NOLA Distillery sits on Tchoupitoulas Street in New Orleans’ Lower Garden District, housed in a converted warehouse that feels authentically industrial rather than polished tourist attraction. Founded in 2014 by James Karst, a former financial advisor who ditched Wall Street for whiskey barrels, this operation represents one of the first legal distilleries to open in New Orleans since Prohibition. Karst partnered with master distiller Todd Leopold (formerly of Leopold Bros. in Colorado) to create small-batch bourbon, rye, and gin using Louisiana ingredients wherever possible.
The journey wasn’t smooth sailing. Karst spent nearly two years navigating New Orleans’ complex zoning laws and convincing city officials that a distillery could work in a residential-adjacent area. The 8,000-square-foot facility features a 500-gallon copper still imported from Germany, and they age their whiskey in new American oak barrels stored in Louisiana’s punishing heat and humidity. Their head distiller, Sarah Martinez, came from Sazerac and brings serious credibility to their bourbon program.
When you visit, you’re walking through working production space where they’re actually making spirits, not a Disney version of a distillery. The tasting room feels like an extension of the warehouse rather than a separate experience, with concrete floors, exposed beams, and the constant smell of fermenting grain. They produce about 1,200 bottles per month, focusing on bourbon and rye that shows Louisiana terroir through local corn and the aggressive aging climate that accelerates maturation.