EmbellishPod

John Hughes

Let’s explore the stories around products, places and people that make them inherently interesting. Stories full of drama or passion. Stories filled with history. New stories. True stories. Less than true stories. We’ll mostly talk about bourbon and whiskey….but who knows what else might draw our attention. www.embellishpod.com

  1. Inside National Bourbon Week 2026

    2D AGO

    Inside National Bourbon Week 2026

    Eight Days of Bourbon: Inside National Bourbon Week 2026 with Sam Lacy Tickets are already selling out. Here’s everything you need to know. A 30-Minute Ceremony That Changed Everything Bardstown, Kentucky, 2018. A small gathering on the lawn of historic Spalding Hall. The mayor reads a proclamation. A handful of master distillers raise a glass. Thirty minutes later, everyone goes back to work. That was the first National Bourbon Day celebration the Bourbon Capital Alliance ever put together. No tickets. No schedule. Just a toast and a handshake. Fast forward to 2026, and it’s eight full days of events — June 14th through June 21st — across some of the most storied distillery campuses in Kentucky. Two events sold out within the first three hours of ticket sales opening. And the man sitting across from me on this episode has been there for virtually every step of the journey. Sam Lacy is the Executive Director of the Bourbon Capital Alliance, the Bardstown-based 501(c)3 nonprofit that organizes, markets, and runs National Bourbon Week in partnership with ten distillery partners. He joined the show on the day tickets went live — March 26th — and if the constant mentions of his phone buzzing with sellout notifications were any indication, things are already moving fast. How a Small Town Claimed Its Identity Before there was a National Bourbon Week, there had to be a reason to build one. That reason, Sam explained, goes back to 2016, when local distillery leaders walked into a meeting with Bardstown’s mayor and economic development office and essentially said: you’re not doing this justice. Bardstown calls itself the Bourbon Capital of the World, but at the time, there wasn’t a cohesive infrastructure to back that up. The distilleries were there — Heaven Hill, Makers Mark, Beam, Barton — but nothing tied them together into an experience a visitor could navigate or a community could rally around. Out of that meeting came a task force, and out of that task force came the Bourbon Capital Community Alliance in 2017. Sam took over as Executive Director in 2019, initially carving out five hours a week from his day job at the tourism commission. He grew up in Bardstown, spent time in Atlanta working for Travel South USA, and came back with a perspective on what genuine destination tourism looked like. He saw what Bardstown could be. And he quietly started building it. Growing Up: From Three Days to Eight The math here is pretty remarkable. The 2018 ceremony was thirty minutes. By 2019, Sam had expanded it to three days of events. COVID hit in 2020, and rather than go dark, they pivoted to virtual content and kept the momentum alive. By 2024, the first official National Bourbon Week launched as a six-day run. In 2025, seven days. And in 2026? A full eight days — starting on National Bourbon Day, June 14th, and running straight through to the following Sunday. “We’re the bourbon capital of the world,” Sam told me. “Let’s own it.” The other thing that makes this work, Sam was quick to point out, is the unusual willingness of the partner distilleries to cooperate. These are, in the traditional sense, competitors. They’re fighting for the same shelf space at the same liquor stores. But in Bardstown, something different happens. The distilleries understand that when a visitor leaves Heaven Hill, if somebody from Heaven Hill tells them to go visit Willett or Lux Row, everybody wins. That community-first mentality has allowed National Bourbon Week to schedule events across the week without distilleries stepping on each other — the bigger names up front, the smaller operations given prime days in the middle of the week. “It’s a credit to them,” Sam said more than once. What’s Happening in 2026: The Full Breakdown So what are you actually signing up for? Here’s the shape of the week: Sunday, June 14 — National Bourbon Day The week kicks off with two very different vibes happening simultaneously, and honestly you could make a strong argument for attending both. Heaven Hill opens the door — literally — with the Elijah Craig National Bourbon Day Celebration at their Bourbon Experience on Gilkey Run Road. It runs 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., it’s free to attend with registration, and it sets the tone nicely: tastings, craft demonstrations, and exclusive merchandise on-site. A low-pressure, high-reward entry point into the week. A few miles out, Preservation Distillery is doing something altogether different. Their Boone Family Reunion Distillery Festival runs 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and is one of the more thoughtfully constructed events on the entire calendar. You get product tastings with a souvenir glass, food, a custom