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Dalton Distillery Shines a Light with Sunflower Crafted Spirits

The Dalton Distillery in Dalton, Georgia has launched what they say (and the TTB agrees) is the world’s first sunflower powered craft spirit.

02/08/2017

The distillery may not be solar powered but their small batch craft spirits sure are powered by the sun as in Sunflower. The Dalton Distillery in Dalton, Georgia has launched what they say (and the TTB agrees) is the world’s first sunflower powered craft spirit. It does have some corn in it but the majority of the spirit is sunflower with a mashbill of roughly 35% corn and 65% sunflower. Founder Chuck Butler said the TTB does not consider sunflower a grain so they required them to label their new product sunflower spirits instead of whiskey. In todays competitive craft spirits market that not so gentle push from the TTB could just prove to be a competitive advantage.

Chuck says that his Master Distiller, Raymond Butler who also happens to be his Dad has been using an old family moonshine recipe with small amounts of sunflower seeds for more than 100 years. He says his Dad’s family, “always added malted sunflower seeds to their moonshine. The whiskey market in the ’40s and ’50s was highly competitive, so they added sunflower seeds to give their ‘shine a distinctive taste.”

Warrior and Chief + Ray of Sunshine = TazaRay

The name of their new release is TazaRay Sunflower. The spirits name is a combination of the family’s Native American roots using the word Taza which translates into “warrior and chief” plus Ray for his Dad, Raymond. And of course Ray for a Ray of Sunshine.

TazaRay Sunflower uses no yeast during the distillation process. Instead, they use malted corn and sunflower seeds to start the fermentation process. Marketing Director and Partner Vann Brown says, “We use the oilseeds. The process involves naturally malting the seeds, sprouting them, and then drying them. After the seeds are dried down, we grind them and mix with unmalted seeds. This blending of the grains produces a clean, complex taste. Since there is no yeast in our products, they do not have that burn that is associated with traditional alcohol.” This also makes the product gluten-free, another point of differentiation from many craft spirits on the market today.

Read more at source Distillery Trail

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