A few weeks ago, we went to the fledgling Seven Stills distillery in San Francisco. This week, we decided to visit the Bay Area’s independent granddaddy distillery, St. George’s.
Started originally as an eau de vie (brandy) distillery in 1982, St. Georges expanded into vodka, gin, whisky, bourbon, absinthe, and of just two weeks ago, they also released their first amaro style apertivo: Bruto Americano. The team, led by master distiller Lance Winters (formerly a nuclear scientist!), are creative mad scientists of alcohol. They’ve reportedly experimented with everything from oyster, goose liver, wasabi, Dungeness crab, and seaweed as flavors – although paradoxically none of these flavors seem to make it out of R&D phase.
What does make it out of R&D to commercial production are smooth, consistent, full-flavored spirits.
St. George’s does one of the best damn distillery tours out there. They’ve almost built what seems like a cultish devotion among their employees. The tour guides are uncannily peppy, animated, passionate, and knowledgeable about alcohol, and the tour almost takes on the character of a Willy Wonka Chocolate Factory vibe.
The tour is a 45 minute trip through the cavernous distilling room, which was converted from a naval airport hangar. Badass, towering Arnold Holdstein stills, each named after a transformer (Megatron, Ultima, Bumblebee, and Starscream), loom on elevated stages around the room.
The tour itself is highly educational and facts of substance are thrown at the crowd rapid-fire. But first, the propaganda! The goal of St. George, you are told, is to capture the “essence” of various ingredients: a pear liquor should taste as if you were biting into the flesh and skin of a ripe pear. Only better because alcohol. The result is that each single bottle contains 30 pounds of ripe Barlett pears. Afterward, we were given information on everything from the reasons for the shape of the stills to St. George’s preference for single distillation (as the tour guide expressed utter, scandalized contempt for the shoddy distillers that perform 8+ distillations) to even the economics of how they dilute their alcohol (anything above 50% is taxed differently than lower ABV alcohol).
The tour always closes at the absinthe table. St. George’s absinthe took a more than a decade to make, and is clearly the team’s pride and joy. St. Georges was, after all, the first American distillery to commercialize the spirit since its 1912 ban. Master distiller Winters clandestinely led the experiment, first beginning with a Scientific American article and then branching out from there. To stay legal, the development was labeled “R&D” rather than “consumption”… although we were assured that the 11 years of R&D involved a fair amount of consumption. When the ban on absinthe was finally lifted in 2007, St. George’s – and all of its “R&D” – was ready.
Tasting at St. George provides 6 quarter-ounce pours of your choice of alcohol. Bring a partner, and the 12 pours allow you to taste the all but one. Unless your partner is an asshole.
The tastings offer a wide range of alcohol, but unfortunately, on this visit, no barrel-aged St. George spirits were available for sampling. The menu tasting menu is still excellent. We tried:
We didn’t try the absinthe – because we knew we were going to buy it anyway. Bottle Purchased.
About $200 later (the tour and tasting itself is rather cheap at $20), we walked out with this haul:
I've experimented with infusing a few spirits, but I find it plays incredibly well with…
A few years back we visited Boston's Eastern Standard bar and wrote about our experience.…
Coffee liqueuer, Amaro Nonino, sweet vermouth, aged aquavit, and cognac
Sylvia received a handful of samples when she visited Big Market, an incredible whisky shop…
The Sovereign is a sub-brand of the venerable Hunter Liang. I think they originally set…
the highlight of the last Negroni Week was Wildhawk's Breakfast Negroni cocktail. The star ingredient…
This website uses cookies.