Clayton & Crume leather keepsake, and live seminars led by Proprietor Marci Palatella, Master of Maturation Kyle Lloyd, and Head Distiller JT Leasor. If you know Preservation’s juice — Very Olde St. Nick, Rare Perfection, the 10-year they just released — you already know why this one is worth your time. If you don’t know Preservation yet, this is your introduction. Either way, you’re not leaving disappointed. Monday, June 15 The Beam Backyard Luau at the Beam Family Home in downtown Bardstown. Fred and Freddie Noe. Bourbon. BBQ. A backyard. They brought this one back after it sold out last year, and it sold out again — fast. If you got a ticket, you already know. If you didn’t, put it at the top of your list for 2027. One of the most genuinely fun nights in bourbon. Tuesday, June 16 Two experiences on Tuesday, and both reward the kind of person who shows up to learn rather than just to drink. Log Still’s Proofed by the Spring is capped at 24 guests at $150 a ticket and is led personally by founder and president Wally Dant. The premise is simple and brilliant: go to the limestone spring that feeds the distillery’s water, taste the water, taste the bourbon, understand the connection. Log Still’s campus is one of the most beautiful anywhere on the Trail — actual lodging on site, an amphitheater, rolling Kentucky hills — and doing this experience with Wally himself is the kind of thing you’d struggle to put a price on. Old SteelHouse has two seatings for their Finish Your Own Blueprint Series Batch 002 Experience, held out at the former T.W. Samuels distillery site in Deatsville. You tour the property, take a short finishing class, and then walk out with your own Blueprint Series Batch 2 bottle and four wood cube options to finish it exactly how you want. Educational, tactile, and genuinely interactive — this is the kind of experience that makes you think differently about what’s in the glass. Wednesday, June 17 Wednesday is the fullest day of the week and it’s not particularly close. Lux Row kicks things off with their Front Yard BBQ with Master Distiller John Rempe — 200 tickets, the custom smoker is going, and they’re up on that hilltop campus five minutes from downtown with access to the Stonehouse and visitor center. Big, social, and exactly the kind of afternoon that slides naturally into evening. Over at Maker’s Mark, Bill Samuels Jr. and Master Distiller Dr. Blake Layfield are hosting Bill’s Bourbon Soiree in the visitor center — cocktails, bites, and that stunning campus as your backdrop. The word “soiree” is doing real work here. This is an elegant evening. And in Springfield, Potter Jane is running their Big Vat Blending Class — second seating, because the first one sold out within hours of tickets going live. Twelve people, maximum. Denny and Jane running the room. Go to the website to find out what “Big Vat” actually refers to. Thursday, June 18 James B. Beam Distilling Co. hosts A National Bourbon Week Celebration at the Kitchen Table — an intimate dinner at one of the best restaurant spaces on any distillery property in the state. Thoughtful food, exceptional cocktails, and the kind of evening that earns its place on the calendar. Potter Jane also runs an additional seating of the Big Vat Blending Class for anyone who missed Wednesday. Friday, June 19 This is the anchor. The Bourbon Capital Mash Up at Bespoke in Bond in downtown Bardstown is the event Sam Lacy and the Bourbon Capital Alliance have been building toward all week, and in its second year it’s gotten bigger and sharper. All ten partner distilleries under one roof. Every one of them paired with a local chef or their own culinary team. Small bites designed to sit alongside a specific pour from each distillery — thoughtfully paired, a mix of savory and sweet, and enough food that you genuinely don’t need dinner beforehand. Master distillers in the room. Accessible. Approachable. All in one beautiful downtown event space. GA tickets are $150 and get you in at 7 p.m. VIP is $375 and gets you in an hour early at 6 — plus exclusive access to Neat Bourbon Bar throughout the night, a dusty cocktail on arrival, and three dusty pours from partner distilleries across the evening. If you’re not sure what “dusty” means: we’re talking vintage whiskey. The kind of bottles that are genuinely difficult to find in the wild, let alone taste in a curated setting. Both tiers get an etched glass to keep, courtesy of Kentucky Bourbon Festival. VIP is selling faster than GA. If you’ve been sitting on it, stop sitting on it. Saturday, June 20 Saturday is where the week becomes something a little bigger than a bourbon festival. Limestone Branch — new partner distillery this year and a sister operation to Lux Row — opens the morning with Barrels & Biscuits with Master Distiller Stephen Beam. A brunch experience, a beautiful craft distillery, a master distiller who clearly enjoys what he does. Strong start to the day. Downtown, Potter Jane’s Big Vat Bar Crawl kicks off in the afternoon with Denny and Jane personally leading the group through their favorite watering holes, starting with a Big Vat pour at Evergreen. The official end time is 5 p.m. The

