KOVAL Distillery sits in a converted warehouse on Ravenswood Avenue in Chicago’s Ravenswood industrial corridor, where husband-and-wife team Robert and Sonat Birnecker launched Chicago’s first distillery since the mid-1800s in 2008. Robert left his academic career in economics while Sonat stepped away from her work as a clinical psychologist, both drawn to distilling after Sonat’s family history in Austria’s distilling tradition and a transformative trip to Robert’s ancestral home in Germany. They gutted a 1920s brick warehouse and installed custom Austrian copper stills, creating Chicago’s first grain-to-bottle distillery where they mill organic grains on-site and bottle everything by hand.
The Birneckers didn’t just want to make whiskey—they wanted to challenge American whiskey conventions entirely. Instead of following traditional mash bill formulas, they craft single-grain whiskeys using 100% of one grain type, from millet and oat to spelt and wheat, sourcing organic grains from Midwest farms. Their approach strips away the complexity of blended mash bills to showcase individual grain characteristics, a philosophy that put them at odds with established distillery practices but earned them recognition from spirits competitions worldwide. Sonat handles the business operations while Robert focuses on production, though both remain hands-on in every aspect from mashing to bottling.
The tasting room occupies the front section of their production facility, where floor-to-ceiling windows let you watch the actual distilling process while sampling their lineup. You’re not touring a showroom—you’re inside a working distillery where the stills are running, grain dust settles on surfaces, and the air carries the sweet smell of fermenting mash. The space feels more like an artisan workshop than a polished visitor center, with concrete floors, exposed brick walls, and the constant hum of production equipment creating an atmosphere that’s authentically industrial rather than sanitized for tourists.