TEXAS WHISKEY MAKERS
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Jared Himstedt, Balcones head distiller, whetted his appetite for distilling first as a home brewer and a manager of Dancing Bear pub, a craft beer bar here in Waco, Texas. He is the creative force, product developer, and head blender at the distillery, overseeing everything from label design to barrel selection since Balcones’s inception in 2008. Being involved in an industry steeped in both rich tradition and explorative innovation is part of what keeps Jared committed to the creation of fine whiskies—that, and “getting to work alongside some wonderful, thoughtful, diligent, and creative people.” When he can get away from the distillery, Jared can be found spending time outside with family, friends, good music, and good drinks, particularly the #1 Texas Single Malt, which is still an enduring favorite here
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Heather Greene, CEO of Milam and Greene Whiskies, is a world-leading spirits expert, one of American media’s favorite “go-to” thinkers on the topic of spirits, and the author of Whiskey Distilled, A Populist Guide to the Water of Life on Viking Studio, an imprint of Random House Penguin. She was The Director of Whiskey Education and sommelier at The Flatiron Room in Manhattan from 2012-2014 where her classes sold out regularly. She was the first American Woman to Serve on the Scotch Malt Whisky Society in Edinburgh. By 2019, she was inducted into Kentucky's esteemed Order of the Writ as a keeper of Bourbon Whiskey, and as someone who upholds honesty and authenticity in the industry. She serves as a judge on many panels, including the IWSC in London the San Francisco Wine and Spirits Competition, and the American Craft Spirits Association. Her biggest passion today is running Provision Spirits, developing their whiskey program, and building the business nationally.
Her written work has appeared in Eater, CNBC, Town and Country, and Daily Beast and she has appeared nationally on media outlets such as CBS This Morning, Bloomberg News, Fox, The Food Network, and MSNBC.
Most of all, she is a passionate speaker and leader as as one of the leading woman pioneers in America's great spirit renaissance, as featured in Fred Minnick's book, "Whiskey Women: The Untold Story of how Women Saved Bourbon, Scotch and Irish Whiskey. "
When she is not drinking, she's photographing the world around her and playing with her dog, Franklin.
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Born in El Paso and raised in West Texas, Jonathan is a passionate Texan. From an early age his parents, John and Marcia, instilled the importance of hard work and doing things the right way. Jonathan puts his engineering degrees to work every day as head of the distilling and maturation operations.
He has a beautiful wife named Jessica, two spirited children named Danica and Grainger, and a small menagerie of pets. Jonathan studied Industrial Engineering at Texas Tech in Lubbock, and Biomedical Engineering at St. Louis University in St. Louis.
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More information coming soon.
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She was born in Corpus Christi, Texas, and comes from a family of female medical professionals … a career route she set out on. She attended Del Mar College in Corpus Christi and received her Associates Degree in Respiratory Therapy.
Then, as she explained, her plan did not go as expected.
In 2012, Olvera was managing a bar in Hye, Texas, just down the road from Garrison Brothers Distillery. The distillers would frequent her bar on their off-time and shared with her stories of their days and work. Her interest was piqued. When a job opened at the distillery, she said she knew it was an opportunity she had to take, even though she didn’t know the first thing about how to make bourbon.
Olvera learned from Garrison Brothers’ Master Distiller Donnis Todd, starting as a mash cooker where she perfected the art of making Garrison Brothers’ mash, a year-long process.
She then spent a year shadowing each distiller, followed by an additional six-month training program with the master distiller. By the end of her training, she was able to determine by smelling, feeling, and looking at the raw distillate what part of the run she was on.
Today, Olvera is a Distiller and the Mash House Boss at Garrison Brothers. She’ll soon celebrate her 10-year anniversary at the Distillery. She helps train the newest members at the distillery, a distilling team that now numbers 14 people and distills 24 hours a day to keep up with demand.
In 2023, Sam Olvera was recognized as Best Woman Distiller 2023 by the International Women’s Spirits Competition.
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Jacob Peraza has always had a love of beer and spirits, but became interested in crafting his own while in college at University of Texas at Dallas. Through his family's southern California roots, he developed a taste for hop-forward west coast IPA's, and with a limited craft beer scene at that time, was struggling to find them in the Texas market. Because of this and an interest in the brewing process, he started homebrewing, and before long, enrolled in the Journeyman Brewer's Certification program at Eastfield College. In 2016, he graduated with a degree in Neuroscience from UT Dallas, as well as receiving his brewer's certification. What had started as a love of unique beer and spirits quickly became a love of CRAFTING small batch beer, and before long, spirits.
