Tag Archives: brewer

edible beer can holder

Brewery bosses invent an edible beer can holder which could save sea life from the scourge of deadly plastic six-packs which fish mistake for jellyfish

 

Click here to view original web page at www.dailymail.co.uk

Brewery bosses have come up with a novel idea to cut the appalling toll that discarded plastic is taking on sea life: edible Beer can holders.

The binders, which hold cans together, are currently among the most destructive waste dropped into our oceans because they are often mistaken for jellyfish and swallowed by larger fish, while smaller fish and birds can easily become tangled in their loops.

But the new binders, devised by the Saltwater Brewery in Florida, are made using by-products from the brewing process and can be eaten by marine animals.

And if they are not consumed, the binders are fully biodegradable and quickly disintegrate.

Marco Vega, of the brewery’s advertising agency, said: ‘Initially we wanted to make the rings from seaweed but it was too fragile and rigid. But what we have come up with works perfectly and is safe in the sea.’

The brewery has made metal moulds capable of churning out 400,000 binders a month at a cost of 17p each compared to 11p for their plastic ones.

But it says that, if big beer companies implement this technology, the manufacturing cost will drop and become very competitive.

It also believes customers will pay extra because of the environmental benefits of the rings.

The edible beer can holders fit the six-packs typically sold in the United States, but could easily work on four-packs more common in Britain.

Greenpeace has thrown its weight behind the invention and hopes UK brewers will adopt the idea. Already major brewers including Carlsberg and hundreds of smaller craft breweries are in talks with Saltwater about the binders.

But Dr Sue Kinsey, senior pollution policy officer at the Marine Conservation Society, sounded a note of caution.

She said: ‘Wheat and barley by-products [from brewing beer], while better than plastic, aren’t a natural diet for marine life and, if ingested, the effects are still unknown. The best thing would be is not to throw these things away in the first place.’

A recent report from US scientific research group PNAS said that about 90 per cent of seabirds have eaten plastic and predicted that, by 2050, any seabird found dead will have plastic in its stomach.

Louisa Casson, Greenpeace UK Oceans Campaigner, said: ‘Plastic pollution is one of the greatest threats facing our oceans. To protect life, we need to end the era of single-use plastic.

‘It is very encouraging to see new innovations to tackle the problem of ocean plastics. But the most effective way is for manufacturers to commit to phasing out throwaway packaging.’Brewery bosses invent an edible beer can holder which could save sea life from the scourge of deadly plastic six-packs which fish mistake for jellyfish

The world’s biggest soft-drinks firms admitted last week that just 6.6 per cent of the more than two million ton of plastic bottles they make globally each year comes from recycled material.

The percentage came to light in the first attempt to estimate the companies’ plastic footprint, but the figure is actually likely to be far lower because Coca-Cola – the world’s biggest producer of soft drinks – refused to participate in the study.

In January, Prince Charles backed a campaign to stop plastic being dumped in the oceans and called for a deposit scheme for bottles.

The Prince, who has long been outspoken on environmental matters, said plastic was building up in the guts of sea creatures, polluting beaches and the ocean floor.

Ballast Point surpasses Stone

Ballast Point surpasses Stone

National craft beer trade group the Brewers Association released its annual lists of the top 50 American breweries by sales volume last week. While all four San Diego breweries included on last year’s lists remained — each with a higher ranking — there were some notable changes.

Two big ones had to do with Ballast Point. Since 2016 was the company’s first full year under the ownership of the Constellation Brands corporation, it no longer met the Brewers Association definition of craft brewer, and therefore did not appear on the list of the country’s largest craft brewers, where it ranked #11 last year, one spot behind Stone Brewing.

However, Ballast Point did show up on the list of Top 50 Overall Brewing Companies, which was topped every year — in the same order — by Anheuser-Busch, Miller Coors, and Pabst Brewing Co.

Ballast Point rose four spots on that list to become the 13th largest beer company in the USA. That puts it four spots ahead of Stone Brewing, meaning that, by sales volume at least, Ballast Point has taken over the mantle of the largest brewer in San Diego. In 2014, it ranked 37th.

The Brewers Association would not release the sales numbers it used to tabulate these lists (it will publish them in its own The New Brewer magazine in May). Neither would Stone, nor Ballast Point.

However, Stone did release its production numbers. Including beer produced at breweries in Virginia and Berlin, Stone brewed approximately 345,000 barrels in 2016, up from 326,000 barrels in 2015 — a 6 percent increase. Ballast Point did not release production numbers, so its difficult yet to tell whether it topped Stone in the amount of beer brewed, in addition to sales.

Stone ranked #9 on the list of top craft brewers, reclaiming its highest rank after dropping to #10 last year. However, it’s worth noting that Lagunitas Brewing, which ranked #6 in 2015, was also pulled from the craft list due to a partnership with Heineken. Stone fell two spots on the overall list to #17 (it was #14 two years ago).

Green Flash Brewing climbed four spots to become the 37th largest craft brewer by sales. Its production rose nearly 12 percent in 2016, to 91,040 barrels. That figure includes its production of beers for Alpine Beer Co., which it acquired in 2014. Overall, this increase was good enough to make Green Flash the 46th largest beer company — its second year in the top 50.

Finally, coming in at #41 on the craft beer list was Karl Strauss Brewing Co. Karl’s rank on this list has fluctuated the past several years, usually in the low 40s. It ranked #39 in 2012, when it also cracked the top 50 overall, actually coming in at #50. Nevertheless, the reigning midsize brewery of the year increased production 4 percent in 2016, to 78,618 barrels.

