Monday, July 2, 2012

Artisan craze helps drive boom in craft booze

Take a look inside the Woodinville Whiskey Co's distillery to see how bourbon whiskey is made.

By Allison Linn

WOODINVILLE, Wash. ? ?When Orlin Sorensen and Brett Carlile got the idea to start a whiskey distillery, the longtime friends freely admit they knew little?more about spirits than that they liked to drink them.

?We had no idea how to do it,? Carlile said.

Just a few years later, Woodinville Whiskey Co. is among the more prominent players in a surging craft distillery industry, which is drawing hundreds of hard liquor fans into the hands-on business of distilling vodka, whiskey and other spirits.

There are perhaps 250 craft distillers operating around the country right now, up from about 50 in 2005, according to a Michael Kinstlick, who runs Coppersea Distilling in New York state. He prepared an industry report for the American Distilling Institute, the craft industry?s trade group.

The explosion in interest has been fueled by more relaxed state laws, which have made it easier to set up distilleries, combined with the growing?interest in?hand-crafted, artisan?and locally made products.

?There?s been a major renaissance in America in wine, beer, food,? said Bill Owens, founder of the American Distilling Institute. ?Now it?s our turn.?

It also helps that Americans ? perhaps influenced by ?Sex and the City? and ?Mad Men? ? are increasingly favoring spirits over beer and wine. Spirits accounted for 34.1 percent of?alcoholic beverage revenue?in 2011, up from 28.7 percent in 2000, according to the Distilled Spirits Council, a lobbying group.

But while distilling spirits all day may sound like a dream come true, the reality is that it?s hard, physical work that takes a lot of money? to get started ? and may not?pay off for years.

At Woodinville Whiskey, located in?an industrial strip about 30 minutes outside?Seattle, the day often starts as early as 6 a.m. and can stretch?late into the night, especially if the founders?are hosting an all-volunteer bottling marathon.

Kyle Bruggeman / msnbc.com

Brett Carlile, co-owner of Woodinville Whiskey Co., fills a barrel with unaged whiskey.

One recent morning, Carlile was bounding up and down a set of movable stairs, checking on a huge vat of water and locally grown corn that he had just milled into a fine corn meal. Cooking the grain, called mashing, is the first step in the long process of making whiskey.

As the mill roared, he turned his attention briefly to a barrel that had just been filled with "white dog," whiskey that has not yet been aged. The barrel had sprung a small leak and the stopper, referred to as a bung, had broken apart.

As he worked to fix that, he kept his eye on a gas nozzle that was being used to fill yet another massive barrel. Later, he would use a forklift to hoist the barrels into the former computer repair shop next door that serves as their warehouse. The barrels will then sit for several years while the alcohol takes on the flavor from the wood it is stored in.

Carlile, 35, said he lost 30 pounds within months of starting the whiskey company, just from the physical activity of running the distillery.

?It?s a blue-collar job,? he said. ?I get sweaty every day.?

Carlile is a former construction materials salesman who quit his job to start this business. He and Sorensen went to high school and college together but?say they came up with the idea of starting a distillery separately. The coincidence was so powerful they felt it was meant to be.

Sorensen, also 35, is a former pilot who was laid off after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. He?started a web marketing business that he has?kept going on the side to pay the bills while Woodinville Whiskey grows.

To learn about the business, the pair turned to Dave Pickerell, who had been master distiller at Maker?s Mark for 14 years before starting a consultancy focused on craft distillers. Woodinville Whiskey was one of his first clients.

Pickerell, who is based in Louisville, Ky., now has clients coast to coast. He thinks the weak economy and high job losses have actually helped get some people into the industry.

?There were people who had a dream and were displaced and said, ?Why not?? he said.

The big challenge of starting a whiskey distillery is it requires a?big investment in?space and equipment, but it takes several?years before the whiskey is ready to be sold. That?s one reason why many craft distillers sell vodka or other clear spirits that don?t need time to sit in a barrel developing flavor.

Woodinville Whiskey has mitigated that business?problem by selling vodka and the unaged?white dog whiskey. They also aged some of their whiskey in small, pricier barrels so they could get a product on the shelf quicker. They started selling those this year.

