The first time I met Dean Phillips, he was wearing dainty white gloves and handling a 100-year-old bottle of booze worth more than $1,000. We were at a cocktail party and he was showcasing his collection of vintage liquor bottles and some odd alcohol-measuring instruments from the early 20th century.
He had an air both regal and geeky -- wealthy enough to own such a bottle, nerdy enough to want it in the first place.
I guess it's in the blood. Phillips, 43, is part of Minnesota's first family of liquor barons. As the figurehead of Phillips Distilling Co., he says it's his duty to preserve not only his family's history, but the industry's legacy in Minnesota.
"Some people like Warhols," he told me. "I like whiskey bottles."
The Phillips company has been making history for a long time. The family business was founded by Phillips' great-great-grandfather exactly 100 years ago as a candy and newspaper wholesaler. After Prohibition, the company entered the distilling industry, creating the country's first schnapps and flavored vodka. Under his father's leadership in the late-1990s, it began producing Belvedere, which pioneered an entirely new category: luxury vodka.
In 2001, Phillips became president of the company, which has a reported value of $175 million. Soon after, the distillery debuted its highly-successful neon-colored array of UV Vodka flavors (Cake! Coconut! Sweet Green Tea!). Phillips said the brand is expected to sell 1.8 million cases this year in the United States, and it just entered the burgeoning Chinese market.
Yet for all this success, the five generations of Phillips men have often sought a low profile. Dean Phillips is no different.
"My uncle always told me that the whale who spouts the most gets harpooned," he said. (His aunt, however, pens the famous advice column Dear Abby.)