lincoln overnight but Grover Cleveland as well. This former bed and breakfast is now an overnight accommodation without breakfast. For $75 it was fun staying overnight at a place predating the Civil War.
My talk was at the local library just down the street from the Inn. I brought with me the road instructions for Moonshine with the hope a local might make some useful strategic comments. When I first mentioned Moonshine, which is 24 miles from Marshall, every one told me about the couple times they went to principally satisfy their curiosity. I was also warned not to have great expectations of the place. Interestingly, the library had preprinted instructions from Marshall to the Moonshine Store as “Featured on CBS.”
If you follow Route 1 through Marshall from the north, then these instructions apply:
1. Turn right on Archer Avenue, which turns into National Road.
2. Turn left onto US-40 from Marshall to Martinsville Road.
3. Turn left (south) onto York Road (if you turn right it is Cleone Road)
4. Go through Martinsville and on the south edge, immediately following the railroad tracks, turn right onto Jefferson Street, which becomes 700th Street. THIS IS WHERE MANY MAKE A MISTAKE!
5. Continue south to 1000th Road, turn right (west).
6. Turn left (south) on 670th Street; continue south until reaching 570th.
7. Turn right (west) to 570th Street.
8. Turn left (south) on 600th Street.
9. The Moonshine Store is on the northeast corner of 600th Street and 300th Road.
If you came on IL-49 from Casey, you have a much more direct shot to Moonshine by turning onto 400th Road, which leads you to 600th Street which intersects with 300th Road. I noticed at the cash register at Moonshine Store there were a number of directions from various locations in the region stacked up. Apparently they collect them and recycle back to their points of origin for re-use.
Approaching Moonshine Store from any direction, there are corn or soybean fields and no sign of another person. Reach the intersection of 600th Street turning left onto 300th Road, there is a very visible presence of humanity.
The interior of Moonshine Store has stamped tin ceiling tiles, glass merchandise cases filled with collections, several refrigerators chilling drinks, free standing display of chips and at the bottom of the U-shaped counters is the grillmaster.
While the menu offers a limited amount of grilled food, in the fifteen minutes I spent looking at everything, I never heard anyone divert from having a hamburger. Back in Marshall someone said they offered fried bologna sandwiches, which did not exist though I would have very likely ordered one in addition to a hamburger.
Once you place your order at the grill, there is no particular rush to pay for your food. Your name is called, nobody asks for proof of payment. You can dress your hamburger at the generous condiment counter, grab your chips and drink and go to picnic grove without laying out a dime. It is simply supposed at some point or another you will deliver yourself to the cash register to pay. I, of course, paid my bill while waiting for my food. I learned about this pay-when-you-get-to-it system by watching everyone else simply pay when they felt like it, which often was a visit back into the store on their way out of town.
On the CBS Sunday show, they showed the couple arriving at 5 AM to grind their meat and form it into patties. While I heard nobody order a level of doneness and I forgot as well, all the hamburgers seems to be cooked through. If it were your normal lean hamburger, this thorough cook would be the kiss of death. They clearly use a meat high in fat who could bear the thorough cooking while remaining moist and flavorful. Was this the best hamburger of my life? No, though it was a very good hamburger.
My entertainment while eating was listening to the conversations around me while reading the Thrifty Nickle, which I always pick up and scan whenever I come upon one. I especially like this ad on the bullet proof room, which is very likely not the fake ad!
Scattered on various tables were half gallon Mason jars, which I initially assumed was taking a collection for a local-in-need or perhaps for hurricane victims. Instead it was a bit of cross-marketing between Moonshine and a gift store-log cabin business down the road. I wasn’t precisely sure if they were selling gifts in a log cabin style store or sold gifts as well as log cabins.
I am quite happy to have gone to Moonshine Store to meet a thriving business in the middle of nowhere, which defies the business school mantra of location-location-location! What they offer is a straightforward well-prepared hamburger in a rustic setting. They make a best-of hamburger for their region, because anything less and nobody would make the effort to seek them out. While it is destination dining no matter where you come from, I certainly am glad it was not THE destination rather just another stop on an itinerary.
If I were in the general area, I would definitely go there again. I would not go there from Chicago only for the hamburger, though I do consider it a great experience.
Archer House
717 Archer Avenue
Marshall, IL 62441
217-826-8023
Moonshine Store
6017 E 300th Rd
Martinsville, IL 62442
(618) 569-9200