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freeze distillation, honeyjack
Mark R > wrote:
>"Steve Peek" > wrote in message >> "Denny Conn" > wrote in message >> Wrong, it is illegal to concentrate alcohol in any way in the US. >>> As far as I know, it's concentration, not distillation, so it's legal. > If that's the case then we're really getting into a gray area > because isn't that what all of us are doing when we "control" > a process that would occur naturally anyway? > > I guess in that case the brewing laws that allow me 200 gallons > are basically just a tax exemption. Darn, I'm starting to feel > like "big business!" Does that automatically make me a > republican? :-o Throughout the United States, its Territories, and its Protectorates, anyone can produce any quantity of any type of alcoholic beverages AS LONG AS THEY FILE ALL THE FORMS, GET ALL THE APPROVALS, AND PAY ALL THE TAXES. Because in the end. it is all about taxes. Whether or not that makes you a Republican is a matter of personal choice. Many States, Territories, and Protectorates offer regulatory forbearance of these forms, approvals, and taxes for low-level producers of certain beverages that are restricted from market transactions. Note: The standard annual tax forbearance is 50 gallons of beer and/or of wine per adult with a limit of two adults per household. Thus, the homebrewer would have a tax exempt production of 200 750ml bottles per year. Please do not laugh, but let us presume accurate recordkeeping. There is a legitimate question of whether Mead comes under beer or wine. IMRHO Mead is no more a honey wine than beer is a malt wine. It does occur to me that a homebrewer who set aside 100 750ml bottles annually for 40 years might leave an estate of 4000 bottles of premium aged beverages. If those bottles were inherited by someone who was not the second adult in the household, could those bottles be legally sold at auction subject possibly to only State sales tax. I am taking this what I consider to be an interesting tax question over to misc.taxes.moderated. Dick |
freeze distillation, honeyjack
On Sun, 24 Aug 2008 19:46:48 +0000 (UTC), > wrote:
> There is a legitimate question of whether Mead comes > under beer or wine. IMRHO Mead is no more a honey wine > than beer is a malt wine. If it really came down to that, my assumption is that they would look at alcohol levels to decide which category it fell under. John. |
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