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AMERICAN DISTILLING INSTITUTE (ADI) is dedicated
to
the the art and science of distilling. Our mission is
to inform and celebrate the artisan
distiller. Bill Owens,
President. =========================
DISTILLING EQUIMENT
FOR SALE
225 Liter Hostein pot still. $22,000. Call Radhall
Graham 831-425-3625 ex 110 ==================
FOR SALE Column Still Stainless steel column
still, 30
foot high, 12" diameter, 34 plates,
for continuous production potable alcohol.
Fully operational. $60,000.
Don Archer, Archer Distilling Corporation,
Prattsville NY 12468.
mail@donarcher.com
518 734 3822
718 941 7584 ===================
FOR SALE
Two complete alambics pot stills: Both in very good
condition. Sizes available are: 650
gls.Capacity. Price $45000 00
150 gls.Capacity. Price$35000.00
For more informations, please call: Hubert
at (707)485-0670 =====================
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Utah Grants DPS permit. Distiller newsletter has been mailed. |
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The DISTILLER newsletter has been mailed. If you
did not recevie a printed newsletter
please contact me ASAP. 510-886-7418 or e-mail.
bill@distilling.com
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Utah: State grants whiskey permit.
Small distiller wants to break into business of
high-end spirits
By Dawn House
The Salt Lake Tribune
For perhaps the first time, the state Alcoholic
Beverage Control Commission on Thursday issued a
special use permit for an individual to distill small
portions of whiskey.
"We just granted a license for a still," said Earl
Dorius, the commission's head of licensing and
compliance. "I don't think there's ever been such a
permit."
The permit allows David Perkins, 40, of Park City, to
develop his own recipe for whiskey. He moved a $10,000
pot still from Germany into a building near downtown
Salt Lake City, but could not use the apparatus to
distill alcohol from fermented liquid mixtures until
he acquired both federal and state licenses.
Perkins already has received his federal permit from
the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.
Anyone firing up a still without those permits could
face 10 years in federal prison.
"My goal is to set up a distillery in Park City that
will make high-end whiskeys," said Perkins. "It'll be
a long process." Perkins will experiment with
combinations of wheat, corn, barley, oats and rye to
come up with the desired mix of ingredients for his
final product. The grains will be ground into flour
and boiled, much like beer. He then will add a special
yeast to the mash before pouring it into the
stainless-steel and brass still, where vapors are
condensed into a more purified form.
The clear liquid that comes out of the still's spout
is called "white dog" in Kentucky, whose Bourbon
County is namesake for what Congress designated in
1964 as America's official drink. It's dubbed
moonshine when that clear liquid comes out of an
illegal, homemade still.
Whiskey gets its color and flavor from the barrels in
which it's aged, said Perkins. By law, the form of
whiskey known as bourbon must be aged in new charred
white oak barrels, much like some small ones Perkins
brought to Utah from Kentucky.
Depending on the spirits, the aging process can take
two to 10 years.
"I'm committed," Perkins said of his willingness to
wait. "Sure I could lose my shirt, or better yet I
could come up with a good product in a business that
few people can break into."
Perkins' privately held company is called Quaking
Aspen Distillery. He hasn't yet decided on a name for
the spirits he'll distill with consultation from
master distillers out of Kentucky.
It makes sense for a distillery in Utah, Perkins
added, noting that whiskey has been present in Utah
since shortly after the mid-19th Century arrival of
Mormon pioneers.
For instance, the old East Temple street in Salt Lake
City was nicknamed "Whiskey Street" because of its
many saloons. It wasn't until 1906 that the boulevard
was officially renamed "Main Street."
Also, Utah became the deciding state to repeal
Prohibition in 1933 when the Legislature voted in
favor of the 21st Amendment. "Whiskey was always a
dominant factor in the West," Perkins added. "Don't
forget what a cowboy asked for whenever he wanted a
drink." =========================

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