William McGehee’s big gamble to build Baton Rouge’s first local brewery is paying off

William McGehee’s big gamble to build First Baton Rouge brewery is paying off

Click here to view original web page at www.businessreport.com

ANNIE OURSO

2017 Baton Rouge Business Awards and Hall of Fame

YOUNG BUSINESSPERSON OF THE YEAR • WILLIAM McGEHEE

William McGehee was in his late 20s when he and childhood friend Charles Caldwell ditched their careers in law and banking to start a Baton Rouge  brewery venture. They were young—both without kids yet—and although they didn’t have much experience crafting brews, the timing felt right.

“If we’re going to fail,” McGehee recalls thinking, “let’s fail now.”

And it did take some failing. When McGehee and Caldwell first took their business plan to a bank, they weren’t able to get a loan, even though they had personal ties on the board of directors. It didn’t stop them. Their dream was to start a brewery, so they were undeterred—and maybe not quite old enough to fully recognize the risk they were taking.

“The blind optimism of youth definitely helped a lot,” McGehee says with a laugh.

Sitting in the tap room at Tin Roof Brewing Co., McGehee, now 35 and CEO of Baton Rouge’s first local brewery, recalls their relentless determination in those early days. The company got its start at the Louisiana Business and Technology Center, a small-business incubator at LSU.

After years of working to perfect their brewing techniques, McGehee and Caldwell marked the first of many milestones in November 2010, when they brewed their first batch of beer for commercial consumption. Today, Tin Roof can be found in six states: Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Arkansas and Tennessee. The brewery has six core brews, five seasonal and three special single-batch beers.

The business grew by 11.8% in 2016, which also included a major milestone when Tin Roof finally reached an agreement with LSU to release an officially licensed beer for the university. McGehee and Caldwell had first discussed the idea with LSU officials in 2012.

Bayou Bengal lager was lauched just before the start of the 2016 football season, and Tin Roof expects even greater growth this year with the LSU brew in its lineup. Tin Roof has a tap room at its brewery off Nicholson Drive between LSU and downtown Baton Rouge, and plans for additional satellite locations in new markets are on the horizon, McGehee says.

In Baton Rouge and surrounding cities, seeing Tin Roof Blonde on tap at a local bar or a six-pack of Voodoo Bengal in a nearby gas station has become commonplace. But for McGehee, it’s a constant reminder of how far his young business has come.

“The coolest thing was to be able to go to The Bulldog and see our tap on the wall and people ordering the beer that we made, the brand we made,” McGehee says.

After the company started canning beer in 2011, Tin Roof expanded to gas stations, grocery stores and other retailers—and not only locally, but nationally. McGehee says he was so stuck in the grind of everyday operations back then that the accomplishment didn’t fully register until he saw his beer on the shelves of a local Albertsons.

“That’s when it was like, ‘Oh, wow. This is real,’” he says.

With his close ties to Baton Rouge and deep affinity for the city, it’s surprising McGehee isn’t a native. He grew up in Natchez, Mississippi, and later attended Millsaps College in Jackson to play football. But it wasn’t what he hoped it would be, so in 2002 he moved to Baton Rouge and transferred to LSU, where he began pursuing a law degree.

It was during that time that Caldwell—who had returned to Natchez and a job in the banking industry after a stint in Colorado working as a ranchhand—began visiting McGehee in Baton Rouge. Caldwell had fallen in love with craft beers while in Colorado, where microbreweries abound, and McGehee had developed a taste for them after spending a summer in Europe as part of a study abroad program.

Though Caldwell and McGehee were disapointed with the relative dearth of craft brews in Baton Rouge, they also spotted an opportunity.

And while it meant abandoning the career paths they were already pretty far along on, the two decided to take a chance on launching their own brewery.

In 2009 they developed a business plan, and the following fall they launched their first beer. The next few years were spent marketing the fledgling Tin Roof brand and getting its brews into local bars. By 2012, the first batches of Tin Roof had hit the New Orleans and Northshore markets, and McGehee and Caldwell began eyeing their native Mississippi for further expansion.

The following year they added 6,000 square feet of space to the 9,000-square-foot brewery to make way for the tap room, and in 2014 they made their way into the Mississippi market.

McGehee and Baton Rouge share a special bond, and he says he doesn’t ever plan to leave. As his brewery was taking off, so was Baton Rouge. And as the city continues to grow, so does Tin Roof. It was the first brewery to hit Baton Rouge at a time when people here didn’t know much about craft beer, McGehee says, so Tin Roof introduced them to it by brewing it right in their hometown.

The craft beer industry and McGehee’s business have evolved since those early days. Competition back then wasn’t as tough as it is now—Baton Rouge has even become home to a second brewery, Southern Craft Brewing Co.—and McGehee has learned just how cutthroat the beer industry can be.

“You look at tap space in a restaurant or bar and shelf space in a store as real estate. There’s only so much real estate, and everyone is fighting for those same taps,” he says. “You wake up in the middle of the night worrying if you lost a tap.”

On top of that, running a brewery means dealing with a lot of heavy equipment that’s prone to breaking down, and McGehee says there are always fires to put out. But he knew the job required hard work from the get-go. When it was just McGehee and Caldwell in the beginning, if there were 200 kegs to wash, one or both would stay at the brewery until 2 a.m. washing them, McGehee says. But knowing that they were doing it for themselves—chasing their dream and not someone else’s—was a gratifying feeling, he’s quick to add.

Today their dream has been adopted by a team of about 20 employees. McGehee says those who work for Tin Roof care about the company just as much as he does. And that support extends even beyond his employees into the Baton Rouge community.