Jacob was introduced to craft distilling on a visit to BENDT, at the time named Witherspoon Distillery. He saw a great opportunity to become part of a hometown company with a vision for growth, community engagement, and a mission to create high quality, hyper local products. Now seven years into his journey as a distiller, his favorite things about his career choice are the friendships among the distillery team, the consumers, vendors, retailers, and the kindred spirits he encounters with fellow whiskey makers. He's enjoyed being a part of the growth and now leads a full production team, producing ten times the whiskey today compared to what was being made when he started his journey.
When asked where he sees himself in five or ten years, the answer is always the same. "I'll be right here making whiskey." Jacob and his wife, Amanda, reside locally in north Texas and enjoy camping and being outdoors with their fur kids, Titus and Zoey.
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More information coming soon.
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When Donnis Todd was eight years old, he stood on a stage at his elementary school in Marblehead, Ohio, as his classmates announced to a packed auditorium of doting parents what they wanted to be when they grew up. “I want to be a police officer,” one of his classmates declared. Another said he wanted to be a fireman and the one after that said she wanted to be an astronaut. Todd was nervous. He had a dilemma. Should he lie and, like his classmates, pick a more conventional profession—or reveal what he really wanted to do with his life? When it was his turn to speak, he cleared his throat and bravely announced, “I’m Donnis Todd and when I grow up I want to make corn whiskey like my grandpa.”
Consider it destiny or just a lucky coincidence, but today Donnis Todd is a grown-up who happens to make corn whiskey. And not just any ol’ whiskey. He’s the master distiller at lauded Garrison Brothers Distillery in Hye, Texas, a family-owned and operated company. The brand was given the first distillers’ permit in America outside of Kentucky and Tennessee, making it the oldest legal bourbon distillery in Texas.“I wanted to be a distiller because of the stories that my grandfather told,” says Todd, who learned how to make whiskey from his grandfather during junior and senior high school. “I would egg him on to repeat his stories if there were new people around. I fell in love with the stories he told about distilling, even though I knew they would become increasingly fabricated—stories about how he supposedly invented the harvester combine he used, and so on.”
Todd’s path to making great Texas bourbon involved a lot of twists and turns. He joined the Air Force in 1998 and ended up stationed for a couple of years in Japan and South Korea. But that didn’t shake his lifelong desire to be a distiller. During his free time, he’d show up at local distilleries, hoping he could learn how to be a better distiller. “There’s a universal language there, so when I was in Japan and Korea, I began learning more about the distilling process by simply hanging out there. They would say ‘there’s that American guy who won’t go away,’” Todd says. He ended up learning a ton. “The distilleries had over a hundred years of fermentation logs and were very detailed in their documentation of every batch,” he says. “It was a powerful tool to look back at and I applied this same method here at Garrison Brothers. So now we have 14 years of fermentation logs; basically every batch is documented.”
As for how Todd got to Texas, chalk it up to the legendary Texan pride. “Everywhere I went in the world, it was always the Texans who’d be waving their state flag around,” he says. “You never see people from Ohio or Iowa waving their state flag. That’s when I knew I wanted to be on their team.”
So in 2007, when he noticed a company called Lone Star LLC had applied for a distillers license, he traveled down to Hye, Texas, and ingratiated himself with the owner, Dan Garrison. “I went up to him and said, ‘Hey Dan, I’m Donnis Todd and I’m going to make your bourbon for you.’ He said he didn’t have any money to hire a distiller at the moment and I said, ‘You’re a smart guy. You’ll figure it out.’” Garrison finally did figure it out. A few months later Todd was back as Garrison Brothers’ official master distiller. “I like to think he finally wised up and gave me a job,” laughs Todd.
And how did Todd put a taste of Texas in Garrison Brothers’ bourbon? The deep and complex flavor, with butterscotch, vanilla and oak notes, is Lone Star to the core. “Texas definitely influences the flavor of our whiskey,” he says. “It’s hot here. And we have huge weather swings. People think it’s 100 degrees every day and that’s just not true. I think that plays a part in the production of bourbon. Our grains—the corn, wheat, and barley—are local to us and everything is grown here in Texas.”
