
Transcript
Ferris Bueller & Spirits (Hour 2)
Nite Lite with Pete Schwaba and Greg Bach · Tue Jul 1, 2025
Broadcasting live from the Civic Media Studios in Green Bay.
This is Night Light with Peach Waba.
Your inside source on everything entertainment from Wisconsin to Hollywood.
And now a guy who prefers to travel by catapult, Peach Waba.
Welcome to Night Light, ladies and gentlemen.
I am Pete Schwabba.
Welcome, welcome.
Hope you're having a great Tuesday.
We are inching closer to the Fourth of July weekend, a holiday weekend, one of the most probably festive holidays we have here in America in terms of things we look forward to, long weekends, et cetera, et cetera, just kind of throwing caution to the wind, eating and drinking like fools and celebrating our nation's birth and independence.
We have a great show tonight, folks.
We are gonna be talking, I thought this was perfect for the 4th of July because the 4th of July is the kind of holiday where you stand around a keg, you have some cocktails, you watch some fireworks, but it's kind of a, I don't mean this in an unsafe or unhealthy way, but it's a drinking holiday, it's a summer booze holiday, and what better guest to have on the radio tonight, on Night Light?
than a distiller.
Conrad, you know who you have coming in?
Sturgeon.
Sturgeon Spirits.
There we go.
Distillery founder, Carl Lowenstein will join us here in the studio at 635.
He makes everything.
And I'm fascinated by the whole distilling process because it looks very cool.
I just think it's a process, a lot of work and care goes into it, and ever since I watched the show Mash, where Hawkeye and Trapper would make their own booze in the tent, even before I drank, I was fascinated at the process.
And especially with whiskey and bourbon and the barrels and all that kind of stuff.
I find the whole process really interesting.
So I thought what better and this is a great week to have a distiller on the show.
Carl will be here at 635.
I have a host of questions for him.
And I'm sure he will enjoy answering them.
I talked to him on the phone the other day and he's also a UW.
Oshkosh Professor.
So we'll talk to Carl about what he brings to each craft by way of the other.
And he will be here at 635 in the studio.
And then at 735, in honor of Cameron Frye's birthday, actor Alan Ruck turns, I believe, 55 today.
He played Cameron Frye in Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
So we will have a little discussion about Ferris Bueller's Day Off at 735 with our pal Lisa Hale, the host of New Isco Weekend here on WGBW and WISS.
If you haven't checked out our news magazine show that Lisa hosts, it's really fun and there's a different theme every week.
It's a great show.
Conrad contributes to it every week.
I do a classic movie pick every week.
It's just a really, a little treasure we have here in Northeast Wisconsin.
The Northeast Wisconsin branch of Civic Media.
Lisa will be here at 735 and we were already Lisa every time I email Lisa I think I told you this con she Comes back with movie lines when I tell her what my classic movie pick of the week will be She has a ton of movie lines.
It like she's apparently seen everything She dwarfs my knowledge of movies and it's kind of emasculating But we'll have a fun talk with Lisa at 735 about a great movie and a great summertime movie to Ferris Bueller
Ferris Bueller's Day Off came out in 1987 or 88.
I gotta go to the Google.
But it was a summer movie and it was just a great... I think I saw it like five times that summer.
So we'll talk to Lisa about that.
That'll be fun.
And we'll talk fireworks.
What did you find out about fireworks?
The history.
They go back really far.
Yeah, they do.
I believe it was, you know, made in from...
China,
right?
Yeah, China with gunpowder, I believe.
Right.
Yeah.
And I mean, it's personally, I'm a C one type one time a year guy.
I
don't know.
I
don't go crazy for fireworks.
How about you?
Same.
I don't we've been lucky.
There's we have a neighbor.
Our neighbor Marty has put on this little fireworks show every year.
I don't think he's doing it this year.
But we
the people in our neighborhood just kind of walk down to the water and we get our own little personal show, which is fine.
But my mom loves fireworks.
And she said, well, if Marty's not doing him this year, maybe we could all get in the car and go over to Menominee, cross the river to Michigan.
And when you do that, you might as well be in downtown Chicago.
I'm not fighting traffic in a small town.
There are hundreds of cars and I'm not doing it.
And I don't like fireworks that much.
Like they're beautiful.
I love them.
But to be honest,
I like watching them on TV over the mall in Washington that they do every year.
That's fun.
I like looking across the bay and seeing Dorr County's displays.
That's a little bit of a distance, but you can still, I mean, it's just a fun show, but that's, that's my level of interest.
I don't, I don't have to sit there under the fireworks for two hours.
Thank you, Wascom.
It was like that too.
It was, you know, there's cars everywhere.
Luckily for me, I lived in town.
So I could, if I wanted to, I could walk to it.
Yeah, that's the way to go.
But then you have to find a seat.
Right.
And
in Kiewaskam, they do it on a hill.
Okay.
Like, that's where people sit.
And then a little bit across the grass is where they start shooting off fireworks.
It's in a park.
Yeah.
And it's so hard to find an actual spot in there.
Right.
On that hill.
I mean, it's pretty
big.
It sounds kind
of cool.
I mean, it was cool.
But it's like, you've seen them, they don't really change that much every year.
Right.
It's fireworks.
They're going to do the same thing.
I don't know they do the same thing and every year you hear the ooh Yeah, I saw this the last 30 years in a row.
This is this really new and I know I sound like a Baham but fireworks are beautiful I love them in a baseball game or when it's not expected or something like that, but I just I Now that my kids are older.
I used to brave those groups
Especially when we lived in LA, it was more of a hassle.
But even in a small town, you know, when you got to get your spot, like you said, and there are, maybe I'm exaggerating, but I don't think I am.
I bet there were years when there have been over 100 or 200 cars, which in a small town creates a bottleneck, you know?
And I just don't, I don't know.
I'm
kind of a bot humbug with this too.
Like, I don't know, I just never really liked fireworks that much.
I'd go to a temporary other game with my brother and some of his friends and they'd be like we got to stay for fireworks after like why
See that I would do if you're already there.
I know I'm like sure bring it, but we can beat
the traffic, you know As soon as we get in our heart how are we gonna get out guys?
That's great Yeah, but I again, I'm not anti fire.
I'm anti crowd, you know my brother and my dad
got in the car on Father's Day and went to a Cubs game from Marinette, Wisconsin.
They drove four hours to Wrigley Field and four hours home the same day.
Maybe something's wrong with me.
I'm not doing that.
I wouldn't do that either.
I've been to hundreds of baseball games.
I love it.
And, you know, if I could jump on the L or if I lived an hour away, maybe I would do that.
But then they're both lawyers and there'd be a ton of legal talk and I have no interest on that.
That sounds like a fun car ride.
Yeah, exactly.
Let's talk more.
Let's talk more about torts.
Um, anyway, again, I don't mean to sound like about humbucker.
I actually, when I was a kid, there was a kid in our neighborhood who blew half of his thumb off with a firework.
So I've always had this kind of bias.
There's a kid who I know who did
that.
Really?
Well, his whole hand actually.
He blew his whole hand off?
All of his fingers.
Like an M80 or something?
I don't know.
I just, I, we weren't that close,
but like
I heard about it.
We should add him on for our handshake No, I and that always like not to me like they didn't freak me out whenever I was around someone doing fireworks I'd kind of keep my distance, but whatever I didn't mind watching but it scared me for my kids like I was always worried they were gonna be at some idiot's house who didn't know what they were doing and I always thought about that kid in our neighborhood that blew half his thumb off yeah after the and he was like nine Mess around with fireworks in the park.
Yeah, that's something
you know I don't like those what are those little like things you can throw
And they make that snapping noise.
You
know what I mean?
Yeah, right.
I had a friend that would just chuck on my people.
I knew kids that would put them in animals.
It's awful.
Yeah.
In Marinette, several years ago, down by the water, I caught some kids putting fireworks in toads.
And I'm like, get out of here, you future serial killers.
That's
crazy.
It's so awful.
And I looked online to find some
fireworks accidents because I thought there'd be some funny ones, but it's all just horrifying.
Yeah, no, it's what
it's all about.
You know,
no, that's terrible.
All right.
So I promise the show will go uphill from here, folks.
We'll try to we'll try to turn this around.
I have a piece of glass in my foot, which is kind of that sucks.
It does.
And it's not a big it's like a little shard.
It's a tiny shard worst that hurts a little bit, and I can't find it.
And I know that something was broken on the kitchen floor, and I'm sure somebody swept it up and didn't quite get everything.
So now, what do I do?
Like, I know you're not a doctor, but like, do I wait for it to pass like a kidney stone or is it going to get
infected?
I don't know
what to do.
This is what I'll tell you.
The one thing that I've done to help me get a splinters or something like that is leave my foot in the bathtub until it gets to that little like soggy state.
Oh, and then go digging around
and then it kind of like goes out a little bit.
Here's the problem.
I haven't taken a bath since 1974.
Well,
you don't have to go actually just put your foot in
there.
Put my foot in some water.
Okay.
And then you get tweezers and exactly.
What are you saying?
It works its way out.
Yeah, because of the heat or the.
I don't know.
I
don't know.
It just works for me.
Okay.
I've done
it with my hand.
