Gin makers often rub a bit of product on their hands and take a whiff to get a feel for the aroma. It just so happens that the alcohol听kills a bunch of germs in the process. 鈥淓ssentially, our hands are always covered in hand sanitizer,鈥澨齭ays Ryan Christiansen, the head distiller at in Vermont. Now听his company is one of several distilleries across the country that have pivoted to producing听hand sanitizer during the pandemic.听
Hand sanitizer is fairly simple to make, with just three ingredients: alcohol, glycerin, and peroxide. And the initial听idea of making it was just a distraction, a fun little make-your-own-hand-sanitizer craft project, at听a tough company meeting about changes due to the coronavirus. Then听鈥渨ord got out to the community, and things shifted from听鈥業s this legal?鈥 to 鈥楬ow can we provide more of this for the community?鈥欌 says Christiansen. In a strange twist of events, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB), which oversees all alcohol sales and is notoriously sluggish, has 听legalizing听this switch.听Caldeonia Spirits is now working toward a goal of making 20,000 gallons of hand sanitizer for Vermont-based health care and community organizations.听
A local food bank got the first batch last month. Then听the University of Vermont鈥檚 health network鈥攖he largest provider of medical care in the state鈥攚as on the phone, asking how soon it听could get 1,700 gallons shipped over. Christiansen wasn鈥檛 sure. Caledonia is distilling to 190 proof, because current 听for sanitizer say听that it should contain听at least 80 percent alcohol. To hit that number, the base needs to be 95 percent alcohol to make up for any dilution听from the additional ingredients. But it takes a long time to distill alcohol to that level. And that鈥檚 when kombucha came to the rescue.
Your kombucha probably contains more alcohol than you think. In fact, there have been several about this. Jeff Weaber, founder of the brand, found this out the hard way. In 2009, when he was running his startup company out of his garage, the , guns drawn, to shut him down for making boozy 鈥檅ooch. Weaber then invested $2 million in听a machine that would remove the alcohol from his brew without damaging the nutritional qualities of the tea.听
Over the years, he鈥檚 saved all the alcohol he鈥檚 ever suctioned off, in hopes of possibly profiting from听it. A few years ago, Weaber听began turning some of it into a flavored vodka. Still, there are gallons and gallons of kombucha distillate in his warehouse. When the overwhelming need for hand sanitizer sprung up in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, there was another use for Aqua ViTea鈥檚听excess alcohol.听
鈥淛eff called and said, 鈥業 have this 127 proof kombucha distillate, can you use it?鈥欌澨齬emembers Christiansen.听A tanker truck hauled 2,700 gallons of it over to Caledonia Spirits, and that鈥檚 when things got rolling.听
Christiansen asked his听sales team to help source everything from ingredients to containers, and everyone got to work. So far听the company hasn鈥檛 laid off a single staff member鈥攁nd听hopes to keep it that way.听
The hand-sanitizer effort has resulted in a few tiny moments of serendipity, like when a someone got a lead on bottles. 鈥淓veryone in the world is racing to make things the hospitals need,鈥 Christiansen听says, and that means demand is making it hard to find听the two-to-six-ounce bottles required to package it. But a team member stumbled across a cache of bear-shaped听squeeze bottles meant for honey. 鈥淲e鈥檙e a honey-gin company. On the video call, you could see that it was like, Who is going to be the first to say听that鈥檚 kind of a good idea?鈥澨
Christiansen says he does miss making gin, but the company听doesn鈥檛 have the workforce to run hand sanitizer and gin at the same time. So听for now, it鈥檒l be cranking out five-ounce bottles of sanitizer in bear-shaped containers. He acknowledges that the bear bottles are a strange听for the product, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 the fastest route to market, and, honestly, it kind of puts a smile on your face when you see the bear,鈥 he says.听
Need a smile and a drink? When this is all over, Christiansen says he鈥檒l be making himself a Bees Knees. Here鈥檚 how to make it.
- 2 ounces听Barr Hill Gin (or whatever you have on hand;听please avoid going听to the store if at all possible!)
- 3/4 ounce fresh lemon juice
- 3/4听ounce raw honey syrup
- Lemon twist to garnish
Combine the first three ingredients in a mixing tin, add ice, shake, then double-strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Add garnish.