Saturday, April 27, 2013

Meet Your Makers: Liber & Co.




What began as three friends making drinks together after class in college has led to quite the career for Texas natives Adam, Chris, and Robert. Since founding Liber & Co. in 2011, these guys have been introducing their customer base to fantastic syrups and fruit shrubs (preserving fruit with vinegar) to be used in cocktails like the classic Gin and Tonic. Provenance staffer Nathan was lucky enough to catch up with these busy guys to find out a little more about this Austin-based company.

It goes without saying all of us at Provenance appreciate a cocktail, especially one that is made well using the best possible ingredients. Carrying small-batch artisan quality products such as yours lets us introduce to our customers ways to greatly improve their cocktails at home. Through your deep respect of cocktail history and tradition, what do you most hope to accomplish with your range of syrups and shrubs?

Our goals are very much in line with yours—we started out wanting to elevate the home bar. There has been an obvious resurgence in cocktail bars, and an interest in the rich history of the craft. We started as interested consumers before conceptualizing Liber & Co. Secondly, although the upper echelon of cocktail bars are capable of making some variation of these classic house ingredients that we’re offering, our goal in taking our products to market was to bring that level of quality to consumers who might be interested but otherwise underexposed. Additionally, as befitting a modern food manufacturer, our production methods afford our products a quality and consistency that cocktails bars rarely achieve.

With the three of you working together to create complex and high quality cocktail ingredients, there must be some history of bartending involved. Is that something you've all had a hand in at some point or was there some other way in which you got to experimenting and innovating tonic or fruit shrubs?

Our background with cocktails actually has culinary roots. In college, the three of us solidified an appreciation for fresh cocktails courtesy of our ill-weeded yet productive garden. In the afternoons when classes were finished, we’d often go home and muddle up springs of fresh mint for mojitos and typically fire up the grill. Basil and jalapeno smashes were had long before we knew what a “smash” cocktail actually was. This was when we learned how fresh ingredients can really transform a drink, and this is why we begin with raw, fresh ingredients for our products now. Once we all fell down the rabbit hole of cocktail history and geekery, it wasn’t long before we paired drinks with our collective entrepreneurial spirit and began Liber & Co.

Several of us on staff at Provenance have backgrounds in bartending, serving, catering and so on which eventually brought us to where we are today working with food and wine at the shop. Prior to founding Liber & Co. were the intricate botanicals and spices something any of you were working with or had previous exposure to?

No not really. Chris’s background is in biology, Adam’s is economics and Robert is political science. The turn toward drinks was more a labor of love than a derivative of any prior career track. Although, we’re all avid home cooks and barmen, none of us have had professional bar or restaurant experience. When crafting recipes, our first source of information is history. So we will research, for example, where shrubs originated and how they were made. From there it’s about trusting our palates.

On a crazy hot day it doesn't get much better than a gin and tonic. Using the best quality spirit and right ingredients can spark an inspiring lifetime love affair with this classic cocktail. Was there a “spark” moment that made you realize this was the industry and career path you wanted to head down?

There wasn’t really an “A-ha” moment, no. At the time we started, we were all living separately in either Austin, D.C. or Lawrence, KS. In addition to physical separation, our lack of beverage industry expertise suggested that we ought to test the waters before diving in head first. With floaties donned, we gently waded into the shallow end with just a small business credit card.

You’ve given the official Liber & Co. endorsement on what you've dubbed “a global cocktail revival” that is going on around the world. This return to traditional recipes and an ever expanding appreciation for artfully made craft cocktails has clearly inspired you to create the products that you do. What else comes as an inspiration to Liber & Co.?

Much of our inspiration comes from a deep appreciation for general craftsmanship, as both of our fathers are carpenters. We learned early on that if you make things honestly and with high effort, your product will have both a story and a quality you can be proud of.

Out of deep respect for their product, many of our other vendors at Provenance believe it requires much time and patience to develop and perfect their offerings. Would you say this is an outlook you share at Liber & Co.? Does this play a role in how quickly or steadily your business has been expanding?

Certainly. We don't wildly expand our product line because each new ingredient has a unique character and it takes time to make sure everything comes together in a stable, balanced way. Especially considering there are only three of us involved, we are pretty patient in developing new products. To your point, this patience probably has kept us from growing and expanding as quickly as we might otherwise be able to, but honestly we don't think too much about that. We really believe that as long as we're consistently offering high quality, flavorful products, there will continue to be a market for them.

We absolutely love your fruit shrub. When we have customers come into Provenance that have never tried, let alone heard of one before, we love being able to explain to them you’re making a product that follows age old traditions of preserving fruit for later. This respect for old-fashioned methods of food preservation is a huge benefit of using your products. What other benefits do you feel you offer to your customers?

