Liquid City
It crept into San Francisco last winter as quietly as the fog: a hush-hush new whiskey. A fellow actually named Igor--distributing executive Igor Rodionoff--was bringing it around to the taverns in his car, handing out a couple of bottles at a time as if it were bootleg hooch. He didn’t talk much about the stuff, which he labeled with seamy allure: “Old Potrero Rye.”
It turned out to be delightfully drinkable. “It’s soft and smooth and very flavorful, with a young, fresh finish,” says Ed Moose, who owns Moose’s, a fashionable North Beach watering hole where customers lap up the 124-proof single-malt rye.
Tipplers wondered: What is it? Who makes it? Well, it came from Anchor Brewing Co. on San Francisco’s Potrero Hill, where the legendary, if at times irascible, Fritz Maytag--the father of the craft beer movement--makes Anchor Steam Beer.
Old Potrero is a paean to American pioneers, among whom, it has been said, whiskey-making was regarded as a powerful symbol of liberty. Maytag says his rye is “very close to what George Washington made.”
Maytag mixes up a mash of 100% malted rye that he cooks and distills in the old Scottish method, with the spirits dripped from copper tubes. (By the way, don’t try this at home without a costly federal permit unless you want to risk a hefty fine and jail time.) Then he ages the spirits in charred, custom-made barrels of eastern American oak.
“They drink it over ice, or straight with water back,” says Washington Square Bar & Grill bartender Eric Boardman, who collects $12.50 a shot.
Old Potrero is due to arrive in Southern California this winter.
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.