Tin Roof’s tap room and brewery is more than just a local watering hole. It’s become a popular spot for charity events, private parties and functions. Tin Roof often hosts local musicians, fundraisers, yoga on the lawn, trivia nights and release parties for specialty beers. In its own way, the brewery brings Baton Rougeans together for the sake of good beer, a good time and, often, a good cause. McGehee says that’s one of his biggest accomplishments.

“It’s about creating something people want to be a part of,” he says. “When we have events, we see hundreds of people show up to our place to support the charity we’re supporting or a young chef who’s trying to get his name out. We try to be a big part of the community.”

Outside of Tin Roof, McGehee dedicates much of his time to his family: His wife of seven years, Cammy, and his 1 1/2-year-old son, William McGehee IV. In addition, McGehee can often be found running the LSU lakes when he needs to clear his mind, and his wife says he has a secret creative side. He dabbles in writing, music and—not so secretly—sports.

Cammy McGehee says her husband has a specific trait that explains his success as business owner, husband and father.

“Doing his job well, being an amazing father and good husband all come back to his best quality: His kindness,” she says. “He is just plain good down to his core, and people gravitate towards that.”

 

Using Craft Beer as a Vehicle for Good

Using Craft Beer as a Vehicle for Good

Click here to view original web page at www.craftbeer.com

Craft beer pioneers had a clear vision: to serve a better, more full-flavored beer. That goal drove Boston Beer’s Jim Koch and Brooklyn Brewery’s Steve Hindy and countless others to persevere through ups and downs in a new and emerging market of beer drinkers.

Beyond creating a better product, many craft brewers use their small businesses as a vehicle for change. Small and independent craft brewers made more than $71 million in charitable contributions in 2014, according to the Brewers Association, CraftBeer.com’s parent organization, and you can find endless examples of breweries giving back to their communities.

But what you don’t always see are individual efforts to use craft beer as a tool, as a way of funding and supporting specific causes related to philanthropy. It goes beyond donating kegs or a portion of beer sales to charity from time to time. Brewers and craft beer-related businesses are literally harnessing craft beer’s popularity for good in a way we haven’t seen before.

Harnessing Craft Beer to Serve a Greater Good

Ex Novo Brewing became the country’s first nonprofit craft brewery when it opened in Portland in 2014. On the surface, it looks like a normal brewery, and a well-oiled one at that with a 16-beer portfolio and a thorough food component, including dessert and brunch items. But any dough that comes through those doors is immediately sent back out. Ex Novo partners with four local charities, donating all its profits to them. Founder Joel Gregory called the brewery “a permanent fundraiser to support causes.”

“I’m moved by the work [of these four organizations] and it’s a great motivator to succeed in business knowing that we are driving toward these goals and supporting these organizations,” Gregory said.

In Georgia, the birth of a new beer at Service Brewing means the start of a new charitable initiative. The brewery was started by West Point grad Kevin Ryan, who spent 8 years in the army, including a tour of Iraq. When he returned from duty, his passion for craft beer and desire to support his fellow veterans inspired him to open Service Brewing. The brewery promotes a new charity each season, typically corresponding with the release of a new brew, and donates to it a portion of the brewery tour proceeds (Georgia law only allows tastings as part of tours at craft breweries). Since opening in mid-2014, they have donated $50,000 to veteran’s charities, first responders’ organizations, and firefighter and police groups, among others.

“Part of our mission statement from the get go was to support those who serve their country and their community,” Ryan said.

Home of the Brave Brewing in Honolulu, which we featured back in December for the 75th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor, brews beers in a one-barrel system in the back of a World War II museum, serving it up 1942-style in its hidden speakeasy. Owner Glen Tomlinson sums up the method of using craft beer as a liaison perfectly.

“World War II is ancient history to young people nowadays, so if beer needs to be the bridge to bring them in, so be it. When younger guests come to the speakeasy and I’m able to share some of these stories, they are blown away,” Tomlinson said. “Add a craft beer that’s brewed downstairs… It’s been a winning combination.”

In Kailua, Hawaii, Tim and Holly Veling have taken to craft beer as a way to fund their nonprofit, the ONEninetynine Initiative. They came up with the concept of Grace in Growlers, a craft beer tasting room that serves up to 36-ounces per visit and sells growlers to go, including many members of the BA. The concept of Grace in Growlers was developed in the same vein as Ex Novo, yet the two models have stark differences. Ex Novo is a nonprofit brewery that donates its profits to external organizations. Grace in Growlers is a for-profit tasting room that donates its profits to its own nonprofit.

“Sometimes people [we meet here at the tasting room] will come on a Saturday to help with our [nonprofit], and then they’re back in here drinking beer again the next night,” Tim said. “Which is the most amazing thing. It’s exactly what we’re trying to do here.”

Good Beer Is Still the Top Priority

Don’t get these small business owners wrong: even though giving back is part of their mission, selling and making great beer is still the top priority.

One thing that everyone who we talked to for this article expressed was a proper set of checks and balances and transparency that ensures their motivations are not misconstrued. Grace in Growlers has the aforementioned 36-ounce limit per visit, for example, and Ex Novo decided to become a nonprofit mainly because they liked the idea of a board with multiple members.

Gregory said he receives calls from people for advice on how to start their own nonprofit brewery. He speaks with them about the pluses and minuses of becoming a nonprofit and advises them on which structure might be best for them. But he has one underlying piece of advice for anyone who might want to start a business with the same idea: Regardless of the purpose or mission, regardless of the organization, focus on the beer first and foremost.

“Maybe someone will come in for the first time and get excited about the mission and giving back, but if it’s mediocre beer, then they won’t come back,” said Gregory. “So beer has always been the focus for us because people come back for the beer.”

It’s good to hear Gregory say that. Good beer is something we can all get behind.

