Distilling the South: A Guide to Southern Craft Liquors and the People Who Make Them
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About this ebook
Driven by legacy and passion, today's distillers are creating a new southern tradition--one that you can now explore with an inimitable writer. Each Liquor Trail covers one or several states and features particularly worthy distilleries that Purvis has personally selected. The trails also feature maps, a complete listing of distilleries in each territory, on-site photographs, and some dynamite drink recipes direct from the distillers.
Kathleen Purvis
Kathleen Purvis is an award-winning food writer, food editor for the Charlotte Observer, and the author of two cookbooks, Bourbon and Pecans.
Read more from Kathleen Purvis
Bourbon: a Savor the South cookbook Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsPecans: a Savor the South cookbook Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Cornbread Nation 7: The Best of Southern Food Writing Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Distilling the South - Kathleen Purvis
DISTILLING THE SOUTH
DISTILLING THE SOUTH
A Guide to Southern Craft Liquors and the People Who Make Them
Kathleen Purvis
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS
Chapel Hill
This book was published with the assistance of the Luther H. Hodges Sr. and Luther H. Hodges Jr. Fund of the University of North Carolina Press.
© 2018 Kathleen Purvis All rights reserved
Designed by Sally Fry Scruggs
Set in Miller and Intelo by Tseng Information Systems, Inc.
Manufactured in the United States of America
The University of North Carolina Press has been a member of the Green Press Initiative since 2003.
Cover illustrations: corn and other liquor ingredients by Sally Fry Scruggs; whiskey bottle by Roman Poljak/stock.adobe.com.
All interior photographs by the author.
Library of Congress Cataloging-win-Publication Data
Names: Purvis, Kathleen, author.
Title: Distilling the South : a guide to Southern craft liquors and the people who make them / Kathleen Purvis.
Description: Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, [2018] | Includes index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2017044543| ISBN 9781469640617 (cloth : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781469640624 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Microdistilleries—Southern States. | Distillers—Southern States. | Distilling industries—Southern States. | Liquors—Southern States.
Classification: LCC HD9390.S672 P87 2018 | DDC 338.4/7663500975—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017044543
CONTENTS
Introduction
Getting Crafty: The Basics of the Distilling World
THE LIQUOR TRAILS
1. Virginia and West Virginia
2. North Carolina
3. South Carolina
4. Kentucky and Tennessee
5. Georgia, Alabama, and Florida
6. Louisiana and Mississippi
SIDEBARS
Tips for Touring: Watch Your Step
Stills and the Basics of Distilling
Know Your Alcohols
How to Taste: No Swirling, No Spitting
A Different Beast: Barrel-Rested Gin
The Dark History of Dark Corner
Oscar Getz: The Sweetest Little Whiskey Museum in Kentucky
Bitter Pill: Prohibition and the Medicinal License
MGP: Right or Wrong?
Medals: Does the Bling Mean a Thing?
Glossary
Recommended Reading
Acknowledgments
Index
DISTILLING THE SOUTH
Introduction
There I was, standing in a lemon grove, surrounded by trees taller than my head, each one lush with green leaves.
I wasn’t in Sicily or Southern California. This lemon grove was in a long greenhouse on a steep hillside in northern West Virginia, in the small arm of the state that curls over the top of Virginia just below Maryland. It’s a place that gets an average of twenty-one inches of snow a year, and where the January temperatures usually hover around 20 degrees—not the place you’d expect to find trees with fruit we associate with heat and sunshine.
The lemon grove on the hill: from a window in one end of the greenhouse at Bloomery Plantation, you can look out over the Blue Ridge Mountains.
It seems improbable, and if I hadn’t seen it for myself, I wouldn’t have believed it. The lemons from those trees were destined to be zested by hand, their skins giving up their flavor to make skinny bottles of Italian-style limoncello right there in West Virginia.
I stood at the window in one end of the greenhouse, looking out at steep hills of the Blue Ridge Mountains stretching off in the distance late on a summer afternoon, and marveled at that view, that greenhouse, and what it represents.
Why would someone go to so much trouble to create an Italian-style lemon cordial in what is surely the most unlikely spot on Earth?
I found the lemon grove on the grounds of a rustic farm called Bloomery Plantation in the countryside outside tiny Charles Town in West Virginia, one of the southern states where changing laws and a new mania for craft food have allowed the flourishing of an entirely new business. Well, a very old business, actually, but one that’s coming alive in a whole new way.
Tom Kiefer and Linda Losey, the owners of Bloomery Plantation, have a story that is different and yet familiar all over the craft-spirits business today: on a trip to Italy to attend the canonization of Kiefer’s great-great-aunt, they bought a bottle of limoncello and became entranced by the vivid flavor.
Returning to America, they tried to find another bottle, but were disappointed by everything they tried. In America, most commercial limoncello is made with lemons that are zested by machine, including too much bitter pith and altering the flavor.