There are definitely benefits to sticking with these heritage production techniques. Ask anyone's grandma-- things were better back then. While we all want to acquire things as cheaply and conveniently as possible, the compromise in quality that comes with the mass production and commercialization of any good reaches a point where it's just not worth it. I think that's why we're witnessing this pendulum swing back toward craftsmanship and artisanal production methods-- increasingly, the general public is realizing that there are huge benefits to seeking out those products that are made with care and attention.

Aside from enjoying your products in a cocktail at the end of the work day, what would you say is your favorite part of the job?
We get to meet some really great industry folks as well. Coincidentally, Chris toured Koval's distillery a year ago and that connection resulted in a Koval & Liber cocktail for Chicago's Green City Market Chef BBQ this past July. The emergence of this new "sub-industry" of small-batch distillers, breweries, mixers and the like, has brought about so many opportunities for us to make new relationships with people who understand what we're doing, because they're largely doing the same thing!

And aside from having to endure the occasional shot of grapefruit juice to the eye, what would you say is your least favorite part of the job?

Early on, with such limited collective experience, the biggest hurdle was simply navigating the pitfalls of a commercial kitchen. Becoming familiar with how, specifically, our process would be carried out with new equipment and an entirely new space took several batches. This resulted in multiple all-nighters in the kitchen (many of which bled over into the wee hours of the morning). Since then, our biggest challenge has been scaling our production. While it’s a good problem to have, to have to figure out how to make more of your product, we committed a long time ago to keeping as many of our processes as possible in-house. That said, this presents challenges at each every step of growth.

Finally, what are some favorite stand-out moments you've experienced over the years that contributed to the success of your tonic and shrubs? Or simply any great stories you’d care to share with our customers that left lasting impressions on you and your company. (A runaway grapefruit cart perhaps? )

We've had our fair share of snafus along the way to where we are now. One memorable episode quite early on in Liber & Co.'s development involved an ill-conceived attempt at sterilizing our glass bottles. Our first couple of batches were actually made in a commercial kitchen at a hotel in Lawrence, KS. They had this amazing 40 gallon steam tilt-kettle (as a side note, neither of the three of us ever imagined we would speak of commercial kitchen equipment so covetously) that was particularly well-suited for our purposes. At some point during the planning phase of that particular batch we arrived at the consensus conclusion that, rather than sanitize each bottle individually, we should simply boil all of the bottles in the kettle-- that way they'd all be sanitized at once and ready for filling after the batch was completed...right? Wrong. Disaster obviously ensued, as the heat made the bottles especially fragile. To make a long story short, we wound up wasting a comical amount of time fishing a couple hundred sunken glass bottles (several of which had shattered) off the bottom of a scalding-hot 40 gallon kettle. Thankfully our process has improved drastically since!

Saturday, April 20, 2013

April Staff Selection: Sour Puss Pickles 10% off all month!




April Staff Selection by Nathan Sohnly: Sour Puss Pickles

"Nobody likes a sour puss, Nathan."

As a kid I hated hearing this phrase, because it usually meant it was dinner time, and my mother was scolding me for pouting over the steamed lima beans or broccoli on my plate. (Seriously, what was the woman thinking with those beans!?)

With that in mind, I'm here this month to say that in fact, everybody likes a sour puss...a Sour Puss Pickle, that is.

From Brooklyn, NY, the Sour Puss line was created on basic principles of food preservation and home canning by pickling/brining sustainably-grown produce in locally-sourced vinegars. Founded by duo extraordinaires Chris and Evelyn, who have been selling their products at farmers markets and small-batch grocers for years, it doesn't get more craft than this!

Garden staples such as cucumbers, carrots, and cauliflower are given VIP treatment; the end result? Pickles so good you'll want to find new and creative ways to incorporate them into your meals. Making carrot-ginger soup? Try throwing a couple Ginger Carrots into your recipe. (The ginger, cumin and coriander will add the perfect amount of warming spice.) Garlic Scapes make a great addition to any cold salad, and don't forget to snag the Curried Cauliflower to serve alongside a Tikka Masala. A 12-spice yellow curry, small batch bourbon and allspice are key players in the brine.

As long as our friends at Sour Puss Pickles avoid the lima beans, I'm happy.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Meet Your Makers: Thornburg & Co.



Ryan and Julie Thornburg are proud to call The Fruit Belt home. Natives of Southwest Michigan, this talented husband and wife duo have been creating preserves and maple syrups for their business, Thornburg and Company, for quite some time now. While the company itself is relatively new, Ryan has been working with local area farmers for over 20 years and is applying his culinary background to their artisan small-batch preserves, maple syrups, and variety of honeys. Provenance staffer Nathan was able to talk with Ryan and Julie about their regions rich agricultural history and why they love working with locally sourced produce.


