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Greenbar Craft Distillery Infuses L.A.'s Spirits With a Modern Style

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  • Greenbar Craft Distillery Infuses L.A.'s Spirits With a Modern Style

    http://m.laweekly.com/squidink/2014/12/09/greenbar-collective-infuses-las-spirits-with-a-modern-style

    Greenbar Craft Distillery Infuses L.A.'s Spirits With a Modern Style

    Photo by Anne Fishbein
    December 9, 2014

    Litty Mathew and Melkon Khosrovian Three days a week, at 10:30 a.m.,
    Melkon Khosrovian, Litty Mathew and their entire production team at
    Greenbar Craft Distillery - Los Angeles' first distillery since
    Prohibition and creators of the largest line of organic spirits in the
    world - gather around a long, high-top table in the company's sleek
    downtown headquarters.

    On this particular day, shreds of dry ginger from a few potential
    vendors (along with a neutral spirit infused with each) are set up at
    one sampling station. Nine mason jars filled with hand-charred cubes
    of wood, each suspended in a brown liquid, form another. Three glasses
    of fermenting, partially infused and unfiltered versions of Greenbar's
    Crusoe Rum (spiced like an egg nog, not like Captain Morgan), Fruitlab
    Orange (made with 75 percent Valencia, 25 percent navel oranges) and
    TRU Lemon Vodka (flavored with 2,000 hand-zested lemons per batch) sit
    next to their previous-batch counterparts for comparison.

    "These are coming along nicely," Khosrovian says after sampling each
    one.

    Days-old fermenting grape juice, which tastes like a sweet white-wine
    spritzer, also gets passed around; eventually it will be distilled and
    infused into a spiced brandy that, because of California's liquor
    laws, will be sold in the tasting room in lieu of their molasses-based
    rum.

    The setup is not unlike one that might be seen in a tea manufacturer
    or perfumery, where dozens of herbs, spices and aromatic fruits and
    vegetables combine to create complex concoctions.

    The inconsistent nature of organic produce plus an obsessive
    commitment to flavor continually brings the crew here, to a room
    overlooking a dingy Industrial District street, where all the batches
    of booze currently under way are taste-tested and new projects are
    researched and developed.

    "These sessions help us all figure out what we're trying to
    achieve. And what we're trying to achieve is a product that you can
    take home and make a great drink out of," says Mathew, who started
    professionally infusing spirits with her husband, Khosrovian, 10 years
    ago this month. "We're actually working backward in the sense that we
    start at the bar and we're thinking, 'How can we make this daiquiri
    better?' or 'How can we make a drink more tasty?'=80=89"

    Photo by Anne Fishbein
    Inside the distillery

    If formulating product for a very specific cocktail sounds like a
    bizarre approach to crafting spirits, it is. While American
    small-batch distilleries today are having a major moment (rapid
    expansion in the once-stagnant industry has brought the number from
    fewer than 60 just 10 years ago to more than 600 today), most of these
    new operations are going back to stand-alone basics: good
    old-fashioned moonshines, 18th-century bourbons and traditional dry
    gins meant to be consumed spirit-first or, at the very least, plugged
    into a classic spirit-forward recipe that has survived generations
    without much alteration.

    In an era when most distillers and mixologists are intently focused on
    re-creating and showcasing the booze of our pre-Prohibition
    forefathers, Greenbar has for the last decade been doing exactly the
    opposite.

    =46rom vodkas infused with celery, dill, fennel and other savory
    ingredients, to liqueurs fermented with white wine yeast and then
    infused with plants found on a hike through Griffith Park, to a
    whiskey aged on five more kinds of wood than any other whiskey that's
    ever been made before, Greenbar not only represents the inevitable
    post-modern response to the spirit industry's throwback obsession -
    it's pioneered it.

    "Bartenders, as a whole, are trained classically. We're like
    ballerinas. There's one way to do it and that's it," says Lauren
    Reyes, bar manager at Mohawk Bend in Echo Park. Her bar stocks most of
    Greenbar's 28 products and, because it doesn't carry any spirit that
    isn't made in California, about half of Mohawk Bend's seasonal
    cocktail menu ends up being made with Greenbar products.

    "It goes back to Prohibition-era cocktails where you are familiar with
    all the ingredients and if you don't have one of them, then you get
    confused," Reyes says. "But we have to be more open-minded here, and
    you have to let yourself be free. If you stick by the rules all the
    time, you're never going to have any fun."

    When Khosrovian and Mathew first began selling their artisanal sipping
    vodkas out of a Monrovia office park in 2004, Greenbar was (perhaps
    more appropriately) called Modern Spirits. The original line was an
    outgrowth of Mathew's dislike of her husband's Armenian-family hooch.

