DBF in the Media: Good Grit

Good Grit article about Doc Brown Farm and Distillers screenshot

Well, we are sending out a big thank-you to everyone at Good Grit, the online southern culture magazine. We recently talked to their journalist, Jennifer Kornegay, who captured our story perfectly in the piece that we share with you today, originally published right here under the header Women’s Work.

Jennifer’s fine words are matched by Ari Skin’s photography. We love it, and we love the Good Grit mission to paint “…a progressive and truthful representation of who we are and who we want to be…” here in the South. Amen to that.

The Spirit Behind Doc Brown

Words by Jennifer Kornegay
Photos by Ari Skin

When you hear Amy Brown, cofounder of Doc Brown Farm and Distillers talk about her farm, her commitment to its care is palpable. “My business partner Paige Dockweiler and I both come from farming backgrounds, and we fled it as young adults, turning to different careers,” she says.

“But a love of the land stayed in us and eventually pulled us back. Protecting our land and working with it to grow and create things—I don’t know anything that’s better.” 

So, it’s no surprise that Georgia’s only seed-to-still, grain-to-glass distillery was inspired by an obscure, almost-extinct heirloom crop. After Brown’s son showed her a magazine article outlining the discovery and revival of Jimmy Red Corn, an idea took root. Amy and Paige had recently bought some farmland and were considering raising cows and goats, but the concept of helping preserve a relic of the South’s agricultural history was too intriguing to pass up. “Paige, my son Daniel, and I decided to grow Jimmy Red, but then there was the question, ‘What do we do with it?’” she says. “It’s not the kind of corn you cook up and slather with salt and butter to eat.” 

The corn’s own origin story provided the answer. Before it almost disappeared, it was the variety most favored by Southern moonshiners, so the original thought was to grow a little corn and make a little bourbon to give to friends and family. “We thought that would make fun wedding gifts,” Brown says.

Armed with this plan, Doc Brown planted its first fields of Jimmy Red in 2019. They looked into building a distillery onsite but decided to contract distill instead, allowing them to move faster but still have total control of their product. After harvest, they sent the mash recipe they developed and their grains to a distilling facility in Atlanta and ended up with four barrels of bourbon. “We were so proud of ourselves! We thought we had won the lottery,” Amy says.

But then, as good ideas are wont to do, not unlike their cornstalks, that initial notion—producing just a bit of corn and bourbon—flourished and grew. High praise was the primary fertilizer. “The distiller told us it was such great corn, with the right amount of protein and sugar and high oil, which gives bourbon its smoothness,” Amy says. “That got us thinking, OK, should we really do this?” Amy had some concerns about working closely with family and owning a business with her friend, knowing the problems it can raise in relationships. “We talked it through and promised to keep personal and business separate, and so far, we have,” she says.

So, Paige, Amy, and Amy’s son Daniel Williams joined forces to found a company, dubbing their venture Doc Brown, combining part of Paige’s last name and her profession (she’s an oncology hematology specialist) and Amy’s last name. Today, Amy is full-time farm manager, and Doc Brown is not just Georgia’s only grain-to-glass distillery, it’s also the state’s only one led by women, and one of only four women-led, grain-to-glass distilleries making bourbon in the country. “We grow our own grains,” Amy says. “We distill it in Georgia and put it in Georgia-made barrels.”

But the farm is Doc Brown’s foundation. The team plants about 40 to 50 acres of both corn and an heirloom Italian rye that’s a part of the Doc Brown recipe each year. Cultivating old-school crops means using old-school methods. The farm avoids harsh pesticides, relying on the bats attracted by the farm’s many bat houses to feast on the insects that can damage corn. It uses bees to augment pollination and deliver bigger yields. And the soil is constantly replenished with cover crops. 

The same attention to detail occurs at the distillery; despite it being offsite, the Doc Brown team is hands-on with each aspect of the process. “It’s not our building or equipment, but it’s our crops, our methods, our mash bill,” Brown says. “We are right there alongside the master distiller, tasting and then putting it in barrels and moving them to the rickhouse to age.”

Its signature sip, Effie Jewel bourbon, is dedicated to all women who enjoy their whiskey and is named after Amy’s great aunt. Day Swigger, a butter-pecan flavored bourbon liqueur, launched last May. And Doc Brown’s bourbon cremes, released last year, won a coveted Garden & Gun Made in the South Award. 

Pleasing customers with Doc Brown’s spirits thrills Amy, but she believes there’s more to it than savoring the liquid itself. “Bourbon is an experience; I want people to open our bottle and understand that we do it all,” she says. From the dirt to tipping back that drink, the folks behind Doc Brown put intention and thought into every step. 

But the hearts of Doc Brown’s founders are dug in deep at their farm. Amy stresses their connection to their patch of earth, and dedication to its future underpins the company’s success. “All of us at Doc Brown love bourbon and whiskey and that world, but it’s the farming that first drew us into this,” Amy says. “That’s where our true passion is.”

Amy believes being a female-founded and led company also lends a special note to Doc Brown’s flavor. “It is still a male-dominated industry, but we’ve never felt shunned. Instead, we’ve gotten so much advice and help; I think most people are excited by more women getting into this,” she says. 

When the days are long and the work is hard, Amy’s old-fashioned glass remains half full, thanks to the rewards she’s reaping from the farm. “Seeing people from all over the country enjoying a taste of our farm means a lot,” she says. But doing it with family means even more. “We’re having so much fun together,” she says. Her six grandkids and their six little sets of eyes watch her and her son put in the work in pursuit of a goal while nurturing and nourishing their land. “I love showing them that example and creating a legacy for them and for following generations,” Amy says. “I mean, how great is that?”

Pre-order your Day Swigger Butter Pecan Bourbon here!

Doc Brown Farm and Distillers Day Swigger Butter Pecan labels

Howdy y’all – down here at the farm we’re overjoyed to announce that out Day Swigger Butter Pecan Flavored Bourbon Whiskey is nearly ready to ship. The first boxes will be going out to stores in Georgia next week.

However, if you want bottles shipped to your address, you can preorder right here on our site using the button below. Just set your quantity and press the button to place an order with our shipping partner.

This finely crafted flavored bourbon comes in a 200ml bottle – the perfect little sweet treat with a warm whiskey finish, ideal for all the old rascals out there who still swig from a flask. After a long day out in the fields, we find that Day Swigger hits the spot with roasty notes of pecan and smooth praline sweetness blended in with the spirit. Watch this space because we’ve got another flavor on the way soon called Hot Honey.

Doc Brown Farm and Distillers Day Swigger Butter Pecan Flavored Bourbon Whiskey

Cookin’ up something HOT!

Doc Brown Farm and Distillers Texas Bird Pepper

Y’all it has been a HOT old summer here in Georgia this year. A heat dome has been floating over our farm but, you know, when the mercury rises here in the South, we just add more heat to our cooking. We like it spiced!

So, we were delighted to meet our neighbors on the 180 Degree Farm, 10 minutes down the road, who are growing some of the hottest chili peppers in the world. And it gave us an idea – why don’t we make a hot honey whiskey inspired by the heatwave of Summer 2024? We looked into it, worked out all the logistics, and we’re pleased to announce that Day Swigger Hot Honey Bourbon is on the way.

American chili peppers

The Texas Bird Pepper plants grown at 180 Decrees are the perfect starting point. Its little round chilis are capsules of pure heat, measuring up to 480,000 units on the Scoville Scale – eight times more powerful than jalapenos. You need to double glove to handle them.

We love that heat, but we also love the history of this ingredient. The Texas Bird Pepper is the only pepper native to North America. It was and still is enjoyed by Native Americans in their cooking, by the Spanish, and later by the founders of the United States. In fact, the peppers cultivated at 180 Degree Farm can trace their lineage back to 1812.

Doc Brown Farm and Distillers farm fresh honey

Farm fresh flavors

Down at the distillery, we’ve blended extracts from these locally grown peppers with honey produced by the bees here at Doc Brown Farm. We are perfecting recipe that will roll in barrels of three-year aged bourbon whiskey for 30 to 45 days to impart that hot, sweet goodness. The spirit will then be finished to 88 proof and bottled.

And for those who like it sweet without the heat, at the same time we are making our Day Swigger Honey Bourbon, which is also flavored with our own farm fresh honey.

Y’all can look out for our Day Swigger Hot Honey and Honey flavored bourbons from September in our online shop.

Finally, God bless the folks at 180 Degree Farm – for the fine work they’re doing growing organic food to support people fighting cancer. Find out more, on their website.

Texas bird chilli - Doc Brown Farm and Distillers

The secret to the BEST bourbon with Hoss

Greg Key of Hoss and Amy Brown of Doc Brown Farm talking bourbon

The other day, we had the pleasure of hosting Greg Key from Hoss down here at the farm. Hoss is a company that encourages people to get their hands into the earth and grow their own food, and they supply everything you need to do it – garden tools, supplies, seed stock and more. The team at Hoss also posts loads of useful information on YouTube and social media helping people get the best results.

As farmers, their message chimes with our own – nothing tastes quite as good as food fresh from the farm, or from your garden. Like us, Hoss is based in Georgia and we think of Greg and the gang as neighbors.

Why were they down on the farm? Well, one of the corn stocks Hoss sells is heirloom Jimmy Red and, as a matter of fact, we bought our original seeds from them. The corn in our fields today is descended from those seeds. So, we showed them around, introduced them to our crops and talked about how we turn those beautiful red pearls of corn into bourbon with a difference.

Greg is the nicest guy and he truly gets the farm fresh ethos and our seed-to-still process. You can watch the video below, and check out the Hoss website here.

A big thank-you goes out to the team at Hoss for taking the time to come and see us, and for spreading the word about our farm, our distillery and our bourbon.

DBF in the Media: Georgia Trend

Screenshot of Georgia Trend page featuring Doc Brown Farm & Distillers

Georgia Trend is the only statewide publication covering our business, politics and economy here in Georgia, so it was a real privilege for us to talk to their reporter Sucheta Rawal last month, and to feature on the site. Georgia Trend has all the buzz on biz!

The article Sucheta wrote hit all the right notes for us – starting with the female leadership in our business, our family’s history in farming, and the special approach we take to bourbon, which is centered around Jimmy Red Corn, plus our new non-GMO Abruzzi Rye. If you want a snapshot of who we are and what we do, Georgia Trend has it for you on the website, and we’ve included the copy below.

We’re so grateful to Sucheta and Georgia Trend for spreading the word. It’s exciting and an honor to feature alongside some great Georgia businesses.

Georgia’s First Seed to Glass Bourbon

Doc Brown Farm & Distillers

Thanks to the passion and efforts of one family, we now have a Georgia seed-to-still bourbon distillery with women at its forefront! Doc Brown Farm & Distillers is located in Senoia. Though the co-founders ­– Paige Dockweiler, Amy Brown, and Amy’s oldest son, Daniel Williams (a commercial pilot by day) – come from a multigeneration of farmers, they never thought about distilling spirits until 2018.

Amy Brown grew up in Hog Mountain (not far from what is now Mall of Georgia), and at one time, her family owned 900 hectares of farmland. Brown went to college and then worked as a mortgage banker in Atlanta for 32 years. After that, she and her partner, Dockweiler (The “Doc” in Doc Brown) ran a pecan farm and event venue in Cordele, GA. But to be closer to her grandkids, Brown bought a farm in Senoia. “Farming was always in my blood,” she says.

One day in 2018, while the family was on their annual beach vacation at the Florida panhandle, they came across an article about Jimmy Red Corn, that up until 20 years ago, had almost died out. A casual conversation about making family bourbon for their own celebrations turned into a commercial investment. Dockweiler had also grown up in a farming family, in South Georgia, and pursued a successful career as a nurse specializing in oncology and hematology. As they researched the heirloom corn, they both got excited about creating a clean spirit while maintaining the ecosystem of the earth.

Jimmy Red Corn is high in protein, sugar (that converts to alcohol), and oil (that gives a creamy buttery flavor profile). “The distiller told us that we were on to something!” Brown exclaims. Doc Brown is now one of the few farms that produce Jimmy Red Corn using old-fashioned hands-on farming techniques like hand pollinating the crop to preserve the variety. The farmworkers distill the corn and non-GMO Abruzzi rye to create unique flavors of bourbon and bourbon creams.

The distillery offers three types of bourbon whiskeys, two of which are named after family members. Since bourbon takes four to six years to mature, the family devised the idea to make bourbon cream with extracts from their bourbon. Since October 2023, they have launched bourbon cream in flavors like coffee (a great dessert on its own), butter pecan (to pay tribute to the pecan farmers of GA), peppermint mocha (that tastes like Andes Mint candy), and salted caramel (with a gentle hint of sea salt). This month, they are releasing a new line of spirits under the label Day Swigger. The first is a butter pecan liqueur made with extracts of Georgia-raised pecans. And soon, they plan to release a special edition hot honey liqueur with the farm’s own honey and southern spice.

You can drink the bourbon cream by itself, cold or at room temperature, or mix it with iced or hot coffee or latte, or hot chocolate. You can substitute heavy cream for bourbon cream to add a special kick to your beverage.

Brown says that she created the flavors that she enjoys drinking herself but also wanted a clean spirit. She adds, “You only need water, grains, a barrel and some patience! There’s no need for added flavoring, coloring, or synesthetic sweeteners to make America’s only native spirit in Georgia.”

Doc Brown products are available for purchase online through its website or through its many distributors.