Jim Chasteen and Charlie Thompson were roommates and wannabe whiskey connoisseurs at the University of Georgia in the late nineteen-nineties. A few years later, Chasteen and Thompson, whoâd started careers in real estate, began to explore a clear form of rye whiskey that isnât barrel-aged. It was not widely available at the time. Maybe they could create their own version, they thought. âSo we literally Googled how to make it and built a little still at my house in Atlanta,â Chasteen explained to me, laughing. They also bought a book called âThe Business of Spirits.â âWe read thatâwell, Charlie read it, and I looked at some pictures,â Chasteen said. It was apparent that, if they wanted to go into distilling, theyâd need to find a slightly more experienced distiller. Theyâd also need to start off by selling a clear spirit, preferably an old standby like vodka or gin. But they didnât drink vodka or gin, so the friends decided to give their mild white whiskey a shot at center stage. They dubbed it American Spirit Whiskey, or A.S.W., which would, in 2016, become the name of their Atlanta-based craft distillery. Since 2018, A.S.W. has won more awards than any other craft distillery at the San Francisco World Spirit competition, the industryâs biggest annual event.
âI could tell you that we knew that the cocktail movement was going to blow up in Atlanta and that rye whiskey was going to have a big comeback, or that the South was going to be this focus of life styleâfrom Garden & Gun to Southern Living,â Chasteen, a bearded and blue-eyed forty-nine-year-old, told me. âBut we just were very fortunate that we started distilling when there was this convergence of trends.â It took five years of lessons learned for Chasteen, Thompson, and their eventual distillerâJustin Manglitz, a friend of Chasteenâs sister from high schoolâto seriously consider making whiskey full time. âWe finally thought, Well, we either need to go big or go home,â Chasteen said. âBut we didnât really want to raise money until one of us could do it from nine to five. And that happened to be me in 2015.â They raised nearly two million dollars in seed moneyâall of it from friendsâand opened their first distillery the following year. The company, which grew by twenty-four per cent last year, has opened two more locations since then, and plans to open a third, at Atlantaâs Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, next month. âThe timing was perfect,â Chasteen said. âWe were heading out of Georgia, going to other places, and what better billboard than being in the busiest airport in the world?â Then came Donald Trumpâs tariffs. âShitty,â Chasteen told me, when I asked how he felt when they began to take effect, in February and March. âEverything is on hold. The outlook since then is almost changing week by week.â
In 2024, the United States exported some $1.3 billion worth of American whiskey. A.S.W., which netted around five million last year, was looking forward to seizing a little piece of that growing export market. âA lot of us in the craft-distiller world have just now gotten to the point in the growth cycle where weâd like to start selling outside of the United States,â Chasteen said. âOne of the really great things about being from Georgia is our Department of Economic Development is incredibly active globally.â More than a dozen economic emissaries from Georgia represent the state around the world, in countries that include Brazil, China, and South Korea. âWe were beginning to engage with them in those countries, but we had to get our trademarks first,â Chasteen went on. He and his partners spent around fifty thousand dollars during the six-month period prior to Trumpâs Inauguration to secure the intellectual property of the A.S.W. brandsâFiddler Bourbon, chief among themâthat they hoped to take out of the country. Their targets also included India, Japan, the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Singapore, among others. âI mean, we were poised to get out of the country, in all these places,â he said. There are a lot of whiskey drinkers in China, in particular, where American whiskey has become a highly desired commodity in recent years. âHong Kong would be pretty sporty for us,â Chasteen said. But China has countered the Trump Administrationâs tariffs of a hundred and forty-five per cent with tariffs of a hundred and twenty-five per cent, as of late April, on American goods. Canada, Mexico, and the E.U. are still expected to roll out, in stages, their own tariffs on U.S. goods; in early April, the E.U. threatened tariffs of fifty per cent on all American whiskey, and some Canadian retailers have reportedly pulled iconic brands such as Jack Danielâs from their shelves. âSo itâs just the uncertainty that thatâs created now,â Chasteen said. âThese are some pretty stiff tariffs that people are going to retaliate against, and thatâs going to keep folks in other countries frozen about bringing in American goods, and that specifically is damaging to craft distillers. Thereâs more risk for the smaller guys.â Chris Swonger, the president of the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, echoed this sentiment in a recent interview with the Times. âWeâre a very anxious industry right now, because there is no reason for our industry to be implicated,â he said. Other corners of the whiskey marketâgrain farmers, barrel and glass-bottle makersâare also feeling the squeeze.
Chasteen and his partners are trying to remain optimistic. They have a few reasons to be. The company raised some funding just before Trumpâs trade wars began, which theyâd planned to mostly deploy overseas. Now this money will act, in part, as a safety net. Chasteen also recalled a silver lining to the tariffs implemented during Trumpâs first term. âAmerican single malts did have a little bit of a resurgence because we did, from a price standpoint, start to look a little bit more competitive due to the tariffs on imported Scotch,â he told me. âMaybe weâll see some of that again.â A.S.W., whose products are now sold in eleven states, is turning its attention to expanding into others, including New York, New Jersey, and Illinois, in the near term. âOur motto has always been, âMany roads to revenue,â â Chasteen said. âSo if the foreign avenue is looking less attractive, I guess the tariffs are intended to make you look more in the United Statesâthen thatâs what weâll try to do. We just have a lot fewer targets to grow into now.â He sighed. âYou carry a lot of burden of stress as a small-business ownerâfrom making payroll to making sure the bills get paidâand, having less options, it is just not good.â I reminded him that more people drank alcohol during the pandemic. âMaybe a trade war will also increase thirst,â he said. âThatâd be nice.â âŚ
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