Houston Chronicle

Texas barley, whiskey producers growing

- By Mike Copeland

WACO — More Texas farmers are wading into the whiskey business, but their end users are far removed from the era of moonshine stills and midnight raids by ax-toting lawmen.

The burgeoning Texas whiskey industry is doubling down on Lone Star pride by recruiting growers from the High Plains to Hutto, from West Texas to the small Central Texas community of Moody.

An ode to this phenomenon is High Plains Texas Single Malt, a whiskey produced at Balcones Distilling in Waco using Texas-grown barley malted by Blacklands Malt in the Williamson County town of Leander. The finished product had its roots in an experiment involving Balcones, Blacklands and Texas A&M University Agrilife, which was exploring ways to develop a barley industry in Texas.

Now, after more than two years of aging, High Plains Texas Single Malt has arrived. It is priced at $80 a bottle and available exclusivel­y at Balcones, the distillery ensconced at Mary Avenue and South 11th Street that has become a popular tourist stop. It hosts tours, tastings and invitation-only “pairings,” multi-course gourmet meals at which whiskies are paired with entrees.

“The two years of aging have been worth the wait,” said Jared Himstedt, head distiller at Balcones, who issued a statement. “We ended up with some very welcome subtle nuances during maturation we’re excited about.”

A descriptio­n provided by Balcones announcing the arrival of High Plains Texas Single Malt said the whiskey “features opening aromas of stewed apples, Sauternes, honeycomb and light mink oil. On the palate, it delivers manuka honey, suede, cedar, tea tree oil, nutmeg and roasted chestnuts.”

‘Historic’ project

In 2016, when Texas Agrilife began experiment­ing with hundreds of barley varieties, Texas farmers grew only about 30,000 acres of barley, mostly for animal feed. Researcher­s saw an opportunit­y for at least 100,000 more acres to supply the growing Texas craft brewing industry.

Brandon Ade, founder of Blacklands Malt, said securing Texasgrown barley suitable for use in fine whiskey proved a long and winding road. Abundant wheat supplies could be found in nearby Hutto or in the Texas Panhandle and West Texas, but Colorado served as the most reliable source of barley.

“I learned early on that you need a backup plan in this business,” Ade said. “I took on the challenge of re-establishi­ng barley in Texas. Wheat and rye could be exclusivel­y sourced here, but barley was another story. Eventually we found some folks willing to replace cash crops they had been growing for years and agreeable to trying barley. I was first approached by Zack Pilgrim at Balcones back in January of 2015. He had heard about the work we were doing revitalizi­ng barley in Texas, and was excited to find a way to incorporat­e us into their work. The idea for this project and others ultimately was born from conversati­ons with Zack, Jared and (Balcones production manager) Thomas Mote.”

They wanted to get their hands on the first Texas malted barley, Ade said.

A deal eventually was struck with Kip Harvey Farms in Brownfield, a community in Terry County, where West Texas merges with the Panhandle, to produce barley featured in High Plains Texas Single Malt.

“At least for me, this project represents a four-year effort to establish and bring forward malting barley into the state of Texas for the first time in history,” Ade said. “A release like this, a 2-year-old American single malt, is historic for our state. No product like this has existed before now … It also is historic and worth noting that it is pure Texas, because such a thing was not even possible before 2016.”

Ade said his pursuit of distilling grains began with the researcher­s at Texas A&M Agrilife. His business continues to evolve, picking up steam through relationsh­ips with Balcones and TexMalt, a Fort Worth-based craft malthouse that partners with area farmers to raise barley, wheat, rye, triticale, oats, heirloom corn, white corn, Jimmy Red corn and organics, says the TexMalt website.

Malting is the process of soaking and sprouting raw grain, then drying it with hot air, creating enzymes that make it suitable for use in brewing beer and distilling whiskey.

“Our target is about 200 short tons of finished malt annually,” Ade said. “Compare that to the top malthouses in the world, large industrial malthouses, the smallest of which produces 30,000 tons a year. But small malting houses are springing up around the country to reinvent the malting industry, with the focus being on local ingredient­s. We were, I believe, the fifth in the nation when we got started. Now there are at least 70, and it appears there will be a about a couple hundred in North America in a couple of years.”

Homegrown success

Meanwhile, another homegrown success story has emerged in Moody, where 36-year-old Wes Perryman is growing five varieties of heirloom wheat for shipment to Still Austin. The whiskey distillery acquires all ingredient­s from Texas farmers, according to a profile appearing online at farmprogre­ss.com.

The soil has run in the Perryman family since the late 1800s. Perryman and his father also grow corn, cotton and wheat on about 3,600 acres, but these regulars now share space with newcomers bound for the distillery: heirloom wheat varieties known as Frisco, Purple Straw, Knox, Mediterran­ean and Fulcaster.

“We’ve been looking for alternativ­e markets, niche markets, to try to drive up our income,” Perryman is quoted as saying. “The commodity markets have been brutal, so we’re just trying to find a little more security and little less stress.”

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