About the Author: Will McGough

Will is a nomad-at-large and travel columnist, penning profiles, features and dispatches from afar. His wake and wander philosophy is inspired by the spectrum of ways in which people live their lives in the different parts of the world. He enjoys the idea of waking up every day to new opportunities, new landscapes and the new feelings that the former inevitably evoke.Using Craft Beer as a Vehicle for Good

Can You Name All 18 of Anheuser-Busch InBev's Billion-Dollar Beer Brands?

Can You Name All 18 of Anheuser-Busch InBev’s Billion-Dollar Beer Brands?

Click here to view original web page at www.fool.com

Beer production keeps going flat for the big brewers as consumers expand their taste palates to include a broader array of alcohol, including hard liquor and spirits, but Anheuser-Busch InBev (NYSE:BUD) has a deep bench of suds to keep its business frothy.

The global brewer recently noted that with its acquisition of SABMiller complete, its portfolio of more than 500 beers includes seven of the top 10 global beer brands. It also claimed ownership of 18 brands that each generate over $1 billion in annual retail sales. That makes it a brewing powerhouse with the ability to withstand any changes in drinking fashion.

Beer production on the decline

Certainly the U.S. beer market is in a funk. According to the Treasury’s Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, beer production in 2016 fell to 188.6 million barrels, a 1.2% decline from 2015’s 190 million barrels.

With one barrel the equivalent to 31 gallons, that’s still a heck of a lot of beer, but production has been steadily falling and is down 6% from 2002 when it exceeded 200 million barrels. Last year, in fact, was the first time in decades that production was below 190 million barrels.

Even the market segment that has been reporting double-digit percentage gains for years — craft beer — has started to show weakness: The industry trade group Brewers Association, which represents independent craft brewers, said their segment’s production expanded by only around 8% last year. That still indicates the niche is growing, but it’s largely small-batch brewers that are doing the heavy lifting while the big craft brewers like Boston Beer (NYSE:SAM) stumble. The leading craft brewer reported depletions (shipments to distributors and retailers, a proxy measure of consumer demand) had fallen 5% last year.

It’s really becoming a market delineated between true craft brewers and what is being called “mass craft” beer. As drinkers search out the latest in new, local flavors, the big craft brands — and the mega brewers like Anheuser-Busch, which have their own mass craft brews such as A-B’s Shock Top — suffer.Can You Name All 18 of Anheuser-Busch InBev\'s Billion-Dollar Beer Brands?

Importing growth

Yet the slowdown in beer sales is not an across-the-board phenomenon, either. According to industry site BevNet, the market researchers at Nielsen say off-premise sales of imported beer rose 6.8.% last year while dollar sales were up 9.1%, with almost all Mexican beers showing strong growth.

Unfortunately, that doesn’t help Anheuser-Busch, which had to sell the U.S. distribution rights to the popular Corona brand to Constellation Brands (NYSE:STZ) in order for its acquisition of Mexican brewer Modelo to pass regulatory muster.

A rich portfolio of brands

Still, it bodes well for the brewer elsewhere, as the company’s global distribution of Corona and its sister beer Modelo Especial are two of the beers in its billion-dollar sale portfolio. Here are all 18 of AB-InBev’s biggest selling brands.

Brand Category Country of Origin
Antarctica Local Brazil
Beck’s International Germany
Brahma Local Brazil
Bud Light Local U.S.
Budweiser Global U.S.
Busch Global U.S.
Cass Local South Korea
Corona Global Mexico
Guarana Local Brazil
Harbin Local China
Michelob Ultra Local U.S.
Modelo Especial Local Mexico
Natural Light Global U.S.
Quilmes Local Argentina
Sedrin Local China
Skol Local Brazil
Stella Artois Global Belgium
Victoria Local Mexico

While these brands generate a sizable percentage of Anheuser-Busch InBev’s $45.5 billion in annual revenues, it should also be noted that fully half of those brands are from the U.S. and Brazil, two markets that are experiencing turmoil.

Brewing up trouble

The shakeout going on in the U.S. we mentioned above, but Brazil has its own local issues: Due to economic problems, its currency was devalued, which has led to an increased cost of sales for the brewer. Still, Anheuser-Busch says it remains upbeat about the prospects for the market. It has done business in Brazil for 30 years, and with favorable demographics suggesting the likelihood to future growth, it foresees a turnaround in its fortunes there.

Plus, with the Miller merger now behind it, Anheuser-Busch InBev has strengthened its position in developing markets and sees itself poised for growth in Asia, Central and South America, and Africa, markets it says will play a key role in its plans.

Although investors tend to focus on how beer trends in the U.S. will impact a brewer, given its global reach, and its portfolio of hundreds of brands beyond its $1-billion-a-year sellers, it would be short-sighted to bet against this company based on its domestic woes.

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Milwaukee craft beer scene is hopping

Milwaukee craft beer scene is hopping

Despite its long-standing brewing legacy, Milwaukee was relatively late to the party when it came to craft brewing. But the hereditary home of Miller High Life, Pabst Blue Ribbon, Schlitz and Blatz is making up for lost time.

These days, the Cream City is awash in suds of all kinds from multiple small breweries scattered across the metro area. Pull up a stool and dive into some great new Milwaukee beer.

Dapper and BFG

Good things often come in small packages and very good beer is coming from Good City Brewing Co. on Milwaukee’s east side. Brewmaster and University of California-Davis grad Andy Jones is coaxing a surprisingly diverse collection of beers from his 17-barrel brewing system, much of which is available in Good City’s Farwell Avenue taproom.