So they found land in West Virginia on the site of what had once been an old ironworks, and opened a farm-based distillery, where they could grow some of their own lemons and create the kind of limoncello they wanted to drink.
We love an adventure,
Losey says. That’s how we approach life, as an adventure. This hadn’t been done, so we thought, ‘Why not?’
Eventually, they went on to add a long row of SweetShine cordials, all based on the moonshine that’s been made in the South for generations and flavored with ingredients, some grown on the property, that include pumpkin, raspberries, and Hawaiian ginger. Their black walnut liqueur won best nut cordial in the world at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition in 2015. You can go to the farm and visit their tasting bar in a rustic log cabin dating to 1840.
This is the allure of the craft distilling industry, where passion, heritage, and a desire to express yourself through the creation of spirits are driving a new generation of distillers to make everything from gin and vodka to whiskeys, rums, and brandies, even filling barrels and waiting years to make bourbon, all challenging themselves with a simple aim: if they dream it, they can make it. And you can be a part of it. With this book in hand as your guide, you’ll get a unique way to tour the South through the experience of craft liquor.
What drives these new distillers? That’s what I set out to discover.
SEE FOR YOURSELF
Visiting distilleries will take you on an unusual journey around the South, getting you off the main roads and back into small towns, farms, and historic areas.
You’ll witness a new wave of American entrepreneurialism, small but growing fast, where people are staking their lives, careers, and bank accounts to challenge big-name brands that have become household names, behemoths like Jim Beam and Jack Daniel’s.
You’ll come away knowing a lot more about what you drink and how it’s made. And you’ll meet passionate people along the way, from young distillers who are trying to go back to the days when distilleries were a part of every town to people who have been driven by love of a drink to put their own mark on it.
You’ll hear about the exploding interest in making liquors that are totally locally sourced as well, boosting state farming systems by using corn and grains grown within a few miles or reaching back to old varieties of rye and corn that haven’t been used in more than a generation.
Because they use smaller amounts, many craft distilleries are pinning their claims on grain to glass
or, in a favorite phrase I heard a lot, farm to flask.
Non-GMO corn strains and organically grown fruits are all finding their way into production, often with help from state universities that are pairing with whiskey programs to train distillers and find better agriculture practices. Almost every distiller I met had also teamed with local farms that use the spent grains to feed local pigs and cattle, so the movement is flask to farm as well.
You’ll also meet people like yourself on tours. The people drawn to visit American distilleries come from all over the world, all age groups from millennial to baby boomers, and from all walks of life. Some of the most interesting people I’ve met on my tours are fellow visitors, people drawn to exploring the world through the lens of food. I’ve seen families in groups, from young adults to grandparents, and batches of friends out to share an experience. I’ve seen day-trippers and weekenders, bridal showers and bachelor parties, even people on their first dates. At one stop, I shared the tour with two couples from Belgium pushing a baby in a stroller, out to experience a different view of America. Their questions were delightful and enlightening.
To write this book, I spent more than a year developing six liquor trails crossing the eleven southern states that will give you the most generous number of craft distilling experiences. I drove thousands of miles and visited more than fifty distilleries from Virginia to Louisiana.
I saw more copper stills than an old-time revenue agent, stuck my finger in vats of fermenting corn and streams of clear, freshly distilled alcohol pouring from working stills, sampled an astonishing range of creations and walked through row after row of oak barrels stacked in warehouses, basements, and even portable trailers.
I drove deep into the Florida backwoods and found brandy made from tangerines and absinthe made from tropical ingredients that was colored red from hyacinth. I crushed wormwood between my fingers from bundles hanging to dry in the back of a little shop in Middleburg, Virginia, where the products include a French-style green absinthe right out of the Beaux Arts era. I visited a dying farm town in Georgia that’s coming back to life as a food destination thanks to a Dutch couple who took over abandoned buildings to build a rum distillery, creating a new stream of tax revenue and attracting new business.
I found people experimenting with innovative ideas like audio aging, where loud music is piped into barrel warehouses to create tiny waves inside the barrels and hurry contact—theoretically, anyway—with the wood. I met a distiller in Alabama who’s putting his barrels of single-malt whiskey into a restaurant-size, walk-in refrigeration unit, raising and lowering the temperature to mimic years of winter and summer in a matter of months.
In Kennesaw, Georgia, I spent an afternoon at a distillery where they’re making whiskey in a barn that dates to the 1830s and was one of the only wooden structures in the state that wasn’t burned by General Sherman’s troops during the Civil War.
DRIVING MYSELF TO DRINK
How did I end up devoting a year to such a crazy endeavor? As a newspaper food editor at the Charlotte Observer in North Carolina, I’ve spent more than twenty-five years covering food in the South, telling the story of my home through the filter of culinary history.
