In an interview last week, Jenkins said his connection with New Liberty began during his foundation’s annual Blitz, Bow-Ties, and Bourbon fundraiser. A whiskey aficionado, Jenkins said one of the most popular auction items is joining him on a private tour of a distillery. The tours schooled him on the whiskey-making process.
Jenkins said he wants to help underrepresented farmers by signing letters of interest for their crops, which would give them equity in an industry in which they lack much representation. Selling grains directly to a distillery would be more profitable than dealing in bulk with an aggregator, Cassell and Jenkins said.New Liberty typically sources its grains from local farms. But in this early going, it’s been a challenge to find underrepresented people who own farms that produce chemical free, non-GMO grains, and to line up these farms in time for the fall corn harvest — and the start of the distilling process.
So far, Cassell said, they have found only one “solid partner,” in Virginia. Other farmers are being lined up for next year.The Malcolm Inc.
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