    52 min
  2. The Invisible Hand Behind Your Bourbon Delivery

    MAR 18

    The Invisible Hand Behind Your Bourbon Delivery

    You’ve clicked “Buy Now” on a distillery website a hundred times. You probably have no idea what happens next. There’s a moment every spirits enthusiast knows well. You’re on a brand’s website, maybe it’s 11pm, maybe there’s a glass in your hand already, and you find the limited release you’ve been hunting for. You click Buy Now, type in your card number, and wait. A few days later, a brown box shows up on your porch. You tear it open. Perfect. Undamaged. Done. What you probably never thought about: the brand didn’t ship that bottle. In most cases, they couldn’t — legally. That’s the conversation I had recently on EmbellishPod. My guest was a representative from Vista Fulfillment Group, the San Diego-based company that’s quietly become the largest spirits fulfillment operation in the United States. Vista works with over 500 brands and 20-plus marketplaces, and unless you’re deep in the industry, you’ve almost certainly never heard of them. That’s by design. The Three-Tier System (and Why It Makes Everything Complicated) If you’re a regular listener, you’ve probably heard me talk around the three-tier system before. But let’s break it down plainly, because it’s the whole reason companies like Vista exist. After Prohibition ended in the 1930s, the U.S. established a mandatory structure for alcohol commerce: a product must flow from producer to wholesaler to retailer before it ever reaches a consumer. Every bottle. No exceptions. A distillery in Kentucky literally cannot ship you a bottle, even if they wanted to. The product has to move through the system. So when you go to a brand’s website and click Buy Now, what you’re actually doing — from a legal standpoint — is transacting with a licensed retailer. The brand’s website just looks like it’s the one selling to you. The consumer sees the brand. The back end is Vista, acting as the licensed retailer, purchasing the product from a distributor and shipping it to your door. My guest put it simply: “The consumer, for all they know, is shopping directly with the brand. But in the back end, the transaction is really happening with us.” It’s seamless. It’s compliant. And it requires a nationwide logistics operation most people don’t know exists. From a Back Room to a National Footprint Vista didn’t start as some tech-forward logistics company with a vision deck and venture funding. It started in the back room of a liquor store. The company’s founder spent his whole life in the retail alcohol business. He bought his first liquor store in 2000, grew that to multiple locations, and then in 2016 got a call from Reserve Bar — an early player in the spirits e-commerce space — asking if he could be a fulfillment partner. He said yes, figured he had the warehouse space, and thought maybe it’d cover some rent. That’s not how it went. By 2019, Vista had outgrown the liquor store back room and moved into a proper warehouse in California. Then COVID hit. And suddenly, everyone who couldn’t walk into a shop was ordering alcohol online. What had been a slow build became a rocket ship. By 2021 and 2022, Vista had expanded to Austin and New York City — three locations chosen to cover the entire country with reasonable shipping times. Today they’re working with brands ranging from Bardstown Bourbon Company and Green River Distilling to Johnny Depp’s Three Hearts Rum and the cast of Vampire Diaries’ Brothers Bond Bourbon. They’re fulfilling for Men’s Journal readers. They’re powering influencer storefronts for accounts like Brewzle in Alabama, who runs a bourbon club with dedicated followers willing to buy whatever barrel he picks. 