Medical opinion.
I've done it
with
my
hand.
All right.
I gotta do something.
It's starting to, it's starting to annoy me more than anything.
I'm not like bleeding profusely or anything.
Those are the worst though, those little tiny things that you can't
find.
The annoying, yeah.
But
they, you can feel it.
Exactly.
Did you say we missed a Steady Eddie text last night?
Yeah, last night he was talking about, or well you asked him, was it the Atlanta
Braves?
Oh
yeah.
Or the Milwaukee Braves.
And he's texting and saying the Milwaukee
Braves.
The Milwaukee Braves, okay.
Very good Steady Eddie.
That, that by the way.
Him just saying Milwaukee Braves is the shortest, steady eddy text we've ever received.
It is.
So we are going to get to our question of the night shortly.
We have a great one tonight, folks.
And I hope everybody, it's been so fun with the questions lately.
And last night we had great responses.
to our, who is the greatest athlete ever to wear a pro or college Wisconsin uniform.
And tonight we've got a good one too.
As I mentioned at 635, Carl Lowenstein will be here from Sturgeon.
Sturgent spirits distillery.
We're gonna talk distilling and spirits.
It's gonna be a lot of fun, especially right before the 4th of July.
So I think we should not waste any more time and get to our question of the night.
Let's talk about the question.
Okay, question.
Question.
Question.
Pregunta.
Question.
Question.
Okay, I have a question.
Questions.
This question.
Domanda.
Question.
Questions.
What drink will you be nursing?
on the 4th of July.
I mean, I'm not encouraging day drinking, but if there is a day you are going to day drink, it's going to be the 4th of July.
So what's a good drink to nurse?
You got to take your time, especially if you start early, before noon, post noon, whatever.
What's a good drink to nurse on the 4th of July?
Let's have an information exchange here and help each other out.
And I don't
Not while you're driving, you know, if you're staying in your neighborhood and you're just going to watch fireworks and cook out and you don't want to really cook out when you've been day drinking either, but what's a good drink to nurse on the 4th of July?
Responsibly.
Wisconsinably, I should say.
Well,
Wisconsinably and nursing don't really go hand
in hand.
The opposite ends.
Yeah.
Yeah, I know.
I don't know this one.
I like I said, I haven't had a drink in over a couple of years now But there was a slushy my the Murphy side of my family used to make my mom's relatives made this like I think it was brandy and ice It'll probably be something like that or margarita.
What about you?
So I just recently tried this new liney lining coogles a beer.
Yeah, I'm a shandy
No, I've had that many many of times It is a new flavor that they put out this year and it's limey lodge
Lime Lime and it's it's a Mexican lager with with like lime in it already pretty much.
Okay.
It's so good.
Really?
It's it's dynamite.
I'm gonna have some of those
That sounds fantastic.
That's heavy though.
Not really.
It's it's a little bit heavier than a corona I'd say
Alright, fair enough.
So that's our question, folks.
Please be part of the fun.
We'll read your text on the radio.
What drink will you be nursing on the 4th of July?
Great night for this, because we've got an actual distiller, Carl Lohenstein, in the studio tonight at 6.35.
We're coming right back to read your text.
It's Peach Wabba and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio Network.
Welcome
back.
That's a great summer song.
Because Back to the Future was another great summer movie.
I remember Summer of 1985.
That's another film.
I saw I just couldn't get enough of it.
I saw it like three or four times loved that song by Huey Lewis the power of love and I found this Last night of the night before Huey Lewis was talking about that song that song power of love and why it worked in that movie and I thought it was a great point and I'll discuss it Let's hear the clip and then we'll come out of it and discuss
we weren't allowed to put power love on our record
except in the rest of the world.
So we never, you know, of all of our songs, we probably made less money on Power Love.
So crazy.
Actually, Power Love on the surface had nothing to do with the movie.
The lyric has nothing to do with the movie.
And there's no real love object in the movie, even.
The way these things work best is when the song stands on its own, and then the movie stands on its own.
If the song is clearly written for the movie, it kind of diminishes the song somehow.
First Power Love was nominated for a Grammy and Oscar and the whole
nine yards.
One nothing.
Zero.
I was so frustrated.
No Oscar, no Grammy.
We're nominated for like 10 Grammys.
One, Bruce Springsteen just killed us.
Nine for or something for Born in the USA.
That's a power of love.
That's such a great point.
Like the movies where the music works, he's so right about that.
Like they weren't written for the movie.
Jay Leno used to do this great joke about how he hated movies.
Like when they would do the Oscars and movies were nominated and they were right.
and production numbers for the films, even though they didn't have production numbers.
And he would do like this, oh, those Amish, aren't they farmish?
And it was like so bad.
But I find that too, when they write songs for movies, they can be really cheesy.
But the power of love just worked on every level and back to the future.
Such a great song.
That was a great interview.
We have a great question tonight, folks.
What drink will you nurse?
on the 4th of July.
I assume you'll start a little sooner than you typically do.
So what are you gonna drink?
Obviously you're not gonna start with the shots at 10 a.m., hopefully not.
Well, Conrad might, but you're working that day, right?
I don't
know.
We've got Tom from New Berlin says, drone shows will replace fireworks shows, but together they will be spectacular.
That's interesting.
Yeah.
That's great Tom.
Thank you.
You're probably right about that and there will be purists who won't want that but Tyler from Wisconsin Rapids says the first fireworks was really the Big Bang and nobody was there for the show Well said You know the Big Bang Started with something a little molecule like I think smaller than a grain of sand And I remember when I read this and it was so dense because everything that's here came out of that
that if you put it in the palm of your hand, it would take you into different dimensions.
Mind-boggling.
That's my science knowledge for the day.
Seriously, it was a book I read.
I think it was called... It was a book about string theory by a guy named Brian Green.
It was called The Elegant Universe.
And it was so fascinating.
String theory is fascinating.
But you read it... I had to read like...
every sentence like three times.
I
know those
books.
Yeah, and I was fascinated, so I stuck with it, but I was like, wow, I am not smart enough to be reading this.
Tom, again, from Maryland says, Pete, it will be, it will fester and pull it like a man clean it good.
Oh, the glass in my
foot.
So it will fester.
You need to pull it out and then clean it good.
I'm glad Tom's not my father.
Sit down, boy, and pull that glass out of your foot.
Liz from Sun Prairie says she's gonna have tequila and soda with a lime or a splash of apparel.
Am I saying that right?
Yep, you got it.
Or another liqueur to give it a bit of flavor.
Loving your show, no to handshakes, no to fireworks, unless you can't hear them.
A lot of people don't like fireworks because of their pets.
Yeah.
And that's
something to
consider.
That's something too.
Thank you, Liz.
Great text.
I would shake your hand, Liz.
I'm just saying that.
I'm not saying I love handshakes, but I'm not a total curmudgeon.
And we got steady Eddie's text.
I want to talk about this show I've been watching called Department Q. I recommend it.
It's by the same guy who wrote The Queen's Gambit, and he wrote Minority Report, the Tom Cruise film.
And it's a really good show.
It's a detective show set in, I think, Belfast, Ireland.
Actually, I don't...
It's kind of ambiguous, but it's definitely somewhere in the UK or Ireland.
And it's a really good show.
A good detective show about a guy who unearths a cold case and he's trying to find this girl who he thinks is still alive.
And she is, but she's been missing for like four years.
And the show starts with him getting shot with his partner.
The partner gets shots and
gets shot in the spine, the bullet goes through the partner in this guy's jaw and out the other side of his neck.
They both almost die, but neither one of them does.
So he's dealing with the trauma of this horrible shooting.
He doesn't know who shot him, and his partner is paralyzed.
But they're both still working in case.
It's a fascinating show, and I'm really digging it.
But it's not one of those shows that you have to watch.
Some shows you have, like, oh, by the way, I started White Lotus Season 3.
Oh, there
you go.
Two episodes in.
How do you feel?
Patrick Schwarzenegger's character is really creepy.
Oh, so creepy.
I know it gets worse.
It gets
way worse.
But I like it.
I like Mike White's phenomenal.
All those
shows are
great.
They're just
well-written.
I love the three women who talk
and
like, oh, she's great.
She's great.
But you know what?
They always try to get a dig in on their friend.
It's just really good.
I'm only two episodes in.
But I highly recommend Department Q. Very good stuff.
Um, we've got some texts we'll get to, uh, let's go to PJs on the stream.
He says soak foot in bucket of warm.
He's not using any articles.
He says soak foot in bucket of warm water with Epsom salt.
It will draw out the sliver.
It's glass though.
Will that work for glass?
I would just try to see if it works because I've had it.
I've had it work.
Carl's a distiller.
Let's ask him.
PJ also says I might pick up a pack of Sensei High Seltzers.
These are available in lemonade and strawberry lemonade flavors and come in four packs, eight packs, and 16 packs with varying THC concentrations.
Keep them all there.
PJ, if you're really gonna nurse them, do it right, right?
All right, we'll read more of your texts as the show goes on.
Coming up next, we're gonna talk spirits with Carl Lohenstein.
It's Pete Schwabba and Nightlight.
Great to have you with me on this Tuesday night on the Civic Media Radio Network.
