Review: Distilling Liquor at Home Could Make You a Felon
Home distilling, unlike home brewing and winemaking, is still prohibited by federal law.

Several years ago, I bought a simple stovetop still from Amazon. I would tell you what I did with it, but I don't want to implicate myself in a federal felony.
The still is a gasket-sealed pot attached to metal tubes that run through a cooling chamber filled with ice. Heated at the right temperature, it separates and concentrates a liquid mixture's more volatile elements. Theoretically, the process can be used to turn fermented beverages such as wine, cider, or yeast-exposed sugar water into distilled spirits.
You should never do that, however, because home distilling, unlike home brewing and winemaking, is still prohibited by federal law. Flouting that law, the Treasury Department's regulators warn, "can expose you to Federal charges for serious offenses." The penalties include up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine for possessing an unregistered still, distilling on prohibited premises, or sharing the resulting booze.
Although modern-day revenuers have been known to target hobbyists as well as money-making moonshiners, such cases are pretty rare. That may help explain why still vendors openly advertise their wares as useful for producing not only "essential oils" but also brandy, whiskey, rum, tequila, and vodka.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Stovetop Still."
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$30,300 is probably close to 2,000 gallons of moonshine once you subtract the cost of the inputs. I'd be interested to know the timeline. 5 weeks seems like a short amount of time for growing, reaping, fermenting, and distilling. How many acres would I need for such a return?
I need distilled water for my cpap machine.
>essential oils
Sounds like someone is going to get his dog killed in a DEA raid...
https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B07TNR4QF1/reasonmagazinea-20/
Works GREAT for me! 3 gallons, $80... 5 gallons, $88... 9.6 gallons, $116... Apparently you can brew in the same container as what you then use to do the boiling off!
I have used mine to try VERY hard to boil ANYTHING essential, out of the comments of Mother's Lament, JesseAZ, R Mac, and Nadless Nardless the Nasty NAZI... Sad to say, even though these DO work VERY well for distilling water, I have NOT had ANY luck with distilling ANYTHING of value from the aforementioned comments!
Clearly you intended to make your own distilled water. 🙂
You mean the feds haven’t outlawed possession of alcohol paraphernalia yet?
Nope.
Crazy thing is, distillation equipment is NOT illegal. And one can buy a pot still from Australia. One is just not allowed to use it for its intended purpose. Which I have been tempted to purchase and do.
I recall once back in my homebrew judging days, someone entered an Ice Beer. Which is technically illegal, but I judged it anyway. One first prize for the category, as the only one in the category. It's illegal because it's still considered distillation (freeze the beer, filter out the ice, repeat until it's a thick cloying eisbock).
I don't know. It isn't technically distillation. Is it explicitly mentioned in the law?
I know it's going to sound like I'm pimping the book below, but the woman who wrote it explains in the book how you can navigate through the legalities and distill your own spirits. It can be done.
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We're pretty much all felons anyways now. It's impossible to know all the laws we've possibly broken. It's also impossible to enforce them all. So, live your life and try to avoid attention from that pesky government. They're not driving dogs thru neighborhoods looking for stills.
If you're interested in exploring this subject further, and doing your own home craft-distilling, may I recommend a book titled Craft Distilling by Victoria Redhed Miller, an acquaintance of mine and friend of my extended family.
Is there actually a legal path without spending thousands of dollars for a federal license? Or moving out of the country?
It's complicated. When she and I talked about the process, she described a kind of catch-22 for anyone who wants to build a craft distillery and sell their product. Essentially, you have to break some laws early in the process to get to the place where you're a legal distillery. But that may have been prior to 2008.
I have the book in my hands-- I haven't read it all the way through (she gave it to me as a present after our very long conversation) but that's what she described to me. There is a chapter on how to navigate the legalities.
**i just got the book out**
Chapter 3: Making Liquor Legally at Home.
Well, cruising through the chapter, she says in 2008, Washington State Liquor Control Board (so this may vary from state-to-state then) created a new distilling license called the Craft Distillery license.
Huh, butter me up and call me a biscuit:
"At this writing, it allows annual production of up to 150,000 proof gallons of distilled liquor; a proof gallon is defined as a US gallon at 50% ABV alcohol, at 20 degrees C/68f. That is a lot of booze. It's even more once it's diluted to drinking strength.
She goes on to talk about the 2012 deregulation of state-run liquor stores in WA and how that changed costs, pricing, blah blah blah. She mentions a federal license being required even for personal consumption. She dispels the myths that some legit brewing sources claim that you DON'T need a license, even for personal consumption. According to her book, it's simply not true, you need a license even for personal consumption.
So I guess if you want to distill at home, Move to Washington.
Oh shit, here's a fun paragraph. She said when she applied for her Washington State license, the liquor control board, after interviewing her said her license DIDN'T ALLOW HER TO PRODUCE LIQUOR FOR PERSONAL CONSUMPTION... she HAD to sell it. The problem with the way the Liquor Control Board interpreted their own rules is to bed "compliant" she would have to show sales figures, tax receipts etc., so without the ability to do that, she couldn't distill for personal consumption.
The control board finally relented and said she'd have to post a notice that she was starting a distillery on her property which would give neighbors time to make public comment. Her nearest neighbor is 2 miles away, and several hundred yards from her front gate. She did what they told her to do and posted the notice for 30 days.
So yeah, looks like with enough perseverance and talking to the right person(s) at the LCB, you can get a personal distilling license in Washington State.
My HOA rules forbid it and I voluntarily entered that stupid arrangement, so I would have to move anyway.
I think a new business model that might be interesting is a distillery that is licensed that allows you to rent time on thier equipment. No federal law against fermenting a bunch of crap yourself that I know of.
Definitely don't want to live in Washington.
Remember that day the people gave the 'feds' the authority to ban distilling everywhere?
Yeah; me neither....
F'En treasonous Nazi's....
Are you talking about prohibition, or the rules that followed prohibition's repeal?
Not to mention the 21st Amendment entirely repealed the 18th. Neither has anything to do with distilling. Only intoxicating beverage importation between the States.
The issue is not the 21st, but the 16th Amendment "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration."
Thus the issue is not police stopping an illegal activity, but "revenuers" going after people for distilling without official tax documents (esp. prepaid tax aka "bond").
Once again, the 16th rears it's ugly, misbegotten, "progressive" head.
Except backyard distilling generally doesn't produce 'incomes'; so I'm not sure what kind of manipulative trick the Supreme Court did on that one.
That would be the "fuck you, we do to you what we want" rule.
Ive thought about giving it a try. But here in east TN there are plenty of people with more experience. While the good ones do make a product superior to the swill 'shine' that they sell in liquor stores, it costs about as much as a decent low price bourbon (e.g. Four Roses.)
So why bother? If anything do what most of these so called boutique "distilleries" are actually doing - ordering a custom mash bill neutral grain spirit from one of the two big houses in Indiana, then lay it up in jars/casks with whatever wood staves/ chips suit your fancy.
The whiskey rebellion of 1791 nearly triggered a civil war.
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