New World Distillery sits in Eden, Utah, a small mountain town tucked into the Wasatch Range just east of Ogden. Founded in 2014 by Jason Barrett and Joe Osborne, two guys who started making whiskey in a garage and turned their hobby into Utah’s first legal distillery since Prohibition. Barrett, a former tech executive, and Osborne, who worked in construction, spent years perfecting their recipes before convincing local officials that a distillery could work in conservative Utah. They opened their doors in a converted warehouse space, producing bourbon, rye, and vodka using traditional methods and locally sourced grains when possible.
The journey wasn’t easy – Utah’s liquor laws are notoriously complex, and Barrett and Osborne had to navigate a maze of regulations just to get their federal and state licenses. They started small with a 250-gallon copper still from Vendome Copper & Brass Works, the same company that builds stills for major Kentucky distilleries. What began as weekend batches has grown into a full production operation, though they’ve kept the hands-on approach that defined their garage days. Barrett handles the business side while Osborne focuses on production, and they’ve built a reputation for making honest whiskey without shortcuts or gimmicks.
Visitors find a working distillery that feels more like a workshop than a polished tourist attraction. The space is functional and unpretentious, with exposed beams and concrete floors that smell like fermenting grain and aging oak. You can see the entire operation from the tasting room, and tours let you get close enough to the stills to feel the heat. It’s not fancy, but there’s something authentic about watching Barrett or Osborne explain their process while checking fermentation tanks or adjusting cuts on the still.