I'm Pete Schwab, and this is Nightlight.
Great to have you with me on this Tuesday as we barrel toward a big holiday here in America the 4th of July.
Can't wait.
We'll be taking some time off here, but we'll have shows on throughout the end of this week and Monday.
We have some really fun, best of shows put together for you guys, so hopefully you can still get a dose of nightlight if you so choose during our time away.
PJ on the stream says, yes, that Epsom salt method will work for the shard of glass.
The salt is a natural drawing agent.
Science.
Now, here's the danger is he could put that and I'd go, okay, that's great.
I don't know, PJ.
He could drive a forklift and there's nothing wrong with that, but does he, you know, people just believe people.
You know, it's based on experience.
PJ put a piece of glass in his foot and got it out this way?
Yeah.
All right, either way, I appreciate the advice, PJ.
I'm sure you're a reputable human being and a great texture, but I don't know.
It kind of scares me.
Rob from Green Bay says, I'll be enjoying Athletic Brewing Company's Free Wave Hazy IPA.
That's from Rob in Green Bay.
That sounds lovely.
Tyler from Wisconsin Rapids says, I will be nursing the intergalactic garble blaster served only at the restaurant at the end of the galaxy.
Prost.
Wow, I don't know what to make of that.
Tyler sounds like he's already having some fun for the holiday.
All right, keep those texts coming, folks.
What drink will you be nursing on the 4th of July?
That is tonight's question of the night here at Nightlight.
We will read your texts on the radio as they come in.
Right now, I'm very excited to welcome my first guest of the night.
He is Carl Lowenstein, and he's the founder of Sturgeon Spirits Distillery.
And check out the website, folks.
Listen to the interview, but check out the website.
I cannot even believe.
how much booze you make.
Oh, we have a great time.
And thanks so much for having me on.
It's my pleasure.
Thank you for being here.
And it's great to have you actually in the studio.
How was the drive up?
You know, once you get past the construction in Appleton, it's a straight shot.
Oh, OK.
It's really less than an hour to get up here.
It's no
big deal.
Oshkosh is a great city.
Have
you born and raised?
No, actually, I grew up in Iowa.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Okay, so tell us how you ended up in Oshkosh.
Well, basically for work.
So I think, well, I taught at the university at UW Oshkosh for 23 years and that was the first full-time academic job that I had.
So that's where you go.
Academics is weird that way.
Yeah.
When you get a job, you go there and in many cases you just stay.
Yeah.
And it worked out well for you.
It did.
You decided to stay.
You could put a distillery anywhere.
I imagine Wisconsin's a good place for one.
It is in
Tozash, because we didn't have one, and it's a booming industry, and they're popping up all over the place.
Absolutely.
All right, so let's jump right in, Carl.
This is exciting.
I was saying at the beginning of the show, my first not experience, but awareness of distilling and the process of how alcohol is made
was from the show MASH because Hawkeye and Trapper had their own still in their tent.
And I thought that was fascinating.
I remember trying to watch going, how do they do that?
So I don't know much about the distilling process.
I've had another distiller on about a year ago, and I find it fascinating.
But let's do a deep dive here because you're just the guy to talk to.
Tell us, first of all, about your business, Sturgeon Spirits.
So we are a little craft facility.
We're on 2663 Oregon Street in Oshkosh.
We've got our own production facility and tasting room and cocktail lounge.
We just opened a new event space.
So we're having parties and bridal showers and a whole bunch of other things.
And we've been at it now for just about two and a half years.
Wow.
And I have been retired for about one and a half.
So I worked the first year.
just in case it didn't come together for me.
But it came together.
It's going well, absolutely.
Okay.
I love my retirement.
Yeah.
Are you working harder now on what you're doing now than you were when you were
teaching?
Well, it's a very different kind of work.
I mean, essentially, this was my hobby.
I was distilling for probably 10 years in my garage.
My wife kicked me out of the house and said, you'll blow it up if you distill in the house.
So I'm outside in the garage and having a great time with that.
And then I did.
I got to...
long way in my teaching career.
And I said, I need something new.
And why not turn your hobby into a business?
Good for you.
That's really
impressive.
So, all right.
So, did being a history professor, were you able to bring any of that knowledge to the distilling process or to this new business?
Because I was looking, I asked that because on your website, you're very knowledgeable about all bourbons and whiskies and everything.
I'm sure you didn't teach that at Oshkosh, but you seem to have a love of history.
No, I think distilling is an incredibly historical...
discipline, our business, because what I mean, there is nothing more deeply embedded in American history than drinking.
And so it is such a core feature.
If you think about the parts of American history, the first rebellion against US government was the whiskey rebellion, because they didn't like the taxes of the put on the farmers to pay for the whiskey.
And of course, prohibition is just this weird moment in our history.
So nothing I learned as a professor.
really came over the skills I learned at how to how to read and how to do research and I just read books, right?
I love to just experiment and do all that stuff and Do it and that kind of work is really what you do as a history professor.
It's
so different though than what you did That's what I guess fascinates me like you you're owning your own business now and you're kind of an artist You're making all these great drinks
And teaching is so different.
I'm kind of fascinated.
Well,
that's true.
I've always been the kind of guy who just sticks his hands in and goes, right?
I love to learn new stuff.
I love to keep experimenting.
The fun part about distilling is there's always something new.
And the same thing about being a small businessman, right?
There's always a new thing to figure out, right?
I'm doing marketing.
I'm doing accounting.
I'm doing distilling.
I'm making cocktails.
I'm doing...
you know, construction supervision, you name it, I have done it in the last two and a half years.
And I
love it.
Let me ask you this, is it hard to learn?
Like if people are listening, and I'm sure you don't want everybody to do this, but it seems very involved in like a detail oriented process.
Is it hard to learn how to distill?
I think distilling is...
actually easier than making beer.
Okay.
Because one of the great things about distilling is that everything is at such high alcohol concentrations, it's sterile.
I don't know if you ever talk to a brewer, right?
They have to worry about bacterial contamination and dirty lines and all this stuff and oxygen and all these things that contaminate your product and makes it not taste good.
I can take whatever I make
I run it through the still.
It comes off the still at 80% alcohol or 90% alcohol.
It's sterile and it's clean.
And in fact, I was just talking to some of my friends at Fifth Ward Brewery in Oshkosh and they brought me some beer that they had too much of and they'd had some contamination problems.
I distilled it.
It made it terrific.
Oh, wow.
Whiskey, I mean, I would say it's a terrific whiskey.
We put in a barrel for a year and it's just
it's delicious.
That's fascinating.
How long does like because I was telling you before we came on the air that Flakes Brewhouse in Madison made a nightlight beer for the Wisconsin Film Festival called Hazeln Radio.
I want to say Dave, the brewmaster had it done maybe in two weeks, maybe three weeks.
How long is it more of a process when you're distilling spirits?
Well, actually
distilling is brewing with one more step.
So I make, I essentially make a beer and it's a whiskey mash or a corn mash or a rum mash or whatever.
I ferment that.
So the alcohol, the sugars get turned into alcohol.
Right.
And then I put it in my still.
Okay.
Right.
And with your brewing, you just turn it into alcohol and then you serve it.
I do one more step.
And so for me, I can do a batch in a week from start to the spirit coming off the still.
But the thing about it is it comes off the still clear.
No matter what you make, it's clear and whatever proof you want it to be at the still, it comes off clear.
And the color that's in a whiskey comes from the barrel and the aging.
So that's why moonshine is clear, because that's fresh from the still, even though it's the same
recipe as a whiskey.
So the color of whiskey,
Scotch, Bourbon, whatever, is because of the barrel?
Yes.
It is absolutely crystal clear when it comes off the still.
So why do they say, and maybe there's nothing to do with the actual color then, but they say stay away from the brown, whether it's colas or like a whiskey, I think vodka is not as detrimental to your health.
Well, they're all pretty bad for you if you drink them straight.
That's why the cocktails are better But I think that's personal preference, but the one of the things about that
Well, we get a lot of detail, but whiskey usually comes off the still at a lower proof and therefore has more stuff left in it.
When you take vodka off the still, it's all the way up at 95% pure alcohol.
So there's no impurities left in that at all.
So it's super, super pure alcohol.
And that's where, and I think that's why vodka can have a smaller effect on you because there's less leftovers and esters and various other chemical compounds that pass through.
to the distilling process.
That makes a lot of sense.
Tell me about, if you would, the barrels, because, I mean, you say you use white oak barrels.
Right.
Do all, like, what's the perfect barrel to use to make a whiskey or a scotch or, you know, something like that?
Well, it's not, everything's an art.
That's one of the things I love about it, right?
There's no, there's the simple answer, which is there's a government rule that says you can't call it bourbon.
unless it's in a new American white oak barrel.
So if you get a bourbon, you know what kind of barrel, and it has to be in there for at least two years.
So there's a federal regulation defining what bourbon is.
For whiskies and scotches and all of those other things, there are rules, but you can use whatever barrel you might want.
But to have bourbon, you need to have that new white oak American barrel.
Why?
I don't know.
I think that I don't actually have a good answer to why it has to be that specifically.
I have a feeling it has to do with the industry as it developed to say when bourbon as an idea was coming into being, they said, we want to make sure it's really distinctive, and we want to do something that's really uniquely American.