The company had about $1.3 million in revenue last year and expects to see a 30 percent increase this year. But the big payoff won?t come until 2013 or?2014, when the big barrels of whiskey?filled?in 2010 are finally ready to be bottled and sold.

The waiting game can be stressful. Pickerell recalled a time when Sorensen and Carlile called him in a panic, certain some of the aging whiskey had been ruined. By the time he flew out there, the perceived problem seemed to have resolved itself.

?Every once in a while I?ve gotta talk ?em off a ledge,? he said.

Sorensen said they aim for a retail price of between $45 and $50 a bottle, on par with premium competitors. They recently had to lower their prices slightly to offset an increase in other fees from new Washington state laws allowing liquor to be sold at retailers rather than just state-run liquor stores.

To fund the business, the company has borrowed about $600,000 and plans to seek more financing. Sorensen, 36, said the company is?profitable, but for now the co-founders are pouring money back into the business rather than taking a paycheck themselves.

They have two full-time and four part-time employees. Once or twice a week, the company?hosts bottling events for?12 volunteers who help out?in exchange for T-shirts and pizza.

The products are still only sold mostly in the Seattle area, in line with the practice of most craft distillers, which start small and local. Woodinville Whiskey has?ambitious expansion plans, but Sorensen said the company will stay primarily?focused on their home state.

?We?re from Washington. The people who helped build our brand are from Washington,? Sorensen said.

Although the number of craft distillers is surging, experts say they represent far less than 1 percent of total spirits sales in the United States.

Still, the increase in small distillers has been enough to attract the interest of big industry players. The Distilled Spirits Council, which traditionally limited itself to big spirits companies, recently started accepting some small distillers as non-voting members. Many think it?s also only a matter of time before big companies start buying up some of the more promising craft distillers.

Meanwhile, more distillers are expected to open up shop. Owens, the president of the Craft Distilling Institute, runs twice-yearly courses in how to start a distillery. He says the classes, which cost $3,500, regularly fill up.

To Owens, the fact that it?s difficult to start a distillery and can take years to see a real payoff are among the industry?s attributes.

?You get rid of a whole bunch or class of people that are just into greed or money,? he said. ?We?re into people who have a love of the craft.?

Source: http://lifeinc.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/07/02/12483094-artisan-craze-helps-drive-boom-in-craft-booze?lite

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Developers ? Blog Archive ? Leave Behind Your Snoring Problems

by admin - July 1st, 2012.
Filed under: Health and Beauty.

It?s recommended that an adult sleeps for at least 7 to 8 hours each night to remain in great health. That said, it is important that the sleep is quality, peaceful sleep. That may be challenging to achieve in the event you or your partner snores. Keep reading for a variety of suggestions for placing a stop to snoring.

In case your snoring is making it difficult for your partner to fall asleep, you need to take action to remedy this scenario. Try to agree on a regular bedtime schedule for both of you. In the event you coordinate your sleep schedules so that you visit sleep about the same time, your partner might fall asleep shortly before or after you do and won?t be so disturbed by your snoring.

An adjustable bed is really a tool which can assist decrease snoring. An adjustable bed enables you to elevate your upper physique. This will relieve a few of the effects of weight and gravity on your airways. This is an perfect method to reduce snoring.

If you want to stop snoring, consider laying on your side to sleep. Sleeping in your back increases the odds that you will snore. It?s usually uncomfortable to sleep in your stomach, because it stresses the neck. Sleep in your side to help open up your breathing, which can reduce snoring. Discover out if prescription medication you take may be causing your snoring. Many prescription medicines can cause mucosal membranes to turn out to be dried-out, which then results in swelling and impeded airflow. Other people can make you feel sleepy and cause the throat muscles to unwind and not take in sufficient air.

You will find numerous methods to quit snoring. Apply the tips laid out right here, and you?ll begin sleeping better, which will improve your life. You do not wish to shed any more nights of good sleep to snoring.

Source: http://www.chicagoajaxdevelopers.com/health-and-beauty/leave-behind-your-snoring-problems/

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A 3-week show of prudent play

Admittedly, claiming a major tournament on a thoughtful platform of efficiency and ?prudent conservation? isn?t so sexy.