3JMS: Named After Three Sons When Vista got serious about growth, they did something a lot of companies in their position don’t do: they built their own technology from scratch. The system is called 3JMS — short for 3J Management Systems. The 3Js? Three sons, all whose names start with J. The founder is clearly proud of his kids. The software handles order management, inventory, shipping logistics, accounting, sales tax, credit card fees — essentially everything that makes a multi-state spirits fulfillment operation function at scale. There is no off-the-shelf solution for this, because this industry didn’t really exist before they helped build it. Every competitor that tried to bolt on existing warehouse software hit a ceiling they couldn’t grow past. Now they’re layering in AI on the back end — not consumer-facing chatbots, but logistics tools for inventory placement, ordering patterns, and warehouse efficiency. The kind of AI that makes fewer things fall through the cracks, not the kind that replaces people. Finding the Diamonds in the Rough I asked what kinds of brands Vista is most excited to work with. The answer wasn’t the celebrity labels or the established names. It was the small craft distillery that doesn’t know online sales are an option. “We want to find the brands that are not serviced,” my guest said. “Once we teach them how to do this online, they’re amazed at how much business they’re getting.” There are no minimums. No monthly fees. If you’re a small distillery in Nebraska with a tasting room, a handful of local retail relationships, and a product you believe in — Vista will work with you. You need distribution in California, Texas, or New York to start (that’s where their warehouses are), but once that’s in place, they’ll help you access the entire country. One of their favorite client stories involves Detrling Rum out of Alabama. Started small, was barely moving bottles when they first partnered. Now every release sells out in ten minutes. That’s the model they’re chasing. Not just moving bottles — watching brands grow. Why This Matters for the Spirits World I’ve talked to a lot of brands on this show. Founders, master distillers, brand ambassadors. The question of e-commerce comes up constantly, and a lot of smaller operations treat it like this distant, daunting thing. Too complex. Too expensive. Too much infrastructure to figure out while you’re also trying to make great whiskey. Vista’s whole pitch is that it doesn’t have to be that way. They handle the compliance. They handle the logistics. They handle the technology. The brand just has to market. That division of labor makes a lot of sense. A small distillery’s competitive advantage is in the liquid in the bottle and the story behind it — not in navigating state-by-state shipping regulations or building a warehouse management system. Let the people who are good at that do it. The spirits world is at an interesting inflection point right now. The boom years are cooling a little. Some brands won’t survive. The ones that figure out how to meet consumers where they are — online, on their phones, buying based on an influencer recommendation at midnight — probably will. Vista is the infrastructure underneath all of that. Invisible, by design. Essential, by necessity. If you run or represent a small spirits brand and want to explore e-commerce fulfillment, you can reach Vista through their website. Links will be in the show notes. Enjoyed this one? Hit subscribe on your podcast app, drop a comment on YouTube, or share this piece with someone in the industry who needs to hear it. You can also find all of EmbellishPod’s episodes, links, and contact info at www.embellishpod.com. Pinkies down, fun up. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.embellishpod.com