But it’s not just the Texas climate and landscape, his grandfather’s distilling guidance, and the knowhow he picked up in Japan and Korea that inform Todd’s distilling philosophy. There’s a touch of his Midwestern kindness and Texas’ famous proclivity for courtesy and respect too. Case in point: Todd personally knows the farmers who make Garrison Brothers’ grains. “I know the sacrifices they’ve made. I even know their dogs’ names. And because of that I’m going to be extra careful and sincere with their product.”
And let’s not forget about American pride. “When I was a kid, I read one line about bourbon that sold me on it forever,” says Todd. “That line is: ‘the distinct product of the United States of America.’ When I first heard that, I thought, what a powerful statement. My dad served in the military. My brother was a Marine. My brother-in-law was in the Army. We are a proud American family. I want to make a distinct product of the United States of America.”
Now, just like his grandfather, Donnis Todd is the one telling all the great stories.
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With a Bachelor of Computer Science and Systems Engineering and a 6 Sigma Green Belt, Julian brings 13 years of food manufacturing, production, and development experience to the distillery.
He joined the organization in 2007 and has been part of several development projects including the startup of the distillery and also overseeing the coffee side operation.
He was mentored by David Pickerell (Maker’s Mark® and Whistle Pig® former Master Distiller) and Troy Smith (Yellow Rose® former Master Distiller), and during this learning experience he quickly dived in and picked up the insights of the fermentation and distillation universe due to his passion and enthusiasm for wine and spirits. Julian makes sure each step is done in the most efficient way following the highest quality standards.
When Julian is not at the distillery, he can be found enjoying outdoor activities like camping, mountain biking, stunt kite flying, or traveling around the world visiting wineries and other distilleries with his family.
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More information coming soon.
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My distilling journey started in the summer of 1990. I owned a small 30-acre farm in central Kentucky and during this time period, aquaculture was become a thing to take the place of farmers raising tobacco. Now, I wasn't a tobacco farmer, but I loved to fish and loved a good fried catfish meal. I went to my local county extension agent to gather information. He told me during our chat that a guy at the local Boston Jim Beam distillery was experimenting with using dried grain or distillers' grain as fish food. Distiller grain was already being used as livestock food, so why not catfish food? Now the guy heading up the experiment at the Jim Beam distillery was Booker Noe. A few days later I met with Booker. It was the first time to met him. We ate lunch and chatted for about an hour, mainly talking about fishing as Booker loved to fish as well. Before we parted ways that day he asked if I would help out with his experiment. He needed someone to come in daily and feed the catfish, I agreed to do so. I was the fish feeder for that summer. Booker had purchased 1,000 catfish fingerings and had the maintenance crew at the distillery build a cage to hold them. The cage was dropped in one of the chill water spray ponds right behind the distillery building.
I had never been inside a bourbon distillery, so I was very curious. First of all, there were very few people around. On some trips down I would only see the security guard at the front gate. It amazed me that so few people could run an operation of that size. 50,000 gal. beer well, 10,000 gal. whiskey tank, big grain silos, rooms filled with fermenting tanks... it was pretty cool. On occasion, there would be one of the employees out back behind the maintenance shop with the grill cooking ribs, burgers, steak... I'm thinking about where you can work and pull a grill out to cook like this.
Over time I met several of the employees. It seems like a very close-knit group in a pretty casual laid-back environment. As the summer drew to an end, one of the guys mentioned that they were hiring. The whiskey business had been in decline for several years but was starting to pick up again. Booker was to play a big part in this resurgence with the creation of The Small Batch Bourbons; Bookers, Bakers, Knob Creek and Basil Hayden.
I applied for the opening they were hiring for. My first day on the job at the Booker Noe Distillery was November 11, 1990.
I spent 27 years in various positions but mainly in the distillery operating the column stills.
It quickly became a love, not a job!
I left Beam in April 2018 after meeting Marsha Milam, founder of Milam and Greene Whiskey. Marsha was in need of a distiller and I had often wondered my last few years at Beam how neat it would be to help build a brand with a craft distillery. Marsha is a serious whiskey lover who wanted to create a premium whiskey brand. She told me " We don't settle for ok, we want to be the best"! I was hooked!
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Emma Crandall is a Balcones Blender for Diageo and a Level Four Whiskey Sommelier. With experience in distillery management, distilling, blending, bartending, and leading educational whiskey tastings, her favorite aspect of working in the industry so far has been blending Balcones Distilling American Single Malts, such as Texas ‘1’, Lineage, and Mirador.
Blending is a creative process, and whiskey is about stories and people. Those two forces drive her passion for her career and the industry and her purpose to create compelling and beautiful whiskies.