Styles range from the eminently drinkable Dapper, a proper British session ale with 4.2 percent alcohol by volume, to the surprisingly dangerous BFG, or Big Friendly Goodness, a deceptively smooth barleywine that weighs in at 11.8 percent ABV. Top marks go to Motto, a single-malt/single-hop pale ale with 5.2 percent ABV and just the right level of Mosaic hops to make it both juicy and resinous on the palate.

Best new brewery

Brewer Kevin Wright must be doing something right, or maybe he just has a lot of friends. His Third Space Brewing Co., co-founded with Andy Gehl in Milwaukee’s Third Ward in September 2016, recently earned top honors as Wisconsin’s best new brewery, according to RateBeer.com, the online platform on which consumers weigh in on their favorite beers.

The RateBeer Best, an annual competition now in its 15th year, tallies the scores awarded for some 470,000 beers to determine the best beers, brewers and beer retailers worldwide. Third Space received its honor at a live ceremony in Santa Rosa, California earlier this year.

The taproom lineup includes Happy Place, a Midwest pale ale with 5.3 percent ABV; That’s Gold!, a golden Kolsch-style beer at 4.8 percent ABV; Acres Edge, a toasted oatmeal stout at 5.7 percent ABV; Happy Happy, a high-octane version of Happy Place with 8.5 percent ABV; and a few others. Wright’s lineup is well-balanced, featuring something for every beer drinker.

From coal to beer

Jimmy Gohsman knows craft beer can sometimes begin with home brewing and jump to the pros. The Denver native is one of those lucky ones and now serves as head brewer for the newly opened City Lights Brewing Co.

The brewery, which evolved from 4 Brothers Blended Beer Co., is in the former Milwaukee Gas Light Company structure built in 1902 to facilitate the coal gasification process necessary to light the street lamps throughout the city of Milwaukee. The building, designed by architect Alexander Eschweiler with bricks glazed by Tiffany, took a lot longer to rehab than expected due to historic preservation considerations. But in the end, the wait was worth it.

Gohsman’s beer lineup takes a traditional bent and includes an amber ale at 5.5 percent ABV, an IPA at 7.2 percent ABV, a brown ale at 5.7 percent ABV, and a session IPA at 4.5 percent ABV. You may want to go for the beer and stay for taproom’s stunning restoration and historical significance.

Doggy heaven

Every beer comes with its own legend. Here’s a good one: Black Husky Brewing was born in a log cabin. Really.

Tim and Toni Eichinger started brewing in a cabin in Pembine, a little town just inside the border from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Inspired by their son’s sled dog kennel and their pet husky Howler, a brand-new line of beers was born in 2010.

But as beautiful as Wisconsin’s north woods can be, the Eichingers ran into logistical problems trying to satisfy a growing number of Milwaukee bars and restaurants. Their solution? Relocate the brewery to Milwaukee’s Riverwest neighborhood, which they did in 2016.

Husky imagery, some fanciful, abounds on the beers’ labels, each of which features a different dog from the Eichingers’ kennel. The taproom lineup of eight beers includes The Original Black Husky Pale Ale, with 7.2 percent ABV, brewed with Simcoe hops and featuring Howler on the label; Sproose 2 IPA, an aggressive 8.6 percent ABV IPA brewed with spruce and featuring Lothar “the biter”; Three Scrutineers, an 8.4 percent ABV Belgian-style Tripel featuring White Knight, Papa and Fish adorned in pope hats; and close to a dozen others.

Brix

Tommy Vandervort was a UWM poli-sci and philosophy graduate when he entered public service and eventually took on the role of District 1 alderman for the city of Oak Creek. That would be enough to drive anyone to drink.

Instead, Vandervort founded Enlightened Brewing Co. in Bay View. In 2014, he brought on brewer James Larson, who holds a master’s degree in brewing and distilling from Heriot Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland, and who spent time in operations for Michigan’s famed Bell’s Brewery.

Together, Vandervort and Larson have come up with some inventive brews. Eight beers are currently on tap, including Benevolent Brew, a 7.4 percent ABV English ale; Enlightened Sustained Thought Coffee Stout with 6 percent ABV; te ipsum (Latin for “yourself”), a 6.5 percent ABV American pale ale; and Cream City Brix, a 5 percent ABV cream ale.

The last one is, of course, an inside joke for area residents who understand the origin of Milwaukee’s Cream City moniker and know “brix” refers to the amount of fermentable sugars in an aqueous solution. And now you know, too!

On tap

Good City Brewing Co.

2108 N. Farwell Ave., Milwaukee

414-539-4343

Third Space Brewing Co.

1505 W. St. Paul Ave., Milwaukee

414-909-BEER

City Lights Brewing Co.

2200 W. Mount Vernon Ave., Milwaukee

4141-436-1011

Black Husky Brewing Co.

909 E. Locust St., Milwaukee

414-509-8855

Enlightened Brewing Co.

2018 S. First St., Milwaukee

414-704-4085

2108 N. Farwell Ave., Milwaukee

2108 N. Farwell Ave., Milwaukee

Click here to view original web page at wisconsingazette.com

World's first craft beer brewed to be enjoyed while flying

World’s first craft beer brewed to be enjoyed while flying

Betsy Beer is the first beer designed and brewed to be enjoyed at high altitudes. Because senses are dulled by up to 30% during a flight, Cathay Pacific wanted to brew a beer that was perfectly suited to this environment.

The beer celebrates the eclectic flavours of the Orient with a tip of the hat to England’s long-standing tradition of turning barley and hops into a golden pint.

Taking its name from Cathay Pacific’s first aircraft, Betsy is a uniquely crafted brew containing Dragon Fruit and New Territories honey from Hong Kong, along with Fuggle Hops grown in Kent and used in English breweries for centuries.

