Tuesday, February 14

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Feb 13, 2012 03:20 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

Win Free Cart Food For a Year

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Feb 1, 2012 01:30 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

BagelGate: Kettleman to Become Einstein Bros.; Portlanders Hit Back

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Jan 31, 2012 12:45 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 10
 

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Home · Articles · Food & Drink · Food Reviews & Stories · Openings, Closings and Dishy Gossip
August 13th, 2008 WW Editorial Staff | Food Reviews & Stories
 

Openings, Closings and Dishy Gossip

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Cascade Peak Spirits’ Diane Paulson

ECO-BOOZE: Cascade Peak Spirits (cascadepeakspirits.com), a craft distillery in Ashland, made headlines when it debuted Oregon’s first organic vodka in May. Now, the company’s Organic Nation gin ($29.30 a bottle) hits Portland liquor store shelves this week. What makes it organic, exactly? “It’s a little bit like an organic tomato,” Cascade Peak head Diane Paulson explains. “The raw product used [to make the spirits], like the wheat or rye or corn or potatoes, there’s been no herbicides or pesticides used on them.” Cascade’s “raw” materials come from certified organic farmers with sustainable growing practices. She says she doesn’t see slapping the big “O” tag on her booze as buying into the marketability of the “organic” label. To her, producing a sustainable product is a matter of responsibility. “That’s why we named our brand Organic Nation—it comes with a system of values,” she says. With only one still, Cascade Peak is certainly small, but its plans are big. The company is researching ginger and vanilla vodka, as well as projects with local food craftsmen like Ashland’s Dagoba Chocolate. It also has an organic whiskey currently sitting on oak, but, as with all whiskeys, patience is a virtue.

 
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08.14.2008 at 06:58 Reply
Organic Nation Gin sounds great but I want to buy some of this Organic Nation Vodka! What a great idea and responsible, too! I think that all the bars in Portland ought to carry this, and let all of us cocktail lovers know that they carry it so we will be reminded to buy this local Oregon product rather than supporting the same ol' corporations that are part of the problem.

 

 
 

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