    45 min
  3. JAN 21

    Exploring Kava Culture with KALM with Kava

    What do you do when prescription anxiety meds leave you blank for hours? For Morgan Smith, the answer came from the South Pacific in the form of kava. In this episode of EmbellishPod, host John Hughes ventures beyond bourbon to explore kava culture with Morgan Smith, owner and operator of KALM with Kava, one of the nation's largest kava distributors. Morgan's journey from burned-out tech professional to kava farmer on Hawaii's Big Island reveals a fascinating alternative to alcohol that's been consumed safely for thousands of years. This conversation dives deep into: What kava actually is and how it works The cultural significance across Polynesia, Melanesia, and Micronesia Morgan's personal story from benzodiazepines to botanical alternatives The science behind kava's calming effects Sustainability challenges in the kava industry The importance of testing and transparency KALM's unique Magic Mushroom Rum (kava-based, not actual mushrooms!) Why more Americans are seeking alcohol alternatives Whether you're doing Dry January, exploring non-alcoholic options, or simply curious about traditional Pacific botanicals, this episode offers an educational and authentic look at a growing movement in the spirits space. Guest: Morgan Smith, Owner & Operator, KALM with Kava Farm Location: Big Island, Hawaii Sources: Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Vanuatu Find KALM with Kava: Instagram/TikTok/Facebook: @kalmwithkava (Kalm with a K) Pinkies down, fun up. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.embellishpod.com

    52 min
  4. 12/22/2025

    From Veteran to Vodka Importer

    From Combat Veteran to Ukrainian Vodka Importer: A Mission-Driven Story We're breaking from our usual bourbon and whiskey focus for an episode you absolutely need to hear. Sam Lerman, co-founder of Spyrt Worldwide, shares one of the most compelling origin stories in the spirits industry - from Air Force security forces veteran to defense industry professional to volunteering in Ukraine during the 2022 invasion, and ultimately becoming an importer of Ukrainian vodka with a mission that extends far beyond the bottle. Sam's journey includes smuggling suitcases of vodka across European borders, discovering that Ukrainian horilka (vodka) is an art form with 700 years of history, and building a brand where 10% of proceeds fund landmine removal efforts in Ukraine through partnerships with organizations like The Invictus Global Response. We explore the cultural significance of Ukrainian spirits, the difference between horilka and Russian vodka, what it was like to volunteer in a war zone, and how a chance encounter with a bottle of Hetman vodka changed everything. This conversation goes deep into entrepreneurship, mission-driven business, and supporting Ukraine through commerce and awareness. Featured Brand: Spyrt Worldwide Products Discussed: Hetman Vodka, various Ukrainian wines and spirits Availability: DC, Maryland, Virginia ABC, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, Washington, California, and online Links: Spyrt Worldwide: www.spyrtworldwide.com Institute for the Study of War: www.understandingwar.org Invictus Global Response Ukrainian Toast: Budmo! (B-U-D-M-O) This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.embellishpod.com

    55 min
  5. 12/10/2025

    Jaz'min Weaver: Bartender-Turned-Bourbon-Educator

    What happens when a Detroit bartender who helped open America’s first fragrance bar joins one of bourbon’s most innovative distilleries? You get Jaz’min Weaver, Bardstown Bourbon Company’s traveling educator with a perspective unlike anyone else in the industry. In this conversation, Jaz’min shares her journey from running bar programs with ever-changing five-course tasting menus to spreading the gospel of Bardstown bourbon across the nation. We dive deep into what makes Bardstown different—their organic collaboration approach, their unique barrel-finishing technique using argon gas preservation, and releases that push boundaries. Key Discussion Points: * The story behind Bardstown’s Cathedral Finish featuring 300-year-old French oak hand-selected for Notre Dame’s restoration * Why Amrut was a historic moment (first American whiskey finished in Indian single malt casks) * How Bardstown’s collaborations work: handshake deals, no money exchanged, just people excited about flavor * The argon gas preservation method that keeps barrels wet for maximum flavor transfer * Pairing whiskey to experiences, not just food * Why the on-premise distillery experience will continue growing despite market contractions Guest Bio: Jaz’min Weaver is a traveling educator for Bardstown Bourbon Company. Her background includes bartending in Metro Detroit, running bar programs at Frame (known for rotating five-course tasting menus), and helping launch the nation’s first fragrance bar. She specializes in pairing flavor to fragrance and food to beverage. Connect with Jaz’min: Instagram: @jaz.distilled This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.embellishpod.com

    55 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Let’s explore the stories around products, places and people that make them inherently interesting. Stories full of drama or passion. Stories filled with history. New stories. True stories. Less than true stories. We’ll mostly talk about bourbon and whiskey….but who knows what else might draw our attention. www.embellishpod.com

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