Unlike its highly-hopped counterparts, Betsy is a wheat-based beer with a higher carbonation level than ordinary brews, heightening the sense of taste and delivering a punch of flavour with less bitterness and more aroma.

The Glenlivet has released a new rare whisky, its Nàdurra Peated Whisky Cask Finish, that has been finished in American oak casks that have previously held heavily peated Scotch whisky. This third release completes its rare single malt craft whisky range.

“As with each whisky in the Nàdurra range, it is produced using authentic 19th Century methods. A limited quantity is available because of the extensive time and craftsmanship involved in its making. Significantly, Nàdurra Peated marks the first time since the 19th century, that The Glenlivet has released a peated whisky,” says The Glenlivet brand manager, Eugene Lenford.

Bottled at 61.5% ABV Cask Strength / 48% ABV, the Nàdurra Peated Whisky Cask Finish is inspired by the authentic production processes used at The Glenlivet Distillery by its founder, George Smith, who originally used peat smoke to dry the malted barley. Finished in peated casks, the classic, smooth and fruity house style has been enriched with gentle, aromatic smoky notes.

The latest release is presented in redesigned packaging, which includes a prominent batch number, cask-like stamps and a more visible translation of the Gaelic word, ‘Nàdurra’ – meaning natural.

The Glenlivet Nàdurra Peated Whisky Cask Finish is available from selected stores countrywide from March 2017 onwards at an approximate retail price of R818.92 – the same price as Nàdurra First Fill and Nàdurra Oloroso.

Click here to view original web page at www.bizcommunity.com

Beer Napa

Beer Napa

The waiter at the Top of the Hill Tavern (“TOPO”) in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, was pleading his case for an IPA called Assist. I wasn’t complaining. In fact, I’d just told him that TOPO’s Ram’s Head IPA was one of the best I’d ever had. It wasn’t just me — last year, the brewpub’s Ram’s Head brought home the platinum in the World Beer Championships. Our waiter said that for his money, he liked the hop-heavy, “fruit-forward profile” of Assist. The thing is that I’d already bought a second round; he wasn’t trying to make a sale. He was trying to convert me.

One of the truly great side effects of the craft beer boom has been a raising of a sort of hipster version of civic pride. So when traveling, I always order a local brew and have regretted it exactly once. It’s something new, and the waitstaff won’t just rattle off options. They get excited about it. Just like the fierce competition has driven Memphis barbecue to the next level in both quality and loyalty, North Carolina breweries are at the top of their game and have created a craft brew tourism in the bargain. It has become the Napa Valley of beer.

According to the North Carolina Craft Brewers Guild, there are currently 185 breweries in the state, with 56 in the areas called the Triad and The Triangle. The regions are right next to each other, but the locals are picky — they aren’t the same thing.

According to its website, Gizmo Brew Works was launched in 2013 “from the ashes of a fallen brewery brother. … Gizmo represents the thinkers, tinkerers, and inventors who make up [Research Triangle Park] and the Umstead Industrial Park which we call home.” My only real complaint with the Assist IPA was the same I had with Gizmo’s prose — there was just a little bit too much going on.

That’s when it struck me — the state’s success with craft beer isn’t just sensible laws and fierce competition, it’s also friendly collaboration. These are the factors that Matt Ridley points out in his book, The Rational Optimist, that cause “ideas to have sex.”

Apt point, as Mrs. M and I were in town for a wedding. While she and her college friends went to pester the bride, the husbands went down to a famous burger shack called Al’s. It was a little too famous, actually, and crowded. One of us called his boss lady to say we’d gone down the street to …

“… the Carolina Brewery?” she guessed. Well, she had us there. This puts two fully functioning brewpubs, churning out excellent beer (try Carolina’s Pamlico Pale Ale, named after the local Pamlico Sound) within about six blocks, in a city the size of Chapel Hill.

The talent in this area is so thick that when a friend from college, Britt Lytle, opened a brewery down the road in High Point, it was easy to find a local brewmaster to help him out. Brown Truck Brewery (named after Britt’s first truck) won three medals in the Great American Beer Festival in its first year. If you love craft beer, beautiful scenery, and friendly arguments about brew, you might want to get yourself out to North Carolina for a long weekend.

And I have to admit to doing my part for the N.C. beer boom. Britt and I were discussing his opening up a brewery in such a competitive environment — the challenges and the fears — when the conversation turned to “Murffbrau,” my college homebrew. “Was I an inspiration for Brown Truck?” I asked.

“Actually, you were.” He said. “I took one sip of that crap and said to myself, ‘There has got to be a better way.'”

Click here to view original web page at www.memphisflyer.com

25 most important American craft beers ever

25 most important American craft beers ever

Food & Wine had a great idea.

I’m borrowing it.

Last month, the magazine asked 21 beer industry luminaries to rank the most important craft beers of all time. Not the best, which would have been a ridiculous and impossible undertaking.

The most important.

As you might expect from a pack of luminaries, the list was fairly well-constructed. But after sharing it on social media and following with my own thoughts, most of which blew past 140 characters, there was only one thing to do: Make a list of my own.

What makes an “important” beer? To me, the definition is simple: It’s one that either changed consumer tastes or how breweries approach making beer. Some of the beers below have influenced both drinkers and brewers. Others hew more in one direction than the other. Others find their power in the brand or the package even more than the beer. As you’ll see, I agree with much of the Food & Wine list but also take several exceptions.

I’m interested in your opinions too. Feel free to email with the beer that has been most important to you, personally, with a few sentences explaining why, and we’ll follow up in the coming weeks with the readers’ say.