And so putting in an American white oak barrel does impart a certain flavor, but it also is part of the thing that makes bourbon bourbon.
My guest is Carl Lowenstein.
He is the founder of Sturgeon Spirits Distillery in Oshkosh.
It is located at 2663 Oregon Street in Oshkosh.
They do tours, events, everything.
They have every kind of alcohol under the sun.
Go to the website and check out their website because you'll be blown away by all of the products they offer.
How long does it take?
to make good whiskey.
Let's say a good Irish whiskey, or you said bourbon has to stay for two years, and you've only been in business for barely that long.
Right, I have no bourbon to sell at bottles.
We have some really young stuff that we do, we use cocktails and tastings, but I don't sell it in a bottle because it's not ready yet.
But you're working on it's in sitting in barrels like I have a ton of barrels just sitting around waiting How
excited are you to taste that when it comes out that must be like something you look forward
to?
Oh, no, it's really exciting We taste it we do taste it every once in a while and I think it's getting really close And so the other thing you can do is big and small barrels and so I have some really small barrels.
Yeah, that will be faster We're gonna hit that two-year part and have a young bourbon that we will release But we're not we're not there yet.
I've tasted new whiskey
And it doesn't quite have the taste of how long do you have to let whiskey sit before it's really good and does that matter?
It does it totally matters and you know the obviously some people go for let it sit for 10 15 years Five is the kind of industry standard that it needs to be in a barrel for five years.
Okay kind of be again with bourbon without a caveat.
Yeah, but it there are so many variables that
it's hard to say and I think a lot of its individual tastes of what you like because like you know you can also over oak whiskey and that's like I don't know it tastes literally too oaky and not that not what I want and so there's a lot of you know fine tuning.
Carl Lowenstein is here he is the founder of Sturgeon Spirits Distillery and when we come back I'm going to ask him what the difference is between 18 year scotch
and 10 years scotch.
Let's start there and then we'll find out
all
the awesome stuff that they offer at Sturgeon Spirits.
It's Peach Wild by Nightlight.
We're coming right back on the Civic Media radio network.
Welcome
back.
This is Night Light with Beach Wabba.
Great to have you with me.
It's a Tuesday night edition of Night Light.
Slightly different than last night.
Kurt Newman of the Bo Deans here, that was fun.
And we had, who else do we have in the show counter?
That was a lot of fun.
Well, we had your buddy Nathan Deming.
I know.
I'm testing you.
And Jeffrey Curtis.
That was a great talk about film incentives coming to Wisconsin.
And tonight is no different, folks.
We have a great guest here in studio right now.
Lisa Hale will be here at 735.
We'll be talking about the movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off in honor of Cameron Fry's birthday.
It's Alan Ruck's birthday today.
So we thought that was a good night to do Ferris Bueller.
But before that, we are talking about Sturgeon Spirits Distillery and all the products they make.
The distiller is here in the studio, and he is the founder of Sturgeon Spirits.
Carl Loewenstein.
It's great to have you here.
Before we went to the break, I mentioned you gave a very funny answer about, but what is the difference really?
I had all these friends where I used to live that loved Scotch and turned me on to Scotch and they would drink 18 year old Scotch.
I don't even know what that goes for right now in terms of the cost, but I found a 10 year Scotch at Trader Joe's that I loved.
And to me, it tasted as good as anything I had.
What is the difference?
And is it like to the naked palate?
Is it that much different?
Well, I think my answer was silly, but it's basically true eight years.
So what happens is that whiskey sits in contact with a barrel for an additional eight years, which should mellow it out more, which there's a little more evaporation.
Less burn.
It should be have a little less burn, but.
I haven't had whiskey around that long, so I can't tell you from personal experience
how
much the difference is going to be.
I mean, I've tried some of those older whiskeys, and I tend to think that the mash overpowers the barrel when you get to that stage.
Because for me, I've noticed that barrels kind of get used up their character.
So after a certain amount of time, you're just not going to get that much.
more flavor out of the barrel, you're just kind of just letting it rest.
So it's kind of that resting that I think can change the complexion, but I don't I don't know the chemistry.
I'm not a chemist.
I'm a historian.
Yeah, don't I don't really know what's going on.
Do you like to drink?
I would assume you have a pretty good sense of all the stuff if you went into business.
Like you like good cocktail, where's your level of drinking?
Yeah, I always say I didn't go into this just because I wanted free booze.
But I really was into making it as a craft because what I did in my garage is I would make
liqueurs that I would give it gifts.
So in fact, I gave you a little sample of cranberry vodka, which was basically the first product I made at home.
Because
this is right there and you sweeten it a little bit.
It makes a great Cosmo.
You use it for Christmas gifts.
You know, you can make all sorts of really nice drinks.
And so I got into just making alcohol for cocktails.
Now, I like I like to drink.
I my favorite right now is we have this lavender gin.
I do a lavender gin and tonic, which I love every night.
And then, you know, we're always got something new, some new cocktails to just taste.
So, you
know, I'm going to hold this up here on the stream again.
This is a cranberry vodka from Sturgeon Spirits that Carl brought in and even the packaging.
It's very slick packaging, by the way, but how do you decide on how to package stuff?
The whole thing seems like it would be so time consuming.
You're retired.
Well, what I would say is I leaned on good people.
One of the
things that makes a business like this work is finding good people and work with them.
My brand design, my shape, my sturgeon, it was all designed by this amazing local design team in Oshkosh who made this lovely package that Quill Design Studios
put this
whole thing together.
And that became the basis for everything that we do.
I've hired an architect to make sure our building and our tasting room and our fit the kind of character that we wanted to create.
So at every step of the way, you find the right people, you can make this whole thing work.
It's a
great passion project for you.
It is.
Yeah.
So what's the most...
Tell us this first.
Where did the name Sturgeon spirits come from?
Well, I think it's a celebration of our community.
I mean, one of the things in the Lake Winnebago Basin and the Fox River and all through the area are these great, amazing primordial fish that has the weirdest fishing season you can possibly imagine, right?
A frozen lake and you spear them.
I mean, this is...
a phenomenon that you will see nowhere else in the world.
And I wanted to celebrate that.
And I'll tell you one more story, because I do like to tell stories.
So the house
I
bought when I moved to Oshkosh.
25 years ago was also built by Sturgeon poachers.
So I'm connected to the history of Sturgeon.
So the family that built this house, apparently, they actually started to put the control on Sturgeon fishing back in the 20s because the Dang Russians were taking all the caviar.
They
were fishing out the whole population for caviar.
And so they put this caps on, but my...
The house, the people who owned the house just kept right on fishing the sturgeon out of the lake.
They would had a smokehouse in the backyard, and then they would sell them out of their ice business.
Wow.
That's fascinating.
And what better mascot, so to speak, for your business than a sturgeon for a history professor?
Because they're so old, they're like prehistoric.
It says this ancient species made its first appearance about 100.
a million years ago.
Is it a hundred million?
A hundred million years ago.
Okay, in the upper Cretaceous period of the Mesozoic era, this is in the weeds here with your history stuff, but that's a great name.
And you guys do a lot.
for the community too, we'll get to that maybe after the news, but what's the most difficult spirit to make?
Like is there one that's finicky, like you have to be overly meticulous when you're distilling
it?
I haven't found anything that's been really hard to do.
I have a lot of, I have temperature control issues, right?
So one of the things you have to worry about is yeast is really picky.
You got to keep your temperature down if it gets too high, the yeast
It basically kills itself.
It gets too low.
They stop being active.
You got to keep your pH right.
So there's a lot of chemistry that I have to deal with.
But the recipes themselves, the base distilling hasn't been radically different from one product to the next.
That is fascinating.
All right.
We have Carl Lowenstein is in the studio.
He is the founder of Sturgeon Spirits Distillery in Oshkosh.
And they do tours.
They have tons of craft cocktails.
He's only been in business for less than two years.
And after the news, the second act, after intermission, we're going to come back and talk about how you use rhubarb in your vodkas.
And you have a jalapeno vodka.
I don't know if you're the first to ever do that.
It's the first I've heard of it.
So we'll talk about that and Carl's process and more about what they do for the community and how you
can be part of a great experience as search and spirits.
It's Pete Schwabba and Nightlight.
We're coming back on the Civic Media Radio Network.
Broadcasting live from the Civic Media Studios in Green Bay.
This is Night Light with Pete Schwabba.
Your inside source on everything entertainment from Wisconsin to Hollywood.
And now a guy whose house has an actual wiggle room, Pete Schwabba.
It's true folks.
Welcome back.
tonight light as we kick off act two here.
I am Pete Schwabba, your host, the kid Conrad Krieger, the lovable producer Conrad working the board.
And we've got a great guest here in studio, Carl Lohenstein from Sturgeon Spirits Distillery.
We'll get back to Carl in just a second.
But if you missed the first half of the show, I got a piece of glass in my foot.
And I don't know what to do.
I don't want to go to the hospital for this.
It's just it's annoyance, but I know it's in there.
I'm not bleeding.
It's very frustrating.
So, textures have been nice enough to give me some advice on what to do.
I don't know if I should believe them or not, but we'll keep those thoughts coming.