It?s certainly not as alluring or intoxicating as, say, creating history by mercilessly punishing a litany of hapless opposition, by winning through a series of lopsided results.

Spain may reign today, but everyone had hoped for more of that flashy 4-0 flourish along the way. We wanted to be treated to more of the Spanish hammer (as in Sunday?s Kiev kick-around) rather than seeing the champs chisel deliberately away with the precision tools.

But the manner in which Spain just made history really deserves proper recognition. Because the Spanish just stitched together a masterpiece ? never mind some unappreciative grumbling along the way about Spain making its case in underwhelming style.

But Vicente del Bosque didn?t bring Spain to Eastern Europe to wow and impress in first-round matches or in some early elimination contest. They came to make grand history, and such high ambition cannot be entrusted to breathless unrestraint.

We may have wanted to be entertained; but Spain simply wanted to win, coveting that unprecedented third major tournament title (Euro 2008, World Cup 2010, Euro 2012). So win they did, through patient self-regulation, through the tricky tenets of ?doing just enough.?

We talked for three weeks of Spain never achieving the best version of itself, about apparent contentment and the need for blessed discontent, about possibly lacking that final, telling pang of hunger.

But did we have it wrong all along? Was del Bosque (pictured) simply having his men play a little Spanish possum en route to Sunday?s final in Kiev?? We all wondered where the ?real? Spain might be hiding. In reality, they just didn?t need to be ?full Spain? very often.

source:  They wisely determined just how much of the full Spanish treatment three successful weeks in Poland and Ukraine would require. So they got a lead and then got smart time and again, dropping the energy output a smidge ? while the rest of us selfishly shouted ?Go, go, go! ? Why won?t they go??

All that passing, passing, passing ? the possession for possession?s sake that sometimes looked like Xavi, Andres Iniesta, Xabi Alonso and the rest were cruising down a highway but content to travel at a safer ?school zone speed.?

It made us wonder if Spain was vulnerable. In truth, we weren?t giving Spain sufficient credit for thinking this one through. ?Italian manager Cesare Prandelli took in ample praise for getting things right against Germany, and deservedly so. But what about that wily ol? del Bosque, a cunning Spanish fox who got it right in a bigger way.

Let?s not forget, this really is a grueling tournament. The teams Sunday in Kiev were playing their sixth match in 22 days. That?s one contest about every three and a half days ? and what a taxing, debilitating slog it is.

Early Sunday the ESPN announcers wondered why del Bosque?s men couldn?t look more like they did in extra time against Portugal, when they leaned in for further offensive push, pinning the Portuguese back with the extra run, the quicker pass, the earlier ball forward and the higher intensity, generally.

But again, perhaps we weren?t giving Spain enough credit for managing the energy level, for always keeping a restrictor plate on this classic car, for doing just enough and leaving plenty in reserve.

Don?t forget, this is a Spanish team that won a World Cup by scoring eight goals (Just eight, in seven matches!), another lesson in patient application of effort. So perhaps trophy acquisition at Euro 2012 by way of wise conservation shouldn?t have been surprising at all.

By the 60th minute Sunday, Italy looked exhausted. Yes, it was unfortunate the Azzurri had to finish with 10 men, but Prandelli?s unit would likely have been similarly pooped with 11.

The Italians, not quite good enough to hold something back and still steer through the elimination rounds, were spent.

Spain, one of the best teams of all time (there can be little argument now) could afford to pace the enterprise a bit. They did so expertly.

Source: http://prosoccertalk.nbcsports.com/2012/07/01/spain-just-delivered-a-three-week-lesson-in-prudent-patient-application-of-effort/related

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Sunday, July 1, 2012

Storms knock out power to 2M across eastern US

A passing storm brought a halt to rides Friday, June 29, 2012 at the 26th annual Italian-American Festival being held this weekend at the Stark County Fairgrounds in Canton, Ohio. A wave of violent storms sweeping through the mid-Atlantic following a day of record-setting heat in Washington, D.C., has knocked out power to nearly 2 million people. The storms converged Friday night on Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency after more than 500,000 customers in 27 counties were left without electricity. (AP Photo/The Repository, Bob Rossiter)