Until then, here is my ranking of the American craft beer industry’s 25 most important beers ever (which actually numbers more than that due to several ties):

1. Sierra Nevada Pale Ale (Sierra Nevada Brewing)

As simple as the concept is now, Sierra Nevada’s flagship beer was revolutionary in 1980: a hop-forward pale ale showcasing the spry citrus character of American-grown hops. Nothing like it had existed before on a commercial scale; now such beers line shelves of any and every reputable beer store in the country. There’s no other reasonable choice for the top spot. (Food & Wine rank: 1)

2. Sam Adams Boston Lager (Boston Beer)

Not the most exciting beer, but the company’s ambitious growth, crossed with founder Jim Koch’s marketing savvy — including a very public war of words with Anheuser-Busch during the 1990s — has arguably done more than any other brand to challenge the dominance of Bud, Miller and the old standbys. As Goose Island founder John Hall once told me: “Jim built a tent that the rest of us could step into.” (F&W: 2)

3. Bourbon County Stout (Goose Island Beer Co.)

When first released in 1995 (yes — it was 1995, not 1992 as the label says), an imperial stout aged in bourbon barrels might as well have been a lager brewed on Mars; it just didn’t exist. Goose Island gave the world a gift by coaxing those phenomenal flavors that result from imperial stout meeting whiskey barrel — vanilla, chocolate, coconut, marshmallow and oak. The evidence lies in the hundreds, if not thousands, of breweries that have followed suit. (F&W: 3)

4. Anchor Steam (Anchor Brewing)

The original American craft beer. End of story. (F&W: 11)

5. 90 Minute IPA (Dogfish Head Brewing)

Like “Jeopardy!” this spot began with an answer: hops. Hops have been the engine driving craft beer for more than a decade, and without an India pale in the top four, it was time for an India pale ale. Dozens of IPAs have been influential, which made zeroing in on one a challenge. But I settled on this classic, and without much consternation. Back in 1999, when many American craft breweries were still built on mimicking European beer styles, Delaware’s Dogfish Head changed how a nation thought about hops, with this boozy (9 percent alcohol), bitter (90 IBUs) and assertive imperial IPA. What made the beer even more important was the company’s aggressive distribution strategy, which made Dogfish the nation’s fastest-growing brewery by 2011 and put 90 Minute IPA in countless awestruck hands at a time that craft beer was building momentum toward the breakthrough that followed. (F&W: 23)

6. Blue Moon Belgian White (Blue Moon Brewing Co.; subsidiary of MillerCoors)

The Brewers Association defines a craft brewer, and MillerCoors certainly is not one. However, the Brewers Association does not define craft beer, and it is widely agreed: Blue Moon is a craft beer. Ubiquity and the power of that MillerCoors distribution network have made Blue Moon crucially important to the growth of craft beer; it has educated countless mainstream drinkers about the genius of the Belgian wit. (F&W: Not ranked)

7. Lagunitas IPA (Lagunitas Brewing)

Hard as it is to imagine, IPAs barely existed in 1995, which put this beer and its citrus-pine hop character ahead of its time. More subtly, but equally important: Lagunitas founder Tony Magee claims to be first to package an IPA simply as “IPA.” Until then, he has said, the style was largely portrayed as “I.P.A.” and with the sort of images — a raja, the Taj Mahal, a Bengal tiger — that nodded to the style’s history as a British export to India. If in fact Magee was first to package IPA without the periods and the campy iconography — and I’ve found no compelling evidence to the contrary — this beer has been even more influential than its tasty liquid (which has become the nation’s top-selling IPA). (F&W: Not ranked)

8. New Belgium Brewing Fat Tire/Bell’s Amber (tie)

No one cares much about amber ales anymore, but like Sam Adams Boston Lager, the style helped convert scores of craft drinkers in the ’80s and early ’90s. It also gave breweries the bedrock, high-volume beers that financed their ability to embrace the wilder experiments that have come to define the industry. (F&W: Neither ranked)

9. La Folie (New Belgium Brewing)

Long before oak-aged sour beers were popular in American brewing, there was La Folie. This showed a generation of brewers the possibilities. (F&W: 13)

10. Pliny the Elder (Russian River Brewing)

One of the original American cult beers, Pliny can’t be found outside of its tiny distribution footprint — California, Oregon, Colorado and Philadelphia — and that’s partly where the power of this imperial IPA lies. But the beer backs up the hype with superb balance: bold citrus-pine character, malt backbone and bitterness. (F&W: 7)

11. Dark Lord (Three Floyds Brewing)

Dark Lord has several firsts (or near firsts) to its credit: It is among the first prominent examples of an imperial stout featuring adjuncts — in this case, coffee, Mexican vanilla and Indian sugar. Its annual Dark Lord Day release helped birth the idea of beer as an event. And, for better or worse, it has fueled the notion of rarity as a prized commodity in craft beer. (F&W: 8)

12. Redhook ESB/Widmer Hefeweizen (tie)

Extra special bitter and hefeweizen don’t have much in common, but these beers are linked in history by one powerful force: Anheuser-Busch. Both Redhook and Widmer sold minority stakes to the St. Louis giant during the 1990s when big beer was first grappling with the emergence of craft. In Anheuser-Busch’s mighty distribution network, both these flagships vaulted to national prominence and reached many more taste buds than they otherwise would have. A dotted line can be drawn from those deals to Anheuser-Busch InBev’s acquisition of nine American craft breweries since 2011, which has the world’s largest beer company poised to become the nation’s largest producer of craft beer in the coming years. (F&W: Not ranked/19)

13. Anchor Liberty/Anchor Porter/Anchor Christmas Ale/Anchor Old Foghorn (tie)

Arguably America’s first modern IPA, porter, seasonal release and barleywine all came from the same brewery. Remarkable. (F&W: 6/21/17/unranked)

