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Washing State Distillery Opens / Iowa Vodka |
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Washington: State Gets First Grain Distillery
Since Prohibition Partners (left) Don
Poffenroth and Kent Fleischmann
Check out
the news
website www.dryflydistilling.com
Out the door. Dry Fly will be able to produce
5,000 cases
of gin, vodka, and whiskey annually.
By Maggie Dutton
This month, Don Poffenroth and Kent
Fleischmann of Dry Fly Distilling in Spokane
officially became the proud parents of the
first grain distillery to open in Washington
since Prohibition. One small step for local
cocktail drinkers is one giant leap for our
state.
Dry Fly's still arrived last week from
Germany, where it had been constructed by
Christian Carl, an industry giant that builds
everything from small pot stills to giant
distilling plants. Once the still is set up,
the Dry Fly facility is set to produce vodka,
gin, and whiskey at an initial capacity of
5,000 cases total a year, which puts the
operation in the territory of craft
distilling.
A craft distillery is marked by a less
industrial, more hands-on distilling process.
Craft distillers typically only produce one
comma's worth of product, contrasted against
the big distilleries that crank out millions
of cases of booze. Though there are still
fewer than 100 small distilleries in America,
the craft spirits movement is growing, with
Portland leading the charge. With Dry Fly,
Washington finally joins in.
To date, whenever I have asked someone from a
distributor or winery (i.e., "the business")
why there weren't any distilleries in
Washington, they've come up with the most
cockamamie answers and conspiracy theories.
Some have said distilling spirits wasn't
legal here. Some told me that the state had
made the licensing process technically
impossible.
Turns out, our state-controlled system makes
the process of owning a distillery difficult,
but that's due to the lingering fallout of
Prohibition more than any nefarious plot to
keep distillers out of Washington. Poffenroth
says that, in fact, the Liquor Control Board
helped walk Dry Fly through the process, an
intensified version of the same process
potential winery owners have to undergo.
Given the higher profit margins that
distillery owners stand to make, the scrutiny
of potential distillers is greater, as is the
bonding required. The federal Alcohol and
Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, as well as the
state Liquor Control Board, want to make sure
those getting into the distilling business
are able to stay in business-and pay
taxes.
Enduring the background checks and opening up
their financial histories might have felt
like joining the CIA, but Poffenroth and
Fleischmann made it through the process
without being sent back to the starting
point. As Poffenroth advises other budding
distillers, "Licensing is not hard; it is
just very detailed and takes a long time. You
have to have your stuff together, or they
will shoot you down. We made it through in
the first pass, and it still took six
months."
Both Poffenroth and Fleischmann come from
high-level jobs in the food industry. They
cite corporate burnout as one of the main
factors that motivated them to find a trade
in which they could work more flexible hours,
to allow morning forays to the river (Dry Fly
is named for their favorite pastime, fly
fishing). Washington wineries share knowledge
as commonly as they do equipment, but the two
distillers must go it alone for now. Notes
Poffenroth, "We're glad to be the first, but
we're hoping for company."
Dry Fly vodka, gin, and whiskey will cost
around $30, and the duo hope to have their
vodka and gin on the shelves of a
state-controlled liquor store near you this
fall (the company is shooting for October).
The distillery's single-malt whiskey then
will be ready for stores in 2009. I suggest
they name that kid "Poffenroth & Fleischmann
Select"; it's a natural.
======================== Iowa: Vodka
returns to Iowa
Premium ClearHeart is the first bottled in
the state since Prohibition
Iowa can now boast another corn byproduct:
ClearHeart Vodka from Cedar Rapids.
Handcrafted 10 gallons at a time from
Iowa-grown corn and apples, it's the first
and only legal post-Prohibition vodka
distilled and bottled in Iowa.
ClearHeart is one of four spirits produced by
two-year-old Cedar Ridge Winery and
Distillery, owned by Jeff and Laurie
Quint.
With all the corn that grows in Iowa, Jeff
Quint said, "it seems like a good place to
have a distillery.''
Quint decided to make vodka because, unlike
whiskey, it requires no aging.
He compares his 80-proof vodka to Grey Goose
and Ketel One, known as super-premium vodkas
because they're going to cost in the $20 to
$28 range.
Quint said his vodka is not meant to compete
with low-priced Hawkeye Vodka - which is
distilled in St. Louis and is the state's
top-selling vodka, according to Lynn Walding
at the state Alcoholic Beverages Division.
========================

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Distiller Wanted |
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OFF-CENTERED DISTILLERY MANAGER WANTED
Dogfish Head Brewings & Eats is seeking a
dependable, organized, self-motivated,
team-oriented person to become our Distillery
Manager. You must be a rare mix of creative
and administrative as you will be called upon
to both pioneer and replicate exciting beers
and spirits, in addition to managing your
world, including costing, budgeting,
scheduling, maintaining compliance (including
tracking TTB documentation and audit
coordination), managing suppliers, etc. You
will exude your own personal air of
Dogfishness while representin' at pub tours
and through your active participation in
other events. You will champion beer and
distillery education efforts on behalf of the
pub. And as a valued member of the pub
management team you may be called upon to
support various pub initiatives and handle
other duties as assigned.
We seek a reliable person who is detail and
quality oriented, takes a sense of pride in
their work and who is passionate about making
world class spirits and beers that will grow
the brand. Experience with regulatory
issues and documentation, compliance and
audits are quite helpful. We seek a highly
motivated candidate who possesses a
combination of technical training and
practical experience sufficient to meet the
demands of our anticipated brand growth
through the brewing and distilling of
innovative products. (While we love our
home-brewer fans, homebrewing/homedistilling
experience can not substitute for the
former.) The process of brewing/distilling
is a physical one; the successful distillery
manager must be able to lift up to 50 lbs.,
twist/turn, reach over shoulders and
stand/walk/bend on a continual basis.
Working knowledge of MS Word and Excel is
required.
If interested, please send a letter of
interest, resume and salary requirements to
Cindy at cindy@dogfish.com or fax to (302)
684-0541.
GABF in October? You bet
we'll be there. Qualified candidates
interested in getting on the GABF meeting
schedule, please advise in your cover letter;
appointment dates and times will be coordinated.
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Distillery, Barrles / Bottles / Bottling line |
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Business Opportunity:
Successful small distillery with 40K annual
gross revenues and 450 case per year sales.
Retail outlets in 100 out of 163 statewide
stores. Product sells retail in mid-range
for $12 for a 750ml 80 proof bottle. Eight
year operating history. Proven system of
production. Reliable supplies of component
parts. No company debt. Company owns
building where plant operates. Existing
plant capacity is 20K cases per year.
Favorable regulatory environment in state
permits on site retail bottle sales as well
as tasting on premises. Brand only requires
promotion and marketing only to increase
sales. All licenses current, 6 months of
inventory on hand. Current equipment capable
of 20K cases per year.
Plant capacity
with additional equipment would be 50K to
100K cases per year. The company is located
in Morgantown, West Virginia, a vibrant
college town and home of West Virginia
University. The plant is located one mile
from interstate 79 with easy shipping and
receiving access. Seeking qualified buyer
to grow company and continue business.
Price: 750K.
See company website at
http://www.mountainmoonshine.com/
Contact principal;
West Virginia Distilling Co., LLC
Attn: Payton Fireman
1380 Fenwick Ave.
Morgantown, WV 26505
Phone: 304-599-0960 =====================
A& J Whiskey Barrels is now selling new
charred white oak whiskey barrels.cost of
these barrels is
$ 210.00 plus shipping.call (513) 253-8591 or
email us at ajwhskybrls@gmail.com
anytime for orders and
shipping quotes. delivery also
availible. =====================
1 Liter round Liquor Bottles, 28 mm screw top
finish
packed necks down in plain Kraft brown boxes
12 per case. Originally purchased from
Saint Gobain.
Mold number 9935034. $7/case takes all 28 pallets
at 91 cases per pallet. Terms can be
arranged.
Call Mike at (505) 440 8666
====================
GAI Italian Rotary Washer, Filler, KERR
Capper
The GAI Monoblock was bought new in 1997 and
is a rotary washer that grips the top of each
bottle and inverts it before spraying water
in then feeding into a rotary fill station
and has been used to chuck apply plastic KERR
caps 28 and 33mm. Monoblock also comes with a
flat dump table that is integral to feed the
machine. All change parts to include gripper
heads for the washer, feed screws, and star
wheels will be included. For multiple bottle
shapes and sizes.
Price $24,000.00 ===================
Make: KOSME
Age: 1997
Max Fill Speed: 65 bottles per minute.
KOSME Italian 3 Label Self Adhesive/Pressure
Sensitive Labeler
The Kosme pressure sensitive labeler is
capable and has been used since purchased new
in 1998 for applying a front, back and neck
label on a series of square bottles. New
chucks and vacuum heads would need to be
purchased for applications of
any other bottle sizes through Prospero
Equipment at (888)732 1222 in New York, the
broker for the GAI and Kosme machinery.
Price: $15,000.00
Gray Ottley
Director
Distilled Resources, Inc.
(208)727-1823
waytogoidaho.com =====================

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Back issues |
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To read back issues of DISTILLER
newsletter? Go to:
http://distilling.com/backissues.html ====================
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TTB Permits |
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=================== --To obtain a
distilled spirits permit go to:
http://www.ttb.gov/spirits/index.shtml
===================
--To obtain TTB list of DSPs go to:
http://www.ttb.gov/foia//err.shtml
=====================
--To obtain TTB statistics on distilling go to:
www.ttb.gov then scroll down to "spirits" and
then the "year".
=====================
--To obtain Distilled Spirits Laws and
Regulations go to:
http://www.ttb.gov/spirits/spirits_regs.shtml
=====================
--To obtain label regulations go to:
http://www.ttb.gov/spirits/bam.shtml
distilled spirits manual circular.
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Join the American Distilling Institute |
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Membership dues are used to support
the American
Distilling Institute's efforts to educate and
inform
the public about craft distilling.
Benefits of
membership are: a discount to attend the
April 2007
conference, the DISTILLER newsletters, the
web site
password and the Annual Distiller's Resource
Directory.
American Distiller Membership, 2007 is
$250
Pay by check our use
PayPal to join the Institute. ==========
USD
Click the PayPal Logo to register for the "RUM" conference.
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