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46

MY

ROUSES

EVERYDAY

JULY | AUGUST 2016

the

Cocktail

issue

Sugar Cane

In South Louisiana, as elsewhere throughout the Americas, sugar is white gold, the

commodity primarily responsible for much of the region’s early economic, social and

cultural development. The first century of Louisiana’s settlement and history can be

seen as a great sugar experiment, an attempt to transform the colony into the next

great sugar empire. Louisiana’s founding fathers, the Le Moyne brothers, Iberville and

Bienville both attempted and failed in planting cane in the area. Jesuit priests later,

with minor successes, cultivated the crop where New Orleans’s modern-day Central

Business District now stands.

Up until the 1790s when the planter Étienne de Boré triumphantly produced the first

batch of granulated Louisiana sugar and thus sparked a homegrown industry, the Le

Moynes, the Jesuits and the dozens of other farmers who endeavored to grow healthy

cane crops all had one goal in mind: rum. The fermented and distilled product of

molasses and/or sugarcane juice, rum, the early colonists thought, could make them

rich. It would also, at the very least, get them quite inebriated. “The immoderate use

of taffia (a kind of rum),” the French administrator Jean Jacques D’Abbadie wrote

concerning Louisianians in 1764, “has stupefied the whole population.”

—Rien Fertel, My Rouses Magazine, 2013

Donner-Peltier Distillers

Thibodaux, LA

Rouses Rob Barrilleaux recently sat down

with Beth Donner, one of four owners of

the distillery. Additional reporting by Anna

Gourgues.

ROB BARRILLEAUX:

Beth, how did you

guys come to the decision to open a distillery?

There’s nothing in your backgrounds that

says distiller. You studied international

trade and finance. Your husband Tom is a

neurosurgeon.Henry Peltier is a pediatrician,

his wife, Jennifer, is a nurse.

BETH DONNER:

We were on vacation

in Puerto Rico with the Peltiers. My

husband,Tom, was doing an Iron Man race.

Everywhere we’d go on the islands, they

made rum because of course they have sugar

cane there. Tom said, ‘we live in the middle

of sugar cane country, why don’t we try to

make rum?’ The rest is history.

ROB:

From the beginning you all made a

true commitment to use South Louisiana

ingredients. The sugarcane is grown right

outside your distillery. Where do you get

the rice for your Oryza vodka and gin? Am

I right that you also use the rice in your LA

1 whiskey?

BETH:

We knew we wanted to use local

ingredients. Sometimes people think local

means more expensive, but staying local

doesn’t add to our expenses—it’s actually

a good thing. We are two miles from the

sugar cane

mill.We

get our rice from Reyne,

which is pretty close as well. Nine percent

of the rice we buy goes into our whiskey.

ROB:

I know you sell a lot of that sugarcane

vodka ...

BETH:

Vodka is the most common base for

cocktails. It’s a neutral spirit so it doesn’t

have any kind of flavor to it, unless its a

flavored vodka. It mixes well, and it works

well for a martini, chilled or straight up on

the rocks.

ROB:

But gin is different. Gin has flavor. In

fact,every ginhas a unique flavor—Tanqueray

doesn’t taste like Hendrick’s. Hendrick’s

doesn’t taste like Bombay Saphire. What are

the flavors in your Oryza Gin?

BETH:

Ours isn’t a typical London dry type

of gin. It has a citrus flavor to it which makes

it really unique compared to the other gins

out there. We’re in line with the local aspect

by using fresh satsuma along with the other

MEET YOUR

Makers