A passing storm brought a halt to rides Friday, June 29, 2012 at the 26th annual Italian-American Festival being held this weekend at the Stark County Fairgrounds in Canton, Ohio. A wave of violent storms sweeping through the mid-Atlantic following a day of record-setting heat in Washington, D.C., has knocked out power to nearly 2 million people. The storms converged Friday night on Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency after more than 500,000 customers in 27 counties were left without electricity. (AP Photo/The Repository, Bob Rossiter)

An OhioHealth billboard was mangled from Friday afternoon's severe storm, June 29, 2012. A wave of violent storms sweeping through the mid-Atlantic following a day of record-setting heat in Washington, D.C., has knocked out power to nearly 2 million people. The storms converged Friday night on Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency after more than 500,000 customers in 27 counties were left without electricity. (The Columbus Dispatch /Eamon Queeney)

Violent storms swept through the eastern part of the United States Friday night, killing a northern Virginia woman when a tree fell onto her home, damaging subway cars in Washington, D.C., and knocking out power to more than 2 million people in the middle of a heat wave.

The storms that converged on Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington, D.C., Indiana and Ohio packed winds topping 70 mph in some places, uprooting trees and damaging numerous homes. They came after a day of sweltering heat across the region.

The nation's capital reached 104 degrees just before 3 p.m., according to the National Weather Service, beating a record of 101 set in 1934.

Fairfax County police spokeswoman Mary Ann Jennings said the woman in the Springfield, Va., area was killed during the height of the storm. Authorities were at the scene of the home but weren't able to immediately get inside, she said.

Jennings said police also were responding elsewhere to reports of a park police officer injured when his car was hit by a tree and an 18-year-old man struck by a downed power line.

As of 1 a.m. Saturday, Pepco was reporting 406,000 outages in the District of Columbia and Montgomery and Prince George's counties, Md.

"We have more than half our system down," said Pepco spokeswoman Myra Oppel. "This is definitely going to be a multi-day outage."

West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency after more than 500,000 customers in 27 counties were left without electricity.

Several elderly residents from an Indianapolis apartment home were displaced when a tree fell onto a power line, knocking out electricity to the facility, the fire department said. More than 20 residents were taken by bus to a Red Cross facility to spend the night, and others who depend on oxygen assistance were given other accommodations.

In the Washington, D.C., area, Metrorail trains were returned to their endpoints due to the storms and related damage, officials said.

"It has had a widespread effect on the region," Metro spokesman Dan Stessel said early Saturday. He said about 17 train stations were operating on backup power due to local power outages, but that he didn't anticipate service being disrupted on Saturday.

In Ohio, the State Highway Patrol said three tractor trailers blew over on Interstate 75 near Findlay, but no one was injured.

___

Associated Press writer Norman Gomlak in Atlanta contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-06-30-Summer%20Storms/id-bb5aaf13b11841d899dbd82e91630779

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Are Colorado's wildfires caused by global warming?

The wildfires devastating?Colorado?have been linked to a streak of unusually hot weather, but they that does not necessarily mean that global warming is the culprit.?

By Stephanie Pappas,?LiveScience Senior Writer / June 28, 2012

The Waldo Canyon fire burns off the southern border of the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado in this Tuesday photo. Mandatory evacuations have been ordered for all housing residents of the academy as this fire continues to spread.

Mike Kaplan/US Air Force photo/Handout/Reuters

Enlarge

Devastating wildfires scorching the state of Colorado are linked to a nasty streak of hot weather across the central part of the country, but it's tougher to link them definitively to global warming, climatologists say.

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Earlier research has found broad trends linking earlier spring weather, rising temperatures and increased forest fires, suggesting that climate change may play a role in fires like the Waldo Canyon blaze outside of Colorado Springs, which has burned more than 18,000 acres and consumed about 300 homes here. But linking a specific fire to the long-term trend of global warming isn't possible.

