Jason Katz

Where did you grow up?

Naperville, IL (suburb of Chicago)

What did you study/what were you interested in?

I majored in Accounting and Finance at IU Kelley School of Business. I am a wealth advisor by day and spend the rest of my time with my wife and 2 kids and helping Cardinal Spirits grow into the business it is today.

What were you up to before Cardinal?

My wife, Julie, and I have 2 kids: age 12 and 10. So, they keep us busy with school, church, basketball and other activities.

What do you do at Cardinal/elsewhere?

I am a wealth advisor with Bartlett Wealth Management in Cincinnati, OH.

Do you have thoughts about Cardinal or life you want to share, yearbook-style?

I was so honored when Jeff asked me to be a part of this great company. I think the future is very bright for Cardinal and I will continue to work hard to help it grow for years to come!

Jeff Wuslich

Where did you grow up?

I’m a midwest brat. I was born in Youngstown, Ohio. I lived in Pennsylvania, then back in Ohio, and then into Indiana where I spent most of my childhood. Then I came down to school in Bloomington in 1999 to go to IU.

What did you study/what were you interested in?

I started off with aspirations to do business and maybe political science. Then I took a really great sociology class and I realized that that is what I wanted to do. And so I majored in sociology.

As long as I was in school, I was always doing student government and I really liked that. I said that my major in college was sociology and that’s true, but I feel like extra-curricular activities were where my passion was. That really helped me lead to some really great jobs and certainly some great friends. I did student government and some other organizations which led me to working at IU. That was a great experience and it kept me in Bloomington.

What else do I like? I love to read and I love to watch movies and I’m super happily married and I have two great kids. So all those things plus this business keep me pretty busy.

What were you up to prior to Cardinal Spirits?

I worked at IU for about seven years. Even when I was working at IU I was researching and trying to get the distillery going. There was a little bit of a down-time there where I started a company that had did fundraising for some nonprofits and political candidates. Then I met Adam in 2010, who we both wanted to start distilleries independently and then we came together, we joined forces, much like Voltron or Captain Planet, and started our distillery.

What do you do at Cardinal?

I’m the president of Cardinal and one of the co-founders. I love working at Cardinal because every day there’s fun new challenges. What I enjoy most about working at Cardinal is working with all the employees. It’s amazing how smart and creative everyone is here and how hard-working they are and passionate about building Cardinal. It’s amazing to me. I think that on paper, the Birdhouse reports to me and production reports to me, but since Adam and I are co-founders, we are involved with everything from financial operations and decisions to marketing decisions and branding and opening new markets and distribution. Adam and I are split off a lot of those tasks so that we can focus on particular areas. So I get to mostly focus on production and the Birdhouse as well as the financial operations and the “business” of our business.

What do you do elsewhere?

I love to read and watch movies. I’m super happily married and I have two great kids. So all those things plus this business keep me pretty busy. It’s funny, I don’t know if I really have any hobbies. I like cooking, I like playing with my kids and hanging out with friends, but all those things sound like what a teenager would do, other than the caring for your kids part. I would say that the business has been pretty consuming, so extracurricular activities haven’t been too present in my life as of lately.

Do you have thoughts about Cardinal or life you want to share, yearbook-style?

“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are, right now.” — Teddy Roosevelt.

Adam Quirk

Where did you grow up?

I grew up in Evansville, Indiana right on the Ohio River, my home river. It was the quintessential midwestern American-kid childhood–lots of time spent outdoors and then, once Nintendo came, a lot of time spent indoors.

What did you study/what were you interested in?

In college, I “took” Sociology as a major, but I didn’t really study anything. I’m more of a self-learner. I was interested in music and literature. I read a lot of twentieth century American novelists, that was what I was really into at that time in my life. Hemingway, Hunter S. Thompson, Anthony Burgess—those were sort of my big three. But I guess in relation to this, all along, before I was really even legal I was making alcohol. I made bootleg wine in my attic and my friends’ attics. Then when I did turn twenty-one and I started getting into spirits, I really got more into spirits because of the stuff I was reading. So for a long time I was just drinking Wild Turkey because Hunter S. Thompson was drinking Wild Turkey. And then I got into Hemingway so I started drinking gin and Campari. I didn’t have any money—I was a “sandwich artist” at Subway–so I would just buy really cheap vodka and infuse it at home to try to make my own creations. So I’ve been making alcohol and home infusions for almost twenty years now.

What were you up to prior to Cardinal Spirits?

Since high school I was making websites, back when they didn’t look very good and it was all still pretty new. I ended up moving to New York City and got a job doing web design in Hoboken, New Jersey. I got into web video for quite a while and then I got more into the business side of it. I had a little company in Brooklyn that I created with two friends. At the time I was thinking I could either continue doing what I was doing, which was a lot of video work and social media stuff, which was fine, I wasn’t super passionate about it, but I loved the idea of doing a distillery. Then I met the guys who run Sproutbox in Bloomington and they offered me a job, which I took. Then I met Jeff. He had been thinking about opening a distillery here and I had been thinking about it in Brooklyn, so we just started putting our ideas together. It took a while to figure out exactly what we wanted to do, but I think the idea we came up with together is better than each of our individual ideas.

What do you do at Cardinal?

I am the CEO and one of the cofounders. I spend most of my time thinking about next month and then six months from then, and then sometimes I get to think about a year from then. But most of my time is spent just a little bit into the future, planning. I feel very fortunate to have the ability to plan, being able to rely on Jeff to handle the present day operations and the management of all the moving pieces here. I also focus on marketing and branding.

What do you do elsewhere?

I like to dig in the dirt and grow things. That’s probably my favorite thing to do, other than this. I occasionally get to do woodworking too, but that’s not as often.

Do you have thoughts about Cardinal or life you want to share, yearbook-style?

Have fun, do your best, colonize Mars.

What are we doing here?

1. In A Nutshell

Just like craft breweries in the early 1980’s, there is a movement of craft distilleries opening in America, and a desire for locally produced food and drink in general.

Cardinal Spirits brought the production of high quality spirits to downtown Bloomington, where we create great jobs and support our community.

The founders of Cardinal Spirits started the company because of a shared passion for distilled spirits and American manufacturing. They also wanted to create meaningful employment for themselves and others – a place that values entrepreneurial thinking and encourages creativity at every level.

We distill premium spirits using the highest quality ingredients and we source local ingredients whenever possible. All parts of the distilling process — from fermentation to mashing to aging to bottling — happen on-site. 

At the time of publishing, our spirits are distributed in eleven states and our nation’s capital: Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maryland, Rhode Island, New Jersey and D.C.


2. What’s in a name?

The Cardinal is our state bird, but also the state bird of seven other states.
We like it because it’s a hardass. It sticks around all winter, when all the other songbirds fly south.

The triangle in our labels represents the crest of the cardinal.
The logo itself is a silhouette of the wooden cardinal statue sitting on a back bar shelf in the tasting room – a wood carving from the 1940s.


3. Timeline

BCE – 2010

Adam Quirk is a teenager in Indiana making bootleg wine in his attic. He studies sociology at Ball State University and leaves to work in the early world of web design and video. He moves to New York and starts a small company that helps big companies cultivate a web presence.

Jeff Wuslich is a teenager in Indiana campaigning for student government. He studies sociology in college and then begins working for his alma mater Indiana University. He starts a small company fundraising for nonprofits and political candidates.

Jeff Wuslich judges for the first time at the American Distillers Institute Craft Spirits Judging. Meanwhile, Adam is living in New York City when Breukelen Distilling and Six-Point Beer open in Brooklyn. Adam dreams of leaving his web-job to start a Bierschnapps distillery.

Adam moves to Bloomington and meets Jeff. They realize they share a dream of opening a craft distillery. They begin marrying their individual visions into one. Cardinal Spirits is born.

2013

The Indiana legislature passes an amendment allowing artisan distilleries to open tasting rooms and sell carry-out bottles. The new law opens up new possibilities for Cardinal Spirits and decidedly focuses our early development. If not for this piece of legislation, we would not have the amazing bar program, service staff, and full kitchen we have today. Who knows if Tiki Rum would have been thought of!

Adam, Jason, Jeff, and Rick write and pitch their business plan to private investors and banks (seven banks said no, the 8th said yes.) They also raise $850,000 through an online crowdfunding marketplace—one of the first uses ever of equity crowdfunding for private companies. A finance reporter from CNBC wrote about it in a Food & Beverage article “Forget happy hour: How to own your own distillery. ”

We acquire our building, 922 S Morton Street, and begin its initial renovation. The building had previously operated as an office and storehouse for a church ministry that sold furniture to international students – and before that was a metal roofing factory.

2014

Cardinal Spirits undergoes major construction projects. We design and build out the space. We choose and install all of our equipment. We also develop our brand, recipe list, and product offerings.

On December 5th, Repeal Day, we operate our still for the first time. Batch 1 is memorialized in a mini barrel displayed on the bar wall.

2015

We’re in business! We begin distributing in Indiana via Carrol Wine & Spirits. Big Red orders 275 cases of our vodka.

In February we host our Grand Opening. We offer vodka cocktails, pickled veggies and eggs, charcuterie and cheese boards, and spiked sweets from BluBoy and the Chocolate Moose.

We begin adding spirits to our lineup in rapid-fire succession—Spring: American Gin releases in April and our Songbird Coffee Liqueur premiers with the opening of our outdoor patio in May. Summer: Standard Dry Gin and Flora release a week apart in June, Pride label Vodka and Tiki Rum premier in July, and Bramble bursts forth in August. Fall/Winter: Nocino rounds out the year in November.

Our Vodka gets recognition at the 2015 MicroLiquors Spirits Awards, winning Triple Gold – Best in Show.

2016

This year brings another big change from the Indiana Legislature. Thanks to the lobbying and bill-writing efforts of Jeff Wuslich, Indiana allows Sunday carryout liquor sales from artisan distilleries. Sunday liquor sales had been outlawed in Indiana for nearly a century. The first bottle of hard alcohol sold on a Sunday since prohibition was here.

We begin distribution in Kentucky, kicking off with a launch party in Louisville with Good Folks Coffee Roasters. Good Folks provides the coffee beans for our Kentucky-distributed Songbird Coffee Liqueur blend.

The flock welcomes Robyn Wirkerman as our new general manager!

On a crisp Friday in October, we release Bloomington’s first bourbon, our single barrel bourbon! We sell out of carryout bottles in two hours. The bar’s stock depletes by the end of the weekend.

We release four more spirits this year—Lake House Spiced Rum, a custom Spiced Pineapple Tiki Rum for C3 Bar, Black Bear Bierschnaps, and Terra Gin. The development of Terra was a collaboration with Lior Lev Sercarz, a master spice blender in New York City.

2017

In March, Lior Sev Sercarz visits Cardinal Spirits to lead spice blending workshops with members of our Bloomington culinary community. The event, named Spicecamp, inaugurates our annual visitor series of influential makers from the worlds of food, drink, and distilling.

Terra Gin garners heaps of national attention this year, most notably from The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal.

In March, Lior Sev Sercarz visits us to lead a spice blending workshop with members of our Bloomington culinary community. The event, named Spicecamp, inaugurates our annual visitor series of influential makers from the worlds of food, drink, and distilling.

Cardinal Spirits also spreads its wings and flies into the Chicago, Michigan, Tennessee, and New York markets. Our Terra Gin is included in a feature cocktail at the Three Michelin Star rated restaurant Le Bernardin in New York.

2018

In 2018 we completed a massive bottling run for Big Red Liquors. We worked around the clock and to distill and bottle more booze in a just few weeks than we had previously completed in several months. This was the beginning of our contract bottling business, which has continued to grow significantly throughout 2018.

We were very excited to begin distributing through RNDC after parting ways with Carrol Wine and Spirits in February.

We entered six new states and our nation’s capital—Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maryland, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Wisconsin and D.C.!


4. Exciting Firsts

[Bulleted by award emojis–trophy, star, or medal]

? Bloomington’s first distillery

? Bloomington’s first Bourbon

? Indiana’s first bottle of hard alcohol sold on a Sunday

? Local culinary community’s first visitor series, with Lior Sev Sercarz’s Spice Camp

? Indiana’s first bottle of Pride Vodka dedicated to raising awareness and financial support for local LGBTQ+ rights

Hello, bird!

Welcome to Cardinal Spirits! We’re glad you’re here. Many of us have been working together since 2013 building this thing, and now you’re a part of it. We thought it would be nice to lay out a sort of roadmap for how we work together here. Before long you’ll start fitting in and figuring things out, and won’t miss out on any inside jokes. Just know that if Jeff says something with a smile and then pauses, it was probably a joke and you should feel free to laugh.

Thanks for joining our little flock.

Adam & Jeff