    At Khosrovian family gatherings, glasses of fruit brandies, vodka or
    mulberry wine would get passed around for toasting, and Mathew - who
    is of Indian descent but was born in Ethiopia and partially raised in
    Jamaica before moving to the Inland Empire - cringed at the thought of
    drinking it straight.

    By watching how Mathew cooked at home (she is a Cordon Bleu-trained
    chef and food writer), Khosrovian began infusing store-bought vodka
    with layers of ingredients they bought on their weekly trips to the
    Hollywood Farmers Market, creating flavors such as
    pear-lavender-vanilla and kumquat-blackberry. He slapped a nice label
    on it so his family would think he brought something fancy to
    drink. When Khosrovian's cousins started taking bottles home from the
    family dinners and their cousin's friends began calling asking how to
    get more, the couple knew they were onto something.

    "We either had to get our phone number unlisted or go into business,"
    Mathew says. "Luckily, we chose the latter."


    At first, they purchased predistilled neutral spirits and infused them
    with local, hand-processed produce. But with the vodka market flooded
    by cheap, chemically flavored raspberry, vanilla and cotton-candy
    versions from big-name brands, bars didn't want to invest in high-end
    versions of a partially disdained product, and consumers weren't
    interested in the multiple layers and subtle complexities of Modern
    Spirits' chocolate-orange-peppercorn and grapefruit-honey vodkas. For
    the first four years in business, the products were a hard sell.

    In 2008, one of Khosrovian and Mathew's produce suppliers switched to
    an organic farm, and the subsequent batches carried a distinct
    increase in flavor intensity. After consulting with a viticulturist
    who confirmed that pesticide-free produce creates more flavor and
    aroma as a natural defense mechanism, the company launched its line of
    TRU organic vodkas and never looked back.

    Over the next few years, the couple began infusing rum and gin and
    added a series of liqueurs and bitters. Going organic also gave them a
    heightened sense of environmental responsibility, which manifested in
    Earth-friendly packaging and a pledge to plant one tree for every
    bottle purchased (nearly 400,000 to date).

    By the time they moved into their current 14,000-square-foot warehouse
    in 2012 and decided to begin distilling their own base spirits there,
    the original line of Modern Spirits was retired, making Greenbar Craft
    Distillery not just an all-organic spirits manufacturer whose products
    are carbon-negative but also the only distillery of any kind in
    Greater Los Angeles.

    Read more: Greenbar, L.A.'s First Distillery Since Prohibition, Opens
    Tasting Room (VIDEO)

    "We used to buy the distillate because we didn't have room before, but
    we've always wanted to make it vertically integrated," Khosrovian says
    of their current still setup. Because many of their distillates
    require precise treatment to create a final product, Greenbar has a
    traditional copper pot still as well as a higher-tech continuous
    column still. "We love to have control from the bottom all the way
    up," he says.

    "We're just so flavor-driven here," Mathew adds. "Everything we do is
    about capturing the most we can out of real things. We still do so
    much by hand in a way that big companies aren't capable of."

    Back in the conference room, the morning's tasting session is coming
    to a close. The final sample is of Greenbar's Grand Poppy, an
    unclassifiable liqueur and one of Greenbar's newer products, whose
    closest cousin might be a European aperitif or an Italian amaro with a
    local flair. It's most creative home is in a cocktail called the
    Griffith, which won a recent cocktail competition for the title of
    L.A.'s Signature Cocktail. Bitter, then sweet, and potent in aroma and
    taste, the liqueur is made with 16 ingredients native to the state,
    mostly herbs, roots and plants from Griffith Park that a purist might
    say have no place in a spirit.

    But Khosrovian and Mathew don't concern themselves too much with the
    naysayers. They prefer to work with adventurous bartenders like Reyes,
    who understand that not everything has to reflect the so-called
    "Golden Era" of cocktails. In Los Angeles, with its
    international-fusion landscape a longtime destination for people from
    all around the world, it only makes sense that the city's largest
    distillery is finding ways to create entirely new drinking experiences
    instead of copying the old-world ways.

    "It's so California, isn't it?" Mathew says with a smile.

    See also: More photos from Greenbar

    Greenbar Distillery is open for tours with an RSVP. In celebration of
    the company's 10th anniversary, now through the end of the year, $1
    from every Griffith cocktail sold in the city will be donated to a
    fund that helps maintain Griffith Park. 2459 E. Eighth St., Los
    Angeles, (213) 375-3668, greenbar.biz.


    From: Baghdasarian
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