Posted on 08/18/2017 3:07:47 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Distillers are fighting food waste and saving dough
Whats old is new again. Its a saying that applies perfectly for an idea by the owners of one of San Diegos newest distilleries. When we first came up with the idea, no one thought it was a good one, said Sam Chereskin, co-owner of Misadventure and Company. His idea was to take old bread products and use them to make vodka.
Once a week Chereskin takes a van to the Jacobs and Cushman San Diego food bank and picks up a load of more than a thousand pounds of bread products the food bank can no longer give away. Most of them are past their due date, but still useable.
We get twinkies, ho hos, French baguettes, crullers, you name it. The whole bakery aisle goes into our vodka, said co-owner Whitney Rigali. Essentially, all these baked goods have starches and sugars inside them, which are the building blocks to making any type of alcohol.
Rigali walked us through the process which includes combining all the bread products into what could be described as a giant, warm blender. It mashes the mixture up into what he describes a sweet porridge. From there, yeast is added to eat the sugar and create alcohol. At that point, what Rigali says is essentially a bread beer, is heated to extract the alcohol, which is eventually turned into vodka.
There are multiple reasons for doing it this way.
For one, the bread products they get from the food bank are free, which Chereskin and Rigali say allows them to make, and later sell the voda for less.
The other, more importan reason, is about a lot more than alcohol.
If food waste were a country, it would be the third largest contributor of greenhouse gases behind the United States and China, said Chereskin. In 2014, the amount of food wasted could fill the empire state building 90 some times.
According to the USDA, more than $16 billion worth of food is wasted in the U.S. every year. The National Resource Defense Council claims 40% of the food made in this country is never eaten.
If other companies catch on, using old bread products to make alcohol could be one way San Diego fights food waste because the distillery industry is growing in the county.
According to Californias Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, there are 17 licensed distilleries in San Diego County, compared to just two, five years ago.
Were piggybacking off the craft brewing scene, the boom, really, said Rigali.
For now, Misadventure and Company is pretty much alone in its process, and Sam Chereskin says he has multiple reasons to feel good about the work theyre doing.
I have a reason to get up in the morning that goes beyond having a drink, but I get to have that too. So, its a pretty fun day.
Hopefully it's ethanol, not "any type of alcohol."
For now, Misadventure and Company is pretty much alone in its process....
:::
So this company is alone in it is process - whatever that means.
:)
:( Hoping this was a DIY discovery.
“Most of them are past their due date, but still useable.”
And because of stupid regulations food that should be FOOD has to be converted into something else. Well...I wish these guys luck. I’m not sure I’d be inclined to try their product.
Hella good idea!
I SO love this idea!
I have an abundance of mule manure. Can that somehow be spun into gold? *SMIRK* Aside from compost, of course!
We grew a 5” wide, 1.4 POUND ‘Cherokee Purple’ tomato with that compost this season! ;)
LOL! Use a dollop in the still - then when sitting around the fire and sipping on it, while gazing at the stars, one can say, "This is some good $#.."
Jealous about the tomato(s) - down on the MS Gulf Coast, we have clay and sand that won't produce much of anything. Get a few miles north and it starts to change.
That’s a good idea! ;)
:) - In my younger years, I would have loved to have a plot of land like what you describe. Leads to a certain wholesomeness. As I get older, I’m thinking of moving from my 2-1/2 acres to something with “less upkeep”.
I hear you. :)
Get off my lawn!
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