Photo: Mike Newton via Kickstarter |
With a combined 26 years in
the drinks industry, the trio behind this cocktail-centric campaign is ready to
break into the bitters biz. With a little more than $1,000 off their goal and a
little less than two weeks to go, San Diego-based RX Bitters Co. hopes to
introduce its vanilla-forward aromatic bitters, potent sarsaparilla and springy
cherry-apple bitters to the cocktail community at large. Click here for more info.
It’s no secret that Portland,
Oregon, has a thing for beer. And the video-savvy crew behind this campaign
wants to share the city’s ongoing quest for the perfect pint via webseries and
podcasts with beer enthusiasts around the globe. They’re still a ways away from
their $10,000 goal, but with about a month to go, they have plenty of time to garner
the needed support. Click here for more info.
The sweet swag alone is
reason enough to support this coffee-fueled campaign that hopes to convert an
old van into a “rolling craft coffee oasis” (complete with a custom pourover
bar and espresso machine) and hit the road spreading the gospel of great coffee
at festivals and farmers markets around the country. Pledge $199 or more and
score a wooden pourover stand handcarved by Bonlife’s WWII veteran grandfather,
Papo; pledge $2,500 or more and join them on the cross-country coffee tour; and
pledge $3,500 and score an epic origin trip to a coffee farm in Central
America. Click here for more info.
Having a pub-fresh pint at
home used to mean spending weekends building a bulky kegerator only to have the
beer go flat before you could finish it. But Denver-based Robert Scott has
designed an ingenious way to pour pillow-capped pints at home. His TapIt Cap
turns an ordinary growler into a miniature dispenser for fresh, frothy beer
with plastic tubing, CO2 and some clever engineering, but only if he’s able
meet his $80,000 goal. Click here for more info.
The lush farmlands of New
York state are fertile grounds for hops, as the generations-old Szaro Farms
discovered when they came across some wild vines taking root along an old barn.
Szaro has since successfully transplanted several rhizomes and is hoping to
raise funds to grow its hop yard, which will in turn provide farm-fresh hops to
a host of local breweries. Click here for more info.