If you want to text in, if you have a question for Carl Loenstein, my guest at the moment from Sturgeon Spirits Distillery, you could text in a question.
That would be great.
Our question of the night is, what drink will you be nursing on the 4th of July?
The 4th of July is a notorious drinking holiday.
I don't condone unsafe behavior.
But you know, if you're in a safe environment and you're just going to sip something all day, what will it be?
I tend to overdo it.
Like I've nursed Bloody Mary's like on a Sunday watching football.
Just nursed them.
Martinis aren't something you really want to nurse, probably, but an old fashioned or a summer drink like a margarita.
I don't know.
We'll ask our guest that what a good drink to nurse is.
And I'm going to ask Carl about a lot of his products.
They have so many great
You have to go check out, what is your website?
Is it just Sturgeon?
Yeah, it's just SturgeonSpirits.com.
Yeah, I have that right in front of me and now I'm making you do the light work.
SturgeonSpirits.com.
They have all, everything they make.
And I think I told you this earlier, Carl.
I was looking at your website and I'm like, there's like 100 Vodka's and I'm like, oh, they must only do Vodka.
And then I got further down, it's like, oh no, they have bourbon and whiskey.
Like, I don't even know how you guys do all that, but.
It's very ambitious, but they do tours.
They're right there on Oregon Street in Oshkosh.
So check out SturgeonSpirits.com.
It looks like just a wonderful place.
And you told me during the break too, you're doing a murder mystery night.
Oh, absolutely.
We worked with one of your former guests, Ben, of Laughable Production, and he has... Great guy.
He's done about five now.
We're doing about every other month, and it's super fun.
He plays the lead detective.
Everybody gets a character, and you may be the murderer and not know it.
And then part of the game is you try to solve the crime, and the person who...
figures it out, wins a prize.
No one ever actually is bumped off though.
No, there's always a killing at the
bidding.
Todd, my general manager was killed in the first
episode.
There's no actual taking of human life on these whimsical
evenings.
Yeah, that's right.
No animals were hurt in the making of this production.
You
wouldn't host something like
that at Sturgeon
Spirits.
That sounds like a lot of
fun.
I have to say, that's an insult thing.
That's what my grandmother used to do when you had something stuck in your throat.
Is that right?
Soak it until it would pop out.
I didn't realize the context of that whole Epsom salt thing.
That is exactly what I learned from my grandmother.
I
find Epsom salts very intimidating.
I don't really know what it is.
I know my wife has bathed in them, but they kind of scare me.
I don't know what I'm getting into.
I guess I would dip my toe in the actual Epsom salts water and try to get the pizza class.
We'll do that.
What is a good, all right, you're a distiller, Carl.
What is a good drink to nurse?
Well, I think old fashions are great.
We love to do variations on old fashions.
Because they're not that strong, right?
That's right.
Yeah.
We've started a branch out.
We're doing some cocktails and cans for
this
summer.
And so our most popular one, and we're making them about beer strength, about 5%.
I don't even think they're on the website yet.
He's looking.
I can see him surfing.
Well, I was about to pull up the thousands of vodka's you make, because I want to segue into that.
But vodka isn't something you want to nurse, though, is it?
Well, I mean, I think a lot of people just do it with vodka water, but we like the flavors.
So you've got your dimension, the rhubarb, that rhubarb gin is terrific on just with a little seltzer.
Which is a really nice simple cocktail.
Yeah, you
can sip on all day.
We do it depends if you like fruitier things We've got a lot of things like we do banana rum punch with our banana rum and orange juice and Pineapple juice and a little cherry juice.
It's delicious How do you do
that?
Do you taste test everything?
Do you have a pull all your friends in and have a party and go?
This is what I'm thinking about doing or you have all these craft cocktails.
This is rhubarb month
rhubarb negroni, rhubarb slap, rhubarb spritz.
This is so great.
How do you do that though?
How do you find new flavors?
So I have to say, I can't take responsibility for it myself.
I have the best people who work for me.
And so Tanya is a cocktail master.
So she works, she's in fact is working there right there tonight or open till eight.
And she comes up with new cocktails every week and she is so good at it.
She says, I think I'll put these ingredients together.
and then she does and it tastes great.
So she doesn't even have to make them to know how good of a cocktail it will be.
And then we try them and we're like, wow, that is
awesome.
And then what do you do?
Do you like test market it somehow or?
Well, Tuesday nights are a good night to come visit us because Tanya is usually giving out free samples.
You know, try the cocktails.
Conrad,
where are you going?
Conrad.
Hey, if it's free, it's me.
All right.
So you've got also all these talk about your vodka.
Well, this isn't even just vodka.
This is jalapeno agave.
That's
right.
Delicious.
So I mean, what we like to do is you make the base spirits.
It's the same process basically for all the different kinds of spirits.
You get a little different flavor when it comes off the still.
And then we love to use fresh and local ingredients.
The jalapeno, jalapenos came from our backyard.
Really?
So we have it.
We grow some pepper plants to do the spicy things.
You know, I gave you the cranberry.
That's all cranberries that come from clover.
We do a Dorr County cherry that the cherries all come from Dorr.
You name it, we try to use and source stuff locally and see how it turns out.
We're just, we just are crazy.
Like I mentioned you in the break, we have a few fails.
Like shrimp vodka did not go well.
Yeah, I don't know what to make of that.
Just even you saying that.
I probably your boldness for trying that, but what would that?
Wow, shrimp vodka.
You know, oddly, it makes a really good shrimp cocktail sauce, Bloody Mary.
Really?
So you use shrimp vodka, horseradish vodka, and tomato sauce, and it tastes just like shrimp cocktail.
But do you like that sort of thing?
Do we want to drink that?
Not many people do.
I guarantee you.
Well, they can't
all be winners, right?
I mean, you've got enough stuff here.
That's
right.
We don't put the losers on the website.
You've got barrel-aged vodka.
That's what you were talking about before, a brown vodka.
I'd never heard of that before.
I learned that from, as an Eastern European thing.
So that they would take vodka and just stick it in a barrel, and it picks up the flavor and character of the oak.
You want to taste it?
It's like drinking the inside of a barrel.
And you get oak and vanilla and some caramel.
And those are all the flavors that are kind of blended in a whiskey, but they're really right up front when you have it in Avonka.
Where do you buy these barrels?
Is there a company that makes barrels just for distilling?
Oh, yeah.
We are small potatoes.
There are so many barrel companies.
Do you think about the Jim Beams and the Jack Daniels of the world?
They're using millions of barrels a year.
I'm only putting away 10 or 15 at a time, right?
So my barrel, but my barrel companies are in Minnesota.
Okay.
You've got, I have a, the whole reason I got you here, Carl, I have to alter your motives.
I'm going to pitch you a product.
I want, just keep it open mind.
That's all I'm saying.
Conrad, you ready for this?
I'm
ready.
I didn't wake you, did I?
He's like, he gave me a look when he nodded like that.
Like I'm bothering.
All right, Conrad, you know what we call some nightlight listeners?
I'm an inside guy.
I'm a self-proclaimed couch potato.
A lot of nightlight listeners, we call them couch pitados.
So couch potato vodka.
Think about it, Carl.
That's all I'm
saying.
Couch potato vodka.
Con, what do you think?
That's all right.
Oh, we'll get back to
count.
Oh, the question is what flavor does a couch potato have?
I don't know.
I gotta make it distinctive.
So what's a swab of flavor?
I don't know.
Popcorn might actually be salted like butter and salt.
Popcorn might be interesting.
Couch potato popcorn.
That sounds too busy.
There's too
much
going
on there, right?
It's like plaid pants.
Let me ask you this, Carl.
You have all these great flavors.
Have you guys dabbled at all in the non-alcoholic spirits?
I've
looked at how you would make those.
We always have an extensive list of mocktails on our menu, but we always want to do at least a new mocktail where that approximates the flavors.
So we haven't really gotten into trying to make our own.
non-alcoholic spirit, but we always want to make sure we have plenty of options for the non-drinker when they come in.
And like, for example, we do the rhubarb, you take that list of rhubarb cocktails, we just made some essentially rhubarb syrup.
And so you can kind of substitute in a little rhubarb flavored syrup for the rhubarb gin and it.
You get the same kind of character in a non-alcoholic drink that way.
My guest is Carl Loenstein.
He's the founder of Sturgeon Spirits Distillery in Oshkosh.
They are right there on Oregon Street in Oshkosh.
They do tours, events, they do murder mystery nights.
It sounds like just an absolute blast.
It's funny, rhubarb on its own, don't care for it, cranberry.
Nobody eats a fistful of cranberries.
But why are they so good?
Is it just a hint of the flavor?
rhubarb vodka's and I
love rhubarb I mean it's something I grew up with right nothing like rhubarb crisp rhubarb all these rhubarb cake when I was a kid rhubarb we were just eating that in season only in June
right
it's an early summer treat and so basically that's what we did we took the rhubarb we had a touch of sugar that helps bring out the flavor
and just
sweeten up the product and then we decided it blended best with our gin which is a very light
Juniper is not a heavy Juniper gin, so it's not super piney.
It's kind of a light, it's got a little pine, but not a lot.
