I'll make this as non long story as I can:
I have been a lover of mead for years. I have been helping make and making mead for about a year. I am absolutely in love with it. I have given out samples to a lot of friends and friends of friends and all of them agree it is fantastic and they wanted to buy it. I told them I am unable to sell to them legally. I have had dozens and dozens of people push for me to get the licensing to be able to sell it. I have decided: I love doing this enough that I want to do it.
I am a piercer in my main profession and that allots me a good deal of free time. I am also a renny (I go to renfaires a LOT). Through my connections to one of the local renfaires they have informed me if I get the license to sell mead commercially, they will all but exclusively carry my mead. That would be a guaranteed 100-300 bottles of sales just in the summer.
My wife as well has been pushing me to do this because it is something I am good at and has seen how many sales I have been unable to make due to legal concerns (somewhere in the ballpark of 500 bottles since November).
I already read up on how to go about getting the Federal Permit through the ttb (A thousand dollar bond, permit fees, taxes on a per-bottle basis, get inspection done, etc.). I cannot for the life of me find where the hell my states application is on the internet, nor even a HINT of a lead to find who to ask. Hence why I turned to here for that. I live in Kentucky and would love any assistance, advice, criticism, what-have-you anyone could offer up in this especially the who to contact department.
I did discover from what I can find, though, my state allows commercial business to be done out of a home as long as there is no direct-harm or disruption being caused by the business. The TTB's stance on this for alcohol production is "Whatever's clever, you paid your taxes".
Also: I am not attempting to make a big-business out of this. Just me, my mead, and local businesses I have easy-in's at and my local renfaire.
Any help at all would be incredibly appreciated.
I have been a lover of mead for years. I have been helping make and making mead for about a year. I am absolutely in love with it. I have given out samples to a lot of friends and friends of friends and all of them agree it is fantastic and they wanted to buy it. I told them I am unable to sell to them legally. I have had dozens and dozens of people push for me to get the licensing to be able to sell it. I have decided: I love doing this enough that I want to do it.
I am a piercer in my main profession and that allots me a good deal of free time. I am also a renny (I go to renfaires a LOT). Through my connections to one of the local renfaires they have informed me if I get the license to sell mead commercially, they will all but exclusively carry my mead. That would be a guaranteed 100-300 bottles of sales just in the summer.
My wife as well has been pushing me to do this because it is something I am good at and has seen how many sales I have been unable to make due to legal concerns (somewhere in the ballpark of 500 bottles since November).
I already read up on how to go about getting the Federal Permit through the ttb (A thousand dollar bond, permit fees, taxes on a per-bottle basis, get inspection done, etc.). I cannot for the life of me find where the hell my states application is on the internet, nor even a HINT of a lead to find who to ask. Hence why I turned to here for that. I live in Kentucky and would love any assistance, advice, criticism, what-have-you anyone could offer up in this especially the who to contact department.
I did discover from what I can find, though, my state allows commercial business to be done out of a home as long as there is no direct-harm or disruption being caused by the business. The TTB's stance on this for alcohol production is "Whatever's clever, you paid your taxes".
Also: I am not attempting to make a big-business out of this. Just me, my mead, and local businesses I have easy-in's at and my local renfaire.
Any help at all would be incredibly appreciated.