"You can't say it's?climate change?just because it's an extreme condition," said Colorado state climatologist Nolan Doesken. So far, Doesken told LiveScience, the spring of 2012 looks much like the spring of 1910, when warm temperatures hit early. That year, he said, was a bad one for fires. [Images: Devastating Colorado Fires]

Fire weather

The Waldo Canyon fire began on June 23 and has ripped through neighborhoods west of Colorado Springs, destroying a yet-unreleased number of homes. Just 130 miles (209 kilometers) to the north, the High Park wildfire outside of Fort Collins is well into its second week and has burned more than 87,000 acres. That fire killed one 62-year-old woman who was caught in her home.

Other significant fires?in the state include a 300-acre blaze 1.5 miles (2.4 km) outside of Boulder, a 9,168-acre blaze near Mancos in the southwestern part of the state and a 23,400-acre wildfire in rugged terrain in the San Juan National Forest, also in the southwestern part of the state.

The immediate driver of these fires is a lack of moisture and a ridge of heat that has settled over the central United States, said New Jersey state climatologist Dave Robinson, who also directs the Global Snow Lab at Rutgers University. After record snowpack last year, the Rocky Mountains did a 180 this year, Robinson said, seeing little moisture and early snowmelt.

"March and April are supposed to be your snowy months [in Colorado], and they weren't," Robinson told LiveScience. "Thus, the fire danger."

Meanwhile, a high-pressure system in the central part of the country is preventing cloud formation and allowing the sun to bake the ground, heating things up. On Tuesday (June 26) alone, 251 daily?heat records were broken?across the nation, according to the National Climatic Data Center. In the past week, more than 1,000 new daily heat records were put on the books. [The World's Weirdest Weather]

Climate change connection

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/t2QRP4E3I30/Are-Colorado-s-wildfires-caused-by-global-warming

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Jefferson County Federal Credit Union

Date: Friday, June 29, 2012, 10:31am EDT - Last Modified: Friday, June 29, 2012, 10:35am EDT

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_10/~3/Bbfq_sumW64/jefferson-county-federal-credit-union.html

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Genealogy By Ginger's Blog: Genetic Genealogy ? Tapley DNA


I am taking the ProGen (Professional Genealogy) course and our first assignment was to craft a mission statement. I decided to focus on using genetic genealogy to take your family tree to the next level. With this in mind I have found my first guinnae pig ? I mean ?client? J My friend Keith decided to take the Family Finder autosomal test with ftDNA to learn more about his ancestry. His paper trail is like swiss cheese with lots of holes in it. Throw in some affairs and unwed mothers who gave their sons their surnames into the mix and you have a good candidate for DNA. We opted out of taking a Y-DNA test because he knew that his surname is not really his direct paternal line surname as it actually came from a female ancestor and not a male. We have an idea of what his direct line male surname might be, but would like to use the autosomal test to see if we can determine this before taking the Y-DNA test. Also, there are no working surname projects at this time to support either of these surnames. Although a Y-DNA test will provide you with a list of matches, it is more beneficial when there is a surname project to support and manage the results data of you and your matches for comparison and interpretation. I ordered Keith a Family Finder test from ftDNA. He collected the cheek swab samples and mailed them back to ftDNA. He received a kit number and a password for access to his account and home page. I put his account under both his name and my own so I will have access to his home page and be able to help him navigate through his matches and results. While we wait for his test to be analyzed, I have asked him to write down the last names of his parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, and 2nd great-grandparents. This is a good starting point for comparing surnames with his matches. Keith sent me some pedigree charts along with some notes he has made for his own files. He also sent me an Ahnentafel report that his cousin (I presume) made up for him. From all of these files combined, I was able to compile a list of surnames for the ancestors listed above. If you are doing this for someone else, make sure you are clear that you need the names of the biological parents of each ancestor, not the spouses? names. Here is a list of his surnames: I then logged into his account and added each surname one by one. This is an important step that many testers don?t bother to do leading to a lot of frustration from their matches. Now we wait until his results come back.
Photo of DNA kit from ftDNA website.

To Cite This Post:
Ginger R. Smith, "Genetic Genealogy - Tapley DNA," Genealogy By Ginger, 29 June 2012, (http://www.genealogybyginger.blogspot.com : accessed [date])

Source: http://genealogybyginger.blogspot.com/2012/06/genetic-genealogy-tapley-dna.html

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