And so that makes it, that it pairs really nicely with the rhubarb.
This is, I love the jalapeno vodka, cucumber vodka.
That sounds really refreshing.
Well, you want a summer drink, cucumber vodka and seltzer.
That is, that might be a summer drink right there.
Yeah, absolutely.
All right, so tell us about your, your, some of your craft cocktails.
You have such an extensive list of these and it seems like,
I guess, I know I sound like a kid in a candy store here, but you literally have not been in business that long.
And that's what's kind of blowing my mind that you have all these products.
It sounds like you just never sleep or take a break.
I have a very short attention span.
Well, that works.
Whatever, you know, college professor, I don't know if that worked in that gig, but you'll hear, this is great.
There's
always something
new
to
learn, man.
I never taught the same course twice because I just wanted to figure out something new to be doing and learning.
doing the whole thing.
Based on what you guys offer, because what we do here, we talk about TV, film, comedy, music, theater.
What's a great, give me a great Sturgeon Spirits cocktail for a detective show.
Well, I think you got to go with the bourbon.
So we have a bourbon that's on the bar.
I think, in some ways, we did just a bourbon lemonade, which is a great summer drink with
a splash of
bitters in there.
It makes a really nice, light kind of drink for hotter weather.
I mean, I think, what else do we do?
I think we do a lot of, what else do we do in the whiskey front?
That's one of my favorites.
I do like that one.
I'll just go with that one.
Let's not go with the second one.
I think the whiskey lemonade is makes a really nice combination.
What about for
like, if you sit down to watch like a Ferris Bueller's Day off?
Oh, that's a fruity cocktail.
I mean, I might go with a martini.
We might go with one of our, you know, we have like a three berry martini, which is delicious.
We do some cream, like a raspberry cream, which is delicious.
We've done, I mean...
Yeah, I think I like a lot of those.
We do one of our favorite, both popular is a blood orange sparkler, which is
blood
orange gin, and it's got a little ginger beer and a splash of lime.
Delicious, simple, straightforward.
What's a good cocktail for like a lifetime hallmark cheesy love story?
Oh, the cheesy love story.
Do you have a cheesy cocktail?
We got a chocolate.
You got to go with the chocolate liqueur.
You got to do a chocolate covered cherry.
You got to do something like that.
That screams romance to have that chocolate cocktail.
I totally agree.
That's great.
Can you stick around for one more segment?
Sure.
All right, fantastic.
We're going to do a very short break here.
And our guest, Carl Lowenstein, the founder of Sturgeon Spirits Distillery, I have the address here, 2663 Oregon Street, Nashkosh.
Am I getting that right?
All right.
Former college professor, but he found his true love.
And it's in the world of alcohol.
And apparently you're very good at it.
All right.
Coming back, we'll have a few more minutes with Carl after this very short break.
It's Pete Schwabba and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio Network.
Welcome
back,
folks.
This is Pete Schwabba in Nightlight.
You've got the Civic Media Radio Network.
We'll catch up on some texts shortly.
Right now, we have a few more minutes with our in-studio guest, Carl Lohenstein, who is...
I'm finding out a TV and a movie fan.
We're going to talk about Ferris Bueller's day off with Lisa Hale in just a few minutes.
But you and I were talking about Reacher and you said you liked it better than the books.
I did.
I especially the first and I think the third season, you're right.
We were talking about that at the break.
I think the third season brought it back.
But what I like in the TV show is that the screenwriters have given him a sort of, you know, a sarcastic edge that I don't think is in the book.
The book is much more sort of straightforward.
Yeah.
And the show makes him sort of not taking himself quite so seriously.
I agree.
And I like, I mean, I think we all have this fantasy that we just want to...
be this like nomadic lone wolf that just has a toothbrush in our pocket.
That's not realistic.
And I would probably hate my life after one day of that.
But like, it's kind of cool that this guy does that.
So we've got people looking at your website, Carl.
It's great.
PJ says I'm looking at the website also.
He says his cinnamon vanilla sounds good.
Is that a vodka?
That's a vodka.
Okay.
And PJ says, mulberries are delicious.
We
have a
mulberry
tree on the property.
We didn't get it picked in time last year.
Oh, wow.
It's coming.
That's fantastic.
And then on the text line, Jim from Brookfield says, Carl, your drinks sound fantastic.
I'm right there with you on rhubarb.
We use it for rhubarb crisps.
And my daughter just made a rhubarb gin and tonic, which was delicious.
You'd be surprised how many people don't know how wonderful rhubarb is.
I agree with that, but I will say this.
I moved to Marinette, Wisconsin when I was 12, and this is what freaks me out about rhubarb.
In our alley by our house, rhubarb grew.
Next to a concrete alley, and I'm like, that's what we have in pie?
Like, it just kind of creeped me out.
I was like, but I imagine it's
better.
You feel the same way about asparagus?
That's a ditch, that's ditch food too.
Is it really?
Yeah.
No, I
love asparagus.
And I would eat Alley rhubarb if I, hey, there you go.
Alley rhubarb vodka for all you couch potatoes.
That's right.
So what is your best seller, Carl?
All right.
Actually, our best seller is the chocolate liqueur that we make in conjunction with the local chocolate chop in Oshkosh, Oaks chocolate.
Oh, wow.
We sell a ton of that and we all, it's only seasonal.
You get it from Thanksgiving to Valentine's Day, and then we take it off the market.
Before we let you go, too, I have to ask you about your very community-minded.
You do a lot of work in the community.
You're very community-oriented.
Can you talk about that a little bit as it pertains to certain spirits?
Well, I would say I was always very active in the community.
I, in fact, was on the school board back in 2010.
And so I have always wanted to make my community a better place.
And so being a small businessman is great because I can give back in a different sort of way.
Right?
And it's more than just my time.
And so I really support, of course, the Sturgeon Ecology and we give a lot of money to the Sturgeon for Tomorrow and the various organizations that help support the health of the lake and its streams and the Sturgeon as well.
We've also moved into a new brand that's called Squadron Spirits and we support Old Glory Honor Flights with part of the profits for that sub-brand.
So we have that for EAA.
We kind of have a special pilot-based...
product line that we do for them.
And then we, as I said, then we give part of the money back to the glory, old glory honor flights, which is a great organization and they do amazing things for veterans.
Can you make sturgeon better looking?
Is there anything you could do to make a sturgeon a better looking
fish?
I just say we, well, we just keep them in the lake.
I mean, they're one ugly fish, especially when that mouth is extended when they're out of the water.
They're
fascinating, but ugly.
They are, and they're amazing.
And, you know, I just, I appreciate the fact that we in Wisconsin were able to do something nobody else.
in the world was to do.
There are no populations of sturgeon anywhere else except in Lake Winnebago.
Is that true?
Not that it's self-sustaining like no population.
All the more reason to protect Lake Winnebago, which you guys are part of.
Absolutely.
I was on the school board.
I was the PTA president at our school in LA when we lived in LA for two years.
My administration ended in scandal, but I was the PTA president.
I didn't get much done.
What do you do when you're done at...
working at your distillery.
What are you kicking back with at night?
One of your own cocktails.
What do you go for?
I have actually just been really into my canned cocktails So I just take take home and I crowd crack a great popsicle or a cherry limeade or actually We have a brand new margarita in a can which is delicious and they're you know, they're a little lower alcohol It is like having a beer at the end of the night, but it's my own product and That's that's usually what I'm doing while I'm sitting around watching Reacher I don't know what I'm gonna watch next.
I did watch the Jason Bourne series I got in a hook and I watched all five Oh, I haven't seen that how
but you watch the series too
Well, no, I haven't seen the show.
I just watched all five movies.
Gotcha.
I know there's a series, too.
I just kind of got... Treadstone, I think.
Yeah.
I haven't watched it either, but...
I just got hooked, didn't it?
Jason Bourne.
We'll have to we'll have to figure out what cocktails go best with which movies and TVs because I think there's something there.
But let's we've got about a minute left.
You've got some events coming up.
Let's talk about
what we're doing.
We had that great thing we're doing with Ben.
So we're going to do our first stand up comedy night at our place.
July 18th.
OK, we're going to do a pairing dinner with one of our favorite caterers.
It's going to be an outdoor barbecue with paired cocktails.
And that's going to be on July 19th.
We're having to have in music.
I'll put in a.
plug for my son.
Peter is also Peter is a great young musician.
He's going off to graduate school in classical guitar at Johns Hopkins next month.
Oh, wow.
His last gig.
Singer-songwriter with his friend Jaquan, a guitar player and drummer at our place on Saturday, Saturday afternoon, 3.30 to 5.30.
He's an amazing musician and take advantage.
I'm very proud of him for that.
So what's he going to do after?
Is he wanna be part of like a symphony or something?
He knows how to wait tables.
My daughter is learning
how to do that.
She's a
musical theater student.
So
she's learning that this
summer.
He loves classical guitar.
He's amazingly good at it.
And it's his passion.
I think in the end, he may end up being a teacher and maybe get a job.
A lot of universities have a classical guitar instructor on their staff.
So he may end up doing that and then you play concerts.
as part of your academic work as a music professor.
It's nice when you can use his talents too at your own distillery, which
is outstanding.
That's right.