Born in Georgia and raised in North Carolina and Florida, I come from a family that has southern roots that go back generations. If I had my Scots-Irish genes mapped, I don’t doubt my DNA would show traces of cornbread, barbecue, and, yes, homemade hooch. One of my grandfathers made bathtub gin to get through Prohibition. When my father was serving with the 1st Marine Division in the South Pacific during World War II, he and his buddies set up small makeshift stills and scrounged supplies to make a rough form of what he fondly called jungle juice.
The path that led to this project started much earlier, though. About ten years ago, I was approached by Elaine Maisner, executive editor for the University of North Carolina Press, about an idea she had for a unique project: a series of small cookbooks, each by a different writer and each focused on a single ingredient or occasion in southern cooking.
I ended up writing a book on pecans that was one of the first in the book series called Savor the South. I had so much fun that Elaine asked me to tackle a second book for the series. I talked her into letting me do a cookbook on bourbon.
As a food writer, my favorite stories start with a simple question: Why? The stories that I become the most passionate about usually start with my own curiosity. My husband and I have been classic cocktail fans since long before the cocktail renaissance that took off in the twenty-first century. We’re the kind of people who collect books of obscure old recipes and decorate our living room with shelves of antique cocktail shakers that we put to good use.
As a fan of bourbon and bourbon-based drinks, though, I had one simple question: Why is bourbon southern? It’s made from corn, after all, and corn is grown all over the country. To answer my own question, I traveled through Kentucky to visit the big distilleries, places like Heaven Hill, Buffalo Trace, Woodford Reserve, and Maker’s Mark.
I learned how bourbon is made and, more importantly, why so much of it is made there. While bourbon isn’t necessarily southern and there are great bourbons made all over the country, even in New York State, the making of bourbons and whiskeys are intrinsically intertwined with the history of the southern states. I learned about the combination of spectacularly clear water filtered through the region’s white marble limestone and the corn that grows so well in the area, and how those conditions led Scots-Irish settlers to discover that the southern mountains were the perfect place to make corn whiskey using the same techniques they had used in their home countries to make barley-based whiskeys, and how that led, eventually, to the development of the style of whiskey we now know as bourbon.
I found myself becoming a little cynical, too. Big whiskey is a big business, and the tours at large distilleries are slick operations that always end in the gift shop, where a couple of samples of their high-proof wares will leave you all too ready to open your wallet for souvenir bottles and T-shirts.
The lectures on those tours are usually colorful, but not all that you hear turns out to be true. The stories and history of American bourbon are as enhanced and mythologized as the tall tales that always seem to bubble up around an open bottle.
Excellent books, such as Robert Moss’s Southern Spirits: Four Hundred Years of Drinking in the American South and Fred Minnick’s Bourbon: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of an American Whiskey, have detailed how those colorful stories are sometimes used to paper over unsavory history that involved patent medicines, poor-quality whiskeys dumped on Native Americans, and enslaved workers who did most of the backbreaking work of early distilling.
Still, I loved every minute of my bourbon project, creating dozens of recipes using bourbon in cooking and becoming well versed in the lore and truth of my favorite liquor.
A couple of years later, Elaine approached me again. Always a keen observer of food trends, she had started to notice the sudden growth around North Carolina of small craft distilleries, including one right up the street from her office in Chapel Hill, Top of the Hill Distillery, the maker of TOPO Organic Spirits.
There was something there, she thought. How about tackling a book on that? At first, I wasn’t sure. (I’ll be honest: my first response was, It’s an awful lot of moonshine, Elaine. And I hate moonshine.
) We kept tossing around the idea, though, until we finally realized that the growing distillery industry, even beyond North Carolina, might make a great idea for a travel book. And the idea for Distilling the South was born.
Once again, my question was why
? The growth of the craft-beer industry answered a need: America, for many years, had lousy domestic beer. Craft beer filled a need for something that mostly didn’t exist in our food system.
But American liquor has been among the best in the world for generations. So why are people being driven to put everything they have into creating liquor businesses that may never be large enough to compete with large distillers?
The answer to that is the whole motivation behind what we now call craft distilling. That’s what this book will help you figure out.
HOW TO USE THIS BOOK: THE SIX LIQUOR TRAILS
Before we hit the road, let me explain how the book is set up: with an estimated 260 craft distilleries in eleven southern states in 2016 and more on the way, it’s obviously impossible for you—or me—to visit them all.
For each of the six regional trails I created—and which you can explore for yourself, using this book—I looked for anywhere from six to twelve of the most significant stops. Each was chosen for one of a couple of reasons: because what they’re making or how they’re making it made them the most interesting in their region, or because the location made it most likely (or in some cases, less likely) that you’d hear of them while visiting an area.
I also looked for something else: the story of craft distilling isn’t just about making alcohol. Like all great tales, it’s a story about people. I tried, as often as possible, to find people with intriguing or compelling stories behind what they do and why they do it. I tried to find distilleries that are microcosms of the regions where they operate.
Each trail focuses on two or three states that are grouped together as regions. (Because there’s so much there, I broke the Carolinas into two trails for your convenience.) The distilleries I highlighted are arranged in geographic order,