Beverages that are regulated

by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, or TTB

Beverages that are regulated by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, or TTB, include beer, distilled spirits, wine, sake and kumbucha.

At Mother Murphy’s, we create and produce innovative flavoring for each of these very different categories of alcohol. We formulate and blend exotic berry, melon, fruit and botanical flavors to enhance naturally occurring flavor tones and characteristics in aged alcohol and infused liquors. We also help craft distilleries develop their own recognizable flavors.

Our Capabilities

We work with everyone from small breweries to international conglomerates to develop and produce flavors that give their alcoholic products a distinctive taste. We provide seasonal, small batch and true-to-nature flavors that stimulate the senses.



Flavor Builder

Help Mother Murphy's create a sample just for you! Describe the custom flavor sample that you want to build and select the features that will accelerate your next creation.

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Flavor Builder

Help Mother Murphy's create a sample just for you! Describe the custom flavor sample that you want to build and select the features that will accelerate your next creation.

Learn More
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Latest News

Why a Single Note Can Unlock a Whole Moment One whiff of a familiar aroma can yank you back in time with disrespectful speed. Not a vague “I remember this,” but a full-body replay: kitchen light, weather, the exact emotional soundtrack. That isn’t poetry. It’s biology—often called the Proust effect, where taste and smell cues trigger especially potent autobiographical memories. 
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Nostalgia Flavors
It’s 4:47 p.m. in the pilot lab. Your prototype is finally singing: bright fruit top, clean sweetness, a little body to make it feel “real.” Then someone says the sentence every formulator dreads: “We need to add the magnesium.”
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The Aftertaste Ambush
If you’ve ever sipped a “better-for-you” drink that smelled great but felt thin or chalky, you’ve met the problem: the flavor was fine, but the mouthfeel told a different story. What we casually call “flavor” is really taste, smell, and texture working together – and texture is often doing the quiet heavy lifting.
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When Texture Talks Louder Than Taste
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Ready to get in touch?
Contact us!

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