
Chemical engineering senior Katherine Grace O鈥橬an has an inside joke with her dad.
It goes like this: one day they will open a microbrewery together. She will handle all the chemistry and her beer-loving dad will handle all the tasting.
While the lighthearted banter between father and daughter was just for fun, the joking planted the seed of an idea in O鈥橬an鈥檚 heart. Could she leverage her love of chemistry to work in one of Kentucky鈥檚 most celebrated industries?
鈥淚’ve always loved my home state of Kentucky and when I added聽chemical engineering into the mix, the bourbon industry seemed to be a marriage of the two,鈥 O鈥橬an said.
A native of Ashland, O鈥橬an began her academic journey with a UofL scholarship. The grant provides full tuition, a spending stipend and international travel enrichment experiences.
鈥淔or my first summer enrichment experience, I decided to follow this interest by traveling to Scotland for three weeks to聽shadow and work at various whisky distilleries,鈥 O鈥橬an said. 鈥淟earning more about the process and seeing how passionate those in the industry were really confirmed that this was something I wanted to pursue.鈥
When the time came for O鈥橬an鈥檚 second Brown Fellows enrichment opportunity, she headed north.
鈥淚 road-tripped from Kentucky up through Detroit across the border to Canada. From there, I spent a week making my way across Ontario, stopping at distilleries to work for a day at a time,鈥 O鈥橬an explained. 鈥淥nce I hit Toronto, I flew to Nova Scotia and spent a week there working at a few more distilleries.鈥
Some of her distillery experiences were closer to home. She attended in Louisville. The five-day intensive workshop featured instructions on vodka, rum, whiskey and gin-making, sensory training and discussed industry topics such as branding, distribution, state and federal compliance, hospitality and tourism.
To gain even more insight, O鈥橬an leveraged her co-op by working at Louisville-based distiller, .
鈥淒uring my time there, I was able to learn a lot about whiskey filtration processes, how a distillery and its equipment聽operate, concepts about how the whisky聽ages in the barrel, and just how many people it takes to get from that grain to a quality聽bottle on the shelf,鈥 O鈥橬an said.
O鈥橬an has now visited 19 distilleries and tried many different drinks, but bourbon is still her favorite.
鈥淚 love the way that the bourbon industry is so prominent right now and brings so many to the state of Kentucky. I’m passionate about my home state and the drink people from all over associate with it,鈥 she said.
O鈥橬an is on track to graduate from UofL in the spring.聽


























