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Real Maine Potato Vodka

AVB

Jesus of Cool, I'm bad, I'm nationwide
Joined
Nov 14, 2003
Messages
23,027
FREEPORT, Maine - The dream of two brothers — one a potato farmer, the other a brain surgeon — has become reality with a shiny new distillery ready to transform humble spuds into premium vodka.

After months of work, taste testers will help Maine Distilleries LLC decide this week on the final formula that will be on store shelves within a matter of weeks.

At $31.99-a-bottle, the company is aiming for the top of the shelf, and its founders are confident that their Cold River Vodka can compete with the world's best.

"We've been waiting for this moment for three years, and we're ready to go," said Bob Harkins, Maine Distilleries' CEO. "We've done our homework. We've developed a good understanding of the process. Now it's show time. It's time to deliver."

Cold River Vodka is part of a growing trend.

Just like boutique wineries and microbreweries before them, a new wave of small craft distilleries is taking root in the United States.

The number of those distilleries has grown from 15 a decade ago to 66 today. Most of that growth has come in the last five years, said Bill Owens, president of the American Distilling Institute in Hayward, Calif.

Some of the distilleries are attached to small breweries whose operators discovered that the wort, or mash, could be transformed with extra processing into vodka, gin or whiskey. Likewise, vineyards have focused on brandies and grappa.

Owens anticipates future growth akin to the vintners and small breweries that have blossomed in popularity since the 1980s.

"Now the spirits industry is going through this renaissance," he said. "People will pay extra for quality, there's no doubt about that."

One of the biggest success stories so far is Tito's Handmade Vodka, made in Austin, Texas and now sold in 45 states. Another is St. George Spirits, which makes Hangar 1 vodka and St. George single malt whiskey in California.

In Texas, Tito Beveridge was an early pioneer when he incorporated in 1995 and sold his first case of vodka two years later. This year, he expects to sell more than 100,000 cases of Tito's Handmade Vodka.

His vodka goes well in martinis, on the rocks, or straight up, he said. What makes vodka so popular is its versatility, he said.

"My whole opinion is, I don't care if you drink it with Sunny D or Dr. Pepper, just as long as you're drinking it," he said.

Unfortunately, regulations and red tape make it harder for distillers than for vintners and brewers to get into business, Owens said. Wineries and breweries are largely regulated by states; distilleries are also regulated by the feds.

In Maine, it took three years for Donnie and Lee Thibodeau, sons of a potato farmer, to make their dream a reality.

Their goal was to add value to the potatoes that Donnie Thibodeau grows on his 1,200-acre Green Thumb Farm in Fryeburg, near the Cold River.

He and Lee Thibodeau, a neurosurgeon at Maine Medical Center, signed up two additional partners. Harkins, a former ski resort executive, was hired to run the business and Chris Dowe, a brewery consultant, was tapped to build the distillery.

What they created was Maine's first commercial distillery. Unlike White Rock Distilleries in Lewiston, which creates its beverages from imported alcohol, Maine Distilleries oversees every aspect of the process from potato seedling to bottling.

The process is relatively simple.

The potatoes, already washed, arrive in 2,000-pound bags, Dowe said. Three to four bags are dumped into a 1,475-gallon kettle where the potatoes are boiled prior to the fermentation process. Later, the liquid goes through a 1,000-liter copper pot still and circulates three times through a 34.5-foot cone to reach a purity of 96.2 percent alcohol.

Water pumped from an aquifer fed by the Cold River is filtered and added to the alcohol. That, in turn, goes into bottles.

In between, there's the artistry that gives the vodka its nuances.

Last week, Dowe was still tweaking the taste profile while perfecting vodka's most elusive quality: smoothness. The latest version had a full body and pleasant warm sensation when swallowed, with just a hint of fragrance.

The final version should be in liquor stores in Maine and New Hampshire within a few weeks, Harkins said. By Dec. 1, Cold River Vodka will be in Massachusetts, as well. Maine Distilleries will focus on building its business in New England before looking to expand into select states, Harkins said.

Among spirits, vodka remains the nation's most popular, accounting for 26.7 percent of U.S. liquor consumption last year, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States. That's more than double the market share of second-place rum.

Among vodkas, the super premium segment — the Grey Gooses, Chopins, and Belvederes — grew a 38 percent last year, the council said. Maine Distilleries aspires to join that segment.
 
It's a shame our laws are so strict on distilling. I would love to make some whiskey. I just don't want to have to hide it from the law like my Grandfather did.
 
AVB said:
Among vodkas, the super premium segment — the Grey Gooses, Chopins, and Belvederes — grew a 38 percent last year, the council said. Maine Distilleries aspires to join that segment.
[snapback]239384[/snapback]​

Belvedere is a hard vodka to beat. ;)
 
KenK said:
It's a shame our laws are so strict on distilling. I would love to make some whiskey. I just don't want to have to hide it from the law like my Grandfather did.
[snapback]239488[/snapback]​

Yea...It's not as hard as it may seem to distill your own...just not too legal. In some areas it might be legal to distill a gallon at a time for use as a fuel but its been a while since I've been into that. There's a wealth of info all over the net on distilling and what not though. Gotta love good old fashion moonshine ;)
 
Guitar_Gatler said:
Gotta love good old fashion moonshine ;)
[snapback]239512[/snapback]​

I had a chance to try some TN moonshine from a fellow brother here... It's first taste weren't great, but there was hardly an after taste. Great stuff.. :thumbs:
 
I'm pretty certain you can distill limited amounts for your own use but not like the 20 gallons they allow for wine here in PA. Maybe 2 gallons but don't quote me on that. :whistling:

KenK said:
It's a shame our laws are so strict on distilling. I would love to make some whiskey. I just don't want to have to hide it from the law like my Grandfather did.
[snapback]239488[/snapback]​
 
KayakinBoy said:
Guitar_Gatler said:
Gotta love good old fashion moonshine ;)
[snapback]239512[/snapback]​

I had a chance to try some TN moonshine from a fellow brother here... It's first taste weren't great, but there was hardly an after taste. Great stuff.. :thumbs:
[snapback]239558[/snapback]​
awesome! I used to make it...I wasnt old enough to buy it legally so I just started makin it :p


Just found the old recipe's and stuff...makes me wanna start again.


Never tried potatoe mash though..was always one thing I wanted to try but was a little too expensive and time consuming.
 
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