Carl Lohenstein, thank you so much.
Check out Sturgeon Spears Distillery folks at Oshkosh.
Thank you so much for your time and continued success.
Thanks so much, Peter.
It was great talking to you tonight.
That was a lot of fun.
We're coming back and we're talking Ferris Bueller's Day Off with new WISCO weekend host, Lisa Hale.
That's next on Nightlight with Pete Schwama on the Civic Media radio network.
This is Nightlight with Pete Schwab.
Great to have you with me on this Tuesday night.
Just a reminder, we will be off.
There will be no live show Thursday, Friday, or Monday, folks.
But we will have programming all set to go, right?
We've got a Madison-based night.
So, yeah, Friday will be all music guests
that have performed in Madison.
So that's pretty cool.
When I was doing the show for Madison, you'll have those.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah, that'll be a fun episode.
And then
Monday is...
gonna be a quiz show.
So all the quizzes that we have done, I've put together and made a
little show from it.
The next time we have Carl on, let's do a booze quiz.
Because I don't think we've done a booze quiz at all yet.
No, we have not.
And I'm sorry, I didn't see this Lori, this great text you sent Lori from Hayward, she's in the 715, she says, does your guest make a dreamcicle canned drink?
Okay, I saw this text Lori and he does, but it's not canned.
So he does make a dreamcicle drink, but you have to go into Sturgeon Spirits to check it out.
So there you go.
So I did run that by him, and that was his answer.
Why not Canada, though, right?
I don't know.
All right, folks, it is Alan Ruck's birthday today.
You think people know who Alan Ruck is?
I would say no.
No.
If you watch Spin City or Ferris Bueller's Day Off, you know he is Cameron Fry in Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
It is his birthday today.
We've been talking about Ferris kind of off the air a little bit, and I thought we got to have some kind of discussion.
And what better way to celebrate Ellen Ruck's birthday than to have the host of New Whisco Weekend on.
and discuss some Ferris Bueller.
She knows every movie line ever made.
She puts me to shame when we go back and forth, and she is here in the flesh.
She is the Northeast Wisconsin News Director.
Am I getting that right, Lisa?
News Bureau Chief, News
Director.
Yeah, whatever you want to call
me.
Bureau Chief sounds better.
And the host of Newisco Weekend, a wonderful magazine show that we have all to ourselves here in Northeast Wisconsin.
Although you can get it on the Civic Media website.
You can get it on the app and
on the website, yep.
Yeah, welcome to the show.
It's great to have you back.
Thank you very much.
And I'm honored to be here on Alan Ruck's birthday.
And I know, I know that you mentioned that you wanted to talk Ferris Bueller a little bit, but, and I told you this, my favorite Alan Ruck quote is not from Ferris Bueller, although Ferris, you're my hero.
That's a great quote.
My favorite one from him is when he was in Twister, he played Rabbit.
And they're in the car and everybody's trying to find a way to get to this twister going through corn and all this.
And he's goes, trust me, rabbit is good, rabbit is wise.
So that will always be my favorite
quote.
From Ellen Ruck, not Cameron Fry.
Not Cameron Fry, that's Alan Rock.
He played Rabbit in Twister.
I shared with you my favorite Ferris Bueller quote, and it was one that Ed Rooney said, and I can't repeat it on the air, but he was talking to the dog.
He gave the dog like poison flowers or something, and he says, Uncle Ed has a present for you, a little.
It was just beautiful.
So we have, where are you at with Ferris Bueller overall as a movie?
Like on a scale of one to 10,
I loved it.
You know, I don't know that it's a great movie, but it was great to me.
I loved everything it represented.
That's just it.
Ferris Bueller is one of those quintessential 80s movies.
I mean my sister saw it like opening night in the movie theater and she doesn't remember going to see it open not opening night I was pissed because she did I had to work and she got to go see it But and she came home with all this swag and everything that she has since lost and I'm like Do you know what kind of collectors item that would be now?
but um I Watched that movie so many times and what it did for yellow
With oh, yeah
wait was that yellow or was that the art of noise?
No, that was yellow.
Oh Yeah, I believe is yellow.
Yeah.
Yeah, that gets replayed constantly.
I believe you
I have a computer in my hand
I will get to Lisa too.
I want to ask you Lisa after you're done googling your favorite yellow that so the band is yellow and it's oh, yeah
I was totally, I thought it was, because I know Tangerine Dream did some of the music.
There's some of that great music at the end of it where Ferris is with Mia Sarah, who kind of disappeared for years and now she's in this Mike Flanagan movie.
Is it, it's not materialist.
She's in a new film, The Life of Chuck.
And she only, she's basically retired.
She raised a couple of kids in LA and she only comes out of retirement when director Mike Flanagan asks her to.
She's still gorgeous.
She's still, I don't know what kind of actor she was on the broad spectrum because she didn't do much, but she was really good as Sloan Peterson.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And there's some great moments between them with this great soundtrack.
I think it was Tangerine Dream, but a great soundtrack to the whole movie, actually.
Yeah.
She had some great lines, too.
Just some simple little memorable lines, you know.
He's gonna marry me is probably my favorite cuz it's right there towards the end
Hearing you say that that gives me a pain in my stomach and takes me back to what we the things we wanted in high school and It's just like thank God.
There's some song that says thank God for unanswered prayers or something like that It might be yeah meatloaf.
So I don't know but that's no, I
think that's Garth Brooks.
Oh girl.
I wouldn't know Garth Brooks song, but I believe you
I think unanswered prayers is Garth Brooks, but don't quote
me.
It's
been a while since I've been in music radio.
So
I think that's another yellow tune.
And the perfect Ferris Bueller was Matthew Broderick.
That was just outstanding casting.
Yes, absolutely.
I mean, they could not have gotten anybody better to play him and to break the fourth wall.
He was great at breaking the fourth wall.
And you know,
Oh, what's her face?
Me and Sarah.
Dirty dancing, chicky.
Oh, Jennifer Gray.
Thank you.
And Charlie Sheen.
I can remember her
lesson.
Yeah.
Yep, Jennifer Gray, Charlie Sheen.
But he was dating Jennifer Gray during that movie.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
And then afterwards, they had that car wreck.
Wait, oh, Matthew Broderick was dating her.
Mm-hmm.
Right.
Oh, my God, I forgot about that.
Wow, you know your stuff.
See, this is
the stuff that I used to read in my fan magazines when I was.
Tiger beat.
I did have a did have a subscription to tiger beat when I was a younger teenager And tiger beat star which was its
Oh, it's awesome.
It's subsidiary, if you will.
Boy, I am
dating myself big time
with this.
Listen, if we both know who Leif Garrett is, we're in serious trouble.
Chris Casper, our civic media engineering rock star, chimes in on the text line and says, it's part of my ethos, second only to Top Gun.
He's a huge Top Gun fan.
You know, seriously, those of us from Gen Z,
Who were who were you know in our formidable?
It's young adult lives Ferris Bueller's day off was just classic because a he thumbed his nose at authority
right
be he had fun doing it and see well
It was just funny.
It was funny.
It was what we all wanted to do.
It
was great.
It was a great movie.
And speaking of, it's funny that Casper mentioned Top Gun because my classic movie Pick of the Week will be, you have a rock and roll theme this weekend.
And it's such a great show, folks.
If you have not checked out new WISCO weekend here at WGBW or WISS or just go to the Civic Media app, you can.
All the episodes are backlogged.
Lisa is the host and does a great job with it.
And my movie pick is going to be The Doors.
Great film.
Yeah.
And at the time, I don't, I don't, I think time has kind of made it a classic.
Like, and I think Val Kilmer's performance as Jim Morrison, I don't think it's a great, great movie, but it's very entertaining.
And Jim Morrison played by Val, or Val Kilmer playing Jim Morrison to me makes it a classic and the music.
He's got that slithering way of moving that
was
perfect and really kind of invoked Jim Morrison's vibe Absolutely
didn't look
half bad in leather pants either so that was good
Well, he pulled it off and all the other actors like Tom Cruise was considered for that role Bono to play Jim Morrison like there's a whole list of people Keanu Reeves Maybe Keanu Reeves could have done up at Val Kilmer was actually the
the perfect cast and Chris Casper and this is in my my classic movie B2 Casper says oh man Val sang all of his own stuff and that's true too like he did
he did and he also sang all of his own stuff in um oh it was such a great spooky movie um and i'm
losing it oh i know what you're talking about top secret
there you
go top
secret exactly and i i loved Val Kilmer in real genius
Love
that was the movie to watch Val Kilmer and it was real genius.
He was great and here's how here's how well he did playing Jim Morrison Just refreshing my memory about this movie today None of the doors liked the film particularly well of the actual real-life doors They thought it was not an accurate depiction of the band or Morrison.
They said they made him look like a slob.
He was actually a great guy They took a Oliver Stone the director took a lot of liberties, but they all
thought Val Kilmer should have gotten an Academy Award for playing their bandmate Jim Morrison.
Makes perfect sense.
I mean, when you can embody that character and become that character for, you know, several, several weeks of filming.
So, yeah.
So, Lees, what else is coming up on the show this weekend?
Do you anything you want us to be aware of?
I can't believe
you just called me Lees.
Should I not have done that?
No, that's great because I haven't been called lease by anybody who's not in my family for years.
And
that's great.
That
used to be, that's what they used to call me was lease.
I kind
of feel like we're not, we could be cousins.
I mean, we have kind of similar sensibilities.
You're probably a little smarter than I with news.
Of course.
But, you know, I think we could, you pull off the lease thing.
You don't want to do that for news.
You're Lisa Hale.
That sounds very.
Lisa Hale for news.
But when we're talking entertainment, when we're talking
in Ferris Bueller.
Yeah.
Lease.
I'm Lease.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Very good.
But as for new WISCO weekend, this weekend, you mentioned our theme is kind of a mixture.
It's patriotic and rock and roll because rock and roll day is Monday, July 7th.
So and we're doing the 4th of July weekend as well.
So we're combining it.
And we've got some great features on fireworks and Terry Barr's doing her feature on rock and roll.
So it's going to be a good show.
It's going to be a great show.
For the 4th of July, what is a cocktail you would nurse before we let you get out of here?
That I would nurse as in not drink it all at one time and kind of sit there with it the whole time.
Yeah.
Assuming you're not being all news bureau-y and you have the day off.
And you start a little earlier than you normally would.
What are you going to just kind of sip on all day?
Vodka tonic.
Oh, nice.
That's a great summer drink.
Oh yeah, exactly.
A little extra lime and I'm
good.
Yeah, yeah, perfect.
Hey, and you said you were going to retire to your bedroom and have some peace and quiet to do this interview, but your office looks very professional there.
It does not look like a she shed with a bed.
No, no, this is not the she shed
with the
bed.
This is this is the office where where I do work and stuff and you say it looks professional But I'm looking over my shoulder and I see my doctor who picture and my plague
my
plague doctor masks So I don't know how professional that
is.
No way you're styling.
That's fantastic.
Hey, thanks for jumping on to discuss Ferris Bueller We had to do it tonight and you were just the person to do it with thank you so much
Well any time and if you really want to get into a quote Competition we can do that anytime you'd like.
Oh, yeah, I've gotten a beat down the last couple times.
I'll rally.
I'll come back.
I'm not done You haven't seen the last It's pretty
bad when I gave you quotes from in and out and you didn't even know what I was talking
terrible
I'll put on my game face next time.
It
works for
me.
Thank you, my friend.
Have a great show this weekend, and we'll talk to you soon.
Anytime.
All right.
Thank
you very much, Pete.
You're very welcome.
That's Lisa.
Lisa Hale from the host of New Whisker Weekend and the bureau chief here at WGBW, WISS.
We are coming right back to finish up your text.
There was a text war brewing between Dave and PJ.
We'll get to that when we come back in Speechwaba.
And Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio Network.
Just a little high It's all that it takes to...
This is Nightlight with Pete Schwabba.
I am Pete Schwabba.
Conrad Krieger running the board.
Great to have you with me.
We have a little text war brewing.
Good nature text war we'll get to very soon.
Tomorrow night on the show, Milwaukee film critic Matt Miller will be here.
I'm very curious to see if Matt has seen F1.
But we'll talk about all the summer blockbusters, Jurassic Park opening tomorrow.
That's exciting.
It's going to be a big week for the box office.
And it's been a good box office so far this summer, I think.
There have been some really good films that have been out.
And we'll talk to Matt tomorrow night at 6.35 about that.
And then a Madison based filmmaker and music producer extraordinaire, Wendy Schneider will be here.
Wendy has a screening of her film, The Smart Studio Story at the Atwood Music Hall in Madison coming up in just about a week or so.
So we'll talk to Wendy about that.
The film is actually about nine years old and it's about Butch Vig and Steve Marker and how they formed Smart Studios.
Butch is a member of the band Garbage and he and Steve produced albums by Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins, I think like Soundgarden and obviously Garbage all from this little hole in the wall studio in Madison.
And I had the opportunity to interview Wendy and Butch on PBS and host a Q&A with them at the Barrymore Theater after a screening of the smart studio story.
during the Wisconsin Film Festival years ago.
It is a really good film, folks.
And the musical history that Madison offered through Butch and Steve and Wendy, who worked for Butch and Steve is just great.
It's really a great exploration of Wisconsin bands and great albums that were produced here in Wisconsin.
So if you haven't seen the Smart Studio store, you have an opportunity in Madison coming up in just a few days.
But Wendy will be here tomorrow night to talk about that.
along with Matt.
So another great show tomorrow night before we take a short break.
As I mentioned earlier, Thursday, Friday, and Monday will all be new kind of shows, not necessarily original, but fun themes.
We've got the quiz show.
Monday.
Monday.
And we've got the Madison Music guests.
And that's Friday?
Yep.
Yep.
Friday.
And then Thursday is just kind of like some great moments just to look back on this year so far.
Yeah.
Oh, it's going to be fun.
Turning to our last final text here we've got from the social media page Vince Moranto, comedian Vince Moranto, who's been on the show, great guy, he says, nursing.
Ha, ha, ha, good one.
Vince will obviously be downing alcohol at an alarming
rate all
day.
Whatever you do, Vince, be careful.
And this is interesting.
Chad Fran, he's been on the show before.
Chad's a great guy.
He says, why support the alcohol industry?
I'll tell you why, Chad, because there are very responsible businesses.
in all walks of life.
And as we saw here tonight, what Carl Loewenstein does with Sturgeon Spirits is really responsible and good for the community.
He employs a lot of other people through his distillery.
They have conservation theories and missions, and they do a lot for the community.
So I think it all just depends on the business.
There are crappy businesses in all walks of life, including...
As you say, Chad, some in the alcohol industry, but I think there's a lot of really good ones too.
And those are always the businesses that we'll have fun talking to.
So my thanks to Carl Lohenstein for making the drive up from Oshkosh tonight.
It was great to meet him and talk about his product.
My thanks to Lisa Hale.
We've got a text here from Steady Eddie, and then we'll get to our little text war.
Oh, you're dead chimed in Conrad.
Your dad snuck a text in there.
He says his summer drink or that he will nurse on July 4th lining Kugel's summer shandy will be my drink of choice.
That's a great choice.
It is a great choice
popular drink, too You know, I talked recently lining Kugel made a watermelon beer.
Yeah, I Might have been I'm actually been a new glares It was like a watermelon splash because I had that on a golf course actually
And it was phenomenal.
I'm almost sure it
was.
I mean, they probably do that too, but I'm pretty sure about five years ago, Lyon and Cookeles had a watermelon beer.
And it was different and really refreshing.
I really liked it.
That's exactly how the Nucleus one was,
too.
As is Summer Shandy.
That's a great choice.
Steady Eddie from the 608 says, Pete, I feel your pain.
I like Conrad and listener.
I like Con... I like Conrad's and listeners.
You got it.
You got it.
I like Conrad's and listener's idea of soaking your foot in a warm solution to help remove that invisible, painful shard of glass.
I would try that first.
But if that fails, another possible remedy that I found on YouTube Pete is for you to go out in your front yard on a hot sunny summer day while wearing your favorite bowling shirt.
Permuted shorts.
Stand on your head and sing the Star Spangled Banner at the top of your lungs.
Not doing that steady, Eddie.
But he says after singing all four verses, cool yourself down with a garden hose.
Rinse and repeat this procedure every 30 minutes.
The glass shard should eventually work itself out.
I'm not sure if this will work, Pete.
What I'm saying is there's a chance.
Steady Eddie
brought it on that one.
I think you got to try it tomorrow.
Thank you, sir.
All right, so.
For the last hour or so PJ and Dave on the stream of beginning into it and PJ said Well PJ gave suggestions of what he was gonna nurse on July 4th and Dave said PJ is on fire tonight beer for me then PJ kept going after thanking Conrad for being on his side PJ said In response to Dave's text, I'm always on fire Dave.
I'm a fire sign.
However, I am a fire sign.
However, what does that mean?
Don't get that.
I'm not sure
it's not like a astrological thing or something PJ says hemp vodka, you know hemp is legal here.
Yes PJ I'll take your word for it.
Dave says that might be too much PJ They're going back and forth.
I love it when listers get involved and talk to each other PJ says I've been trying to get one of the local micro breweries around here to brew a hemp beer We could you know, you know any breweries Conrad?
There's a bunch in
Green Bay
and here's Dave being helpful again.
He says the railhouse in Marinette talked to Ron He's referring PJ to Ron.
This is an information exchange Just beautiful and nightlight listeners come together And they love oh, yeah PJ says he loves Ferris Bueller's day off Gen X movie Dave says we grew up at that time and we drank hose water
That's what PJ drinks, hose water.
And then Dave says, I remember when everyone from Michigan came to Wisconsin to drink.
Now everyone from Wisconsin goes to Michigan to smoke.
Dave says, eat a little dirt.
PJ says, in Illinois, if you live on that end.
All right.
Everybody chipping in tonight.
It was a great night at night.
Like, thank you all for your texts.
Little text war never hurt anybody.
It wasn't really a war.
No.
Information.
It was fun.
Information change.
We'll do it all again tomorrow.
On behalf of the lovable producer, Conrad, I'm Pete Schwabba saying, good night, Wisconsin.