Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Distillers drinking up stale beer

Kegs without customers seen as recipe for fine whiskey

- BRAD JAPHE

A stainless-steel tanker winds down a gravel road, its 18 wheels coming to rest in front of a bright-red barn. A beard-stubbled Vermonter in coveralls emerges from the structure and fits the rear of the truck with a thick hose. What flows out isn’t fuel or feed, but thousands of gallons of warm beer.

The scene has become something of a morning ritual over the past month at WhistlePig; the farmhouse distillery is receiving roughly 6,500 gallons of stale suds each day.

In the $29.3 billion craft beer industry, the nearoverni­ght collapse of on-thepremise­s consumptio­n has wreaked havoc on the supply chain, equating to hundreds of thousands of kegs log-jammed in distributi­on warehouses and going stale in brewhouses across the country.

In New England, at least, brewers now have an option, thanks to Jeff Kozak, WhistlePig’s chief executive officer.

“We are tentativel­y calling the project the ‘Great Beer Rescue,’” he said of the plan to distill the swill into high-end whiskey. “And we’ve already had significan­t interest from brewers and distributo­rs.”

Nearby brewers including Harpoon, Lawson’s, Long

Trail and Hill Farmstead, have already shipped beer to Kozak, free of cost. To them, it’s actually a bargain, saving them the per-gallon waste fees they’d incur from simply dumping it.

Equally vital is the valuable space it affords their facilities, where kegs can be supplanted by the cans and bottles necessary for a full pivot to offpremise sales and subscripti­on boxes, much as what’s happening with struggling restaurant­s and wineries.

ALCOHOL ALCHEMY

Kegged beer, particular­ly the highly hopped IPAs that

craft fans crave, can lose its identity within a few weeks. Even then, it remains fermented grain—the basic building block of whiskey.

So once it is shuttled in, distillery manager Emily Harrison can run the skunked liquid through towering copper stills, resurrecti­ng it as a 160-proof spirit suitable for oak aging.

“Our route to market has obviously been affected by covid, but unlike whiskey, beer never gets better with age,” Harrison said. ”It is the least we can do to help out our friends in the industry and ensure they can continue to brew the freshest beers possible.”

This tactic isn’t without precedent. For generation­s, farmers have turned to distillati­on as a way to repurpose crops that would otherwise spoil with the seasons. Much the way fresh fruit is shelved into preserves and jams,

grapes became brandy and grain became whiskey.

Now the health crisis is generating some camaraderi­e, as WhistlePig intends to eventually sell some of these spirits as limited-edition single barrels in conjunctio­n with the breweries that unintentio­nally birthed them.

“A few years down the road, it’ll be a way to commemorat­e this moment in time, when we came together to help each other out,” Kozak said. “As the liquid develops in the cask, we’ll work with each brewer on an aging strategy that best benefits their specific beer.” That could mean unique cooperage options and barrel finishes.

FINE-TUNING

It won’t be realized without meeting some challenges, however.

“There’s a difference between bottle-ready beer and just straight-up distiller’s beer,” Marko Karakasevi­c said of the process. He’s been crafting beer into whiskey for more than 20 years at Charbay Distillery

in Northern California.

“It’s a completely different animal with hops involved,” Karakasevi­c said. “You’ve got a lot more essential oils in solution. It’s just going to take whoever is doing it some time to fine-tune it and figure it out.”

There’s also carbon dioxide: If you don’t tease the CO2 out of the solution before distilling, a regrettabl­e side effect can blow up your still. For Karakasevi­c, it’s always been worth the risk:

“The more flavor you have in your beer,” he said, “the more flavor you end up with in your whiskey.”

Karakasevi­c has been hauling in beer from nearby Bear Republic Brewing Co., turning 6,200 gallons of Racer 5 IPA into 600 gallons of 140-proof distillate that he then ages for his R5 line of whiskeys.

“I buy the biggest keg I can find,” his company joke goes. “It comes with a driver and 18 wheels.” For the time being, however, he’s shifted all production to putting out hand sanitizer.

Back in Vermont, WhistlePig’s neighbor is doing the same. Kombucha brand Aqua ViTea pivoted its operation to accommodat­e keg decanting, distilling the emptied liquid into high-proof alcohol for commercial hand sanitizer.

Company founder Jeff Weaber estimates that there are millions of gallons to work with still scattered across the U.S. ”We could be dumping kegs 24 hours a day, seven days a week, for the next six to nine months,” he estimates, adding that a pallet of expired beer can yield about 11 gallons of virus killer.

Whether as raw alcohol or high-end whiskey, the cultish beers for which this region is renowned will continue to be coveted.

“We got into processing beer more as a favor for our brewing partners and then realized that there is probably enough stale beer to fill Lake Champlain,” Kozak said. “I guess we will just have to keep distilling until we get through it. We have the barrels, the warehouses, and the time.”

 ?? (Bloomberg News/Michael Short) ?? A worker at the Fort Point Beer Co. brewery in San Francisco pushes a pallet of beer that couldn’t be sold to restaurant­s or bars.
(Bloomberg News/Michael Short) A worker at the Fort Point Beer Co. brewery in San Francisco pushes a pallet of beer that couldn’t be sold to restaurant­s or bars.

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