1 Thornburg and Company is a relatively new business but the syrups, honeys, and preserves you’re making are keeping with a cooking tradition going back generations. As natives of southwest Michigan living in the agriculturally rich Fruit Belt you believe in making a product that utilizes local produce and supports local family farms in the process. With this kind of mentality, what do you hope to accomplish with your products?

Our goal from day one has been to support local, small family farms and bring awareness to what the area is capable of producing. We live in a beautiful area and believe that Southwest Michigan has the best agricultural growing conditions. There is a story to tell with that and it resonates with our customers.


2 As a husband and wife who share backgrounds in hospitality and food, starting and running your own business of this kind seems like the natural step. Is it because of those backgrounds that you started Thornburg and Company or was there some other way you got to a business creating fruit preserves, maple syrups, and honeys?

Our love of food was always evident, but we wanted to take those relationships with the farmers to the next level. I know these farming families well and have been using their produce for 20 years in the restaurant. So Thornburg and Company was created to support these families and keep the agricultural heritage of Southwest Michigan alive and growing.


3 Being raised in a region so abundant with fruit production, has that been your main focus for work over the years or were you both involved in other ventures totally different from where you find yourselves today?

We both have restaurant backgrounds, but Thornburg and Company is different in that it reaches a much broader audience. It allows us to get our message out and is really just an extension of our daily lives.


4 With such close ties to your community and a sense of pride in making a product that takes advantage of high quality fruits and honey from the area, it’s clear to us Thornburg and Company is passionate about what it makes. As kids was this something you saw yourselves doing when you grew up?

My family always had a large garden and fruit trees. I remember my father always being passionate about it and asking us to help. I grew up in an agricultural community and a lot of my friends came from farming families so it definitely has always been with me.


5 Having such a fantastic variety of produce to choose from in your neck of the woods, do you find there is always a new preserve to try making and do you attempt something new every year? With that in mind, are traditional recipes something you draw inspiration from with your products?

I think there is something to be said about tradition. There is staying power. So yeah, we draw a lot of inspiration from classic recipes and put our own unique twist on them. We never have to travel more than 50 miles to source our fruit, that’s how diverse our area is. We utilize about 20 different varieties of fruit in season, mostly on a limited basis, and a core of 8 seasonal preserves.


6 For anyone who has ever preserved or canned their own food they know how rewarding it can be, especially when you get around to eating it later. Was there a particular moment or maybe a mind-blowing batch of maple syrup you whipped up that made you realize this was what you wanted to do for a living?

Not that I can think of. I think the opportunity to preserve great produce in season is truly special and rewarding. Thornburg and Company has always been about utilizing local agriculture to make a unique product.


7 Are the farmers you connect with and purchase from a source of inspiration for, say, your Fruitbelt Preserves? Where else do you draw inspiration from for your products?

They are the inspiration! Relationships are everything in our business. We want to share the joy of local agriculture through food and to build strong, long lasting relationships with our customers, vendors, farmers, and staff.


8 You've stated you’re in the business of “creating genuine artisanal foods in a traditional time-honored manner.” Our customers are getting access to not just a fantastic product but to a historically significant and age-old method of how we eat and preserve our fresh produce. What is another major benefit you think your company offers to customers?

We create foods in that manner because we believe it is the best way. Creating artisanal foods may be new to us but has been around for centuries in other countries. That’s a real inspiration & sense of pride for us.


9 The growing and harvest seasons are exciting and busy times in your area. Hand selecting your produce from local farms must be a real highlight of the job. What would you say is your favorite aspect of running Thornburg and Company?

That’s it! I look so forward to June when those first earliglow strawberries come in, anxiously waiting on the call from the grower. That’s what drives us to create our product line, whether it is fruit, honey, or maple syrup. But are eyes are always open for unique produce grown in our area that we can utilize.


10 Is a low-yielding growing season a major headache for your business or is there something else you would have to say is your least favorite part of your line of work?

We are conscious of the possibility of a bad growing season like 2012. We chose to not work with stone fruit last year because they were not available locally, but we made plenty of berry preserves. Unfortunately, having a bad growing season is part of the agricultural business. But we love what we do, so it doesn’t always seem like work.


11 Thornburg and Company, despite how young a business, already offers such a great line and range of items to choose from. In what ways do you hope to continue to grow and develop?

I’m always telling people that if you just open your eyes there is a whole world of food in your own backyard. We love to work with as much produce as we can because that is the joy of it. I come from a culinary background so maybe I view things differently, but if it grows in southwest Michigan we will probably work with it. We want to continue to offer high quality products and hope that customers will like them.

BTW, we do have some exciting new products for 2013 so stay tuned!