14. Celis White/New Albion Ale/Bert Grant’s IPA/Pete’s Wicked Ale (tie)

Ah, the dearly departed. In the early ‘90s, Celis popularized the Belgian wit style in the U.S. (and quite likely inspired the existence of Blue Moon). New Albion lasted only a handful of years, but no less than Sierra Nevada founder Ken Grossman cites it as an influence. Grant is widely credited with brewing the nation’s first IPA (Anchor Liberty wasn’t marketed as such, though that’s essentially what it is). Pete’s Brewing was one of the five largest craft breweries in the U.S. through the ‘90s and served as a prominent alternative to Budweiser and Miller. All are gone; none is forgotten. (F&W: 14/10/unranked/unranked)

15. Allagash White (Allagash Brewing)

Blue Moon taught a generation of mainstream beer drinkers to love Belgian wit. Allagash White did it with grace and style. And without an orange wedge. (F&W: 4)

16. Black Butte Porter (Deschutes Brewery)

Opting for a porter as a flagship in 1988 was a bold move. The fact that Black Butte continues to be a bedrock brand for Deschutes — and that porter is now an industrywide bedrock style — more than affirms the decision. (F&W: Not ranked)

17. Dale’s Pale Ale (Oskar Blues Brewery)

Sometimes it’s not just the liquid that makes a beer important. Dale’s Pale Ale was the first craft beer to be widely distributed in cans, forever changing what we reach for when we reach for a craft beer. The fact that the handsome blue, red and silver can housed a well-made 6.5 percent alcohol pale ale didn’t hurt either. (F&W: 15)

18. Arrogant Bastard Ale (Arrogant Brewing)

It was the attitude as much as the beer that made Arrogant Bastard such a revelation upon its release in 1997. Stone Brewing — which spun off Arrogant Brewing into its own company in 2016 — set out to challenge beer drinkers in a way that the industry had rarely done. This intensely bitter and snarky beer (“You’re not worthy” was the tag line) pushed craft to keep pushing. (F&W: Not ranked)

19. Brooklyn Lager/Yuengling Traditional Lager/Victory Prima Pils (tie)

I’m lumping in the lagers because they’ve had similar effects on validating a style once disdained within the industry. Brooklyn and Yuengling did it with volume. Victory did it by crafting the perfect pilsner. (F&W: Not ranked/Not ranked/9)

20. Heady Topper (The Alchemist)

This Vermont double IPA helped establish the East Coast as a legitimate source of world-class craft beer — on par at last with the West. It also helped launch the unfiltered “New England IPA” style that has enjoyed recent prominence. This beer is still better than 99 percent of them. (F&W: 5)

21. Hennepin (Brewery Ommegang) and Tank 7 (Boulevard Brewing) (tie)

Ommegang has never been the most buzzed-about American craft brewery but has long been one of the best. Modeled on the Belgian breweries adored by Ommegang founders Don Feinberg and Wendy Littlefield, Hennepin was the first craft saison made in the United States. Boulevard’s Tank 7 didn’t come along until 2009 but is as responsible as any American saison for bringing that style to the mainstream. (F&W: Neither ranked)

Ommegang has never been the most buzzed-about American craft brewery but has long been one of the best. Modeled on the Belgian breweries adored by Ommegang founders Don Feinberg and Wendy Littlefield, Hennepin was the first craft saison made in the United States. Boulevard’s Tank 7 didn’t come along until 2009 but is as responsible as any American saison for bringing that style to the mainstream. (F&W: Neither ranked)

22. Cuvee de Tomme (Port Brewing/Lost Abbey)

Tart bourbon barrel-aged fruit beer doesn’t sound so radical now, but during the 1990s, Cuvee de Tomme was a revelation for anyone who could find it. I’ve never tried this beer, but it has been on my to-do list since learning its place in history while researching that wonderful, persnickety yeast strain, Brettanomyces. This was one of the first American beers to use Brett. (F&W: 18)

23. Matilda (Goose Island Beer Co.)

Speaking of Brettanomyces, Goose Island was among the first breweries to mainstream that yeast with the 2005 introduction of Matilda, a tribute to legendary Belgian beer Orval. Goose Island needed more than a year to figure out how to make a beer with Brett. Most of the literature at the time was about how to keep it out of beer. Matilda quickly caught the attention of both customers and fellow brewers, which has helped make Brett an industry staple. (F&W: Not ranked)

24. Every beer ever from Firestone Walker Brewing and New Glarus Brewing

How have we gotten this far without any representation from America’s two best breweries? OK, problem solved.

25. Not Your Father’s Root Beer (Small Town Brewery)

Just kidding.

Four reasons to drink beer with your breakfast

Four reasons to drink beer with your breakfast

 

Bloody Marys and mimosas may be typical go-to tipples during boozy breakfasts and brunches, but today’s endless variety of beer styles and flavors are compelling alternatives for morning imbibing. From beers brewed with breakfast-friendly ingredients (oats, coffee and even scrapple) to European traditions, it’s time you explore what craft beer can bring to your a.m.

Here are four ways to bring more beer to breakfast.

Coffee beers

Stouts and porters — whose darkly roasted malts match the flavor of coffee beans — are the most common styles of beer that use coffee, and there are as many variations on the coffee stout theme as there are permutations of espresso and milk drinks. Speedway Stout from San Diego’s AleSmith Brewing is one of the classic coffee beers, and the new 16-ounce cans of the potent brew (12% alcohol) are perfect to share over bacon and pancakes.

Wheat beers

One culture in which beer for breakfast has a particularly long history is Germany, and a tall vase of hefeweizen is the traditional accompaniment to the “second breakfast” