State allows distilleries to sell premixed drinks in small kegs to bars, restaurants

Alaska’s state alcohol regulator is declining to stop distilleries from selling kegs of premixed cocktails despite a warning by federal regulators, who have concluded that the process is illegal.

The Alaska Alcohol Control Board has rescinded an advisory notice that had cautioned distilleries against selling kegs to bars and other places with alcohol licenses. The board also voted unanimously to create a working group to consider the topic further.

“In the meantime, I’m not going to go after a guy who has been doing something, allegedly lawfully for (four) years under our nose,” said Joan Wilson, director of the Alaska Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office.

Sassan Mossanen is the CEO of Denali Brewing and Spirits in Talkeetna and has been selling cocktails by the keg for four years.

State law forbids distilleries from selling a keg to an individual — Alaska has strict limits on serving sizes — but there are no state laws that forbid a distillery from selling a keg to a bar or restaurant that has a liquor license.

In April, following a question from a Denali Spirits sales agent, the state licensing board began investigating whether federal regulations might bar the practice.

Alcohol sales practices are controlled by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, a section of the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

The bureau has a section of regulations called “standards of fill,” which dictate the size of bottles that a distillery, winery or brewery can sell.

“It sounds like the activity you described would not be allowed by federal regulations,” a federal investigator told the state’s lead enforcement officer, after he asked about keg sales.

After that message, the state agency sent a warning notice. “The thought at that time was, ‘Of course, we’re going to enforce the (federal) standards,’ and we sent out an advisory to people to let them know that,” Wilson said.

Tom Hogue, a spokesperson for the Tax and Trade Bureau, confirmed the regulations.

“In terms of making a premixed product, like a margarita, or piña colada, somebody who’s properly permitted as a distiller can go ahead and produce a product like that, as long as it’s properly labeled and everything else. The thing is, they’ll have to remove it from their premises in a container that meets one of the standards of fill requirements. There are certain container sizes that are allowable, and the largest container size that they could use would be 1.8 liters,” he said. That equals a half-gallon.

Most cocktail kegs are one-sixth of a barrel, or just over 5 gallons.

Mossanen and Lee Ellis, board president of the Brewers Guild of Alaska, testified in front of the alcohol board in late June, urging the five-member body to disregard the federal guidance and continue keg sales.

“For us, this is a very, very big deal. There are significant financial consequences,” Mossanen said.

Ellis’ employer, Midnight Sun Brewing in Anchorage, also holds a distillery license.

“I would say we have already lost business opportunities because of (the uncertainty),” Ellis told the alcohol board.

Nationally, and within Alaska, the trend in alcohol sales has been toward “premiumization” — smaller volumes of higher-quality alcohol instead of bigger amounts of cheap products.

Alcoholic and nonalcoholic cocktails represent a larger part of the alcohol industry than they did a few years ago, and so-called “ready to drink” cocktails, which don’t require a bartender’s intervention, are a particularly fast-growing niche.

Mossanen said it’s common for distilleries to sell cocktails as a way to demonstrate to bartenders and the public how their liquor can be used.

Denali Spirits and many other distilleries in the state sell ready-to-drink cocktails by the can, but selling by the keg is more efficient and allows Mossanen’s company to better compete with other kinds of alcohol, he said.

He acknowledged the federal regulation but said that because Alaska doesn’t have a similar state law, it’s unenforceable. He compared the situation to the way Alaska handles marijuana, which is federally illegal but legal within the state.

The AlaskaBeacon.com is a donor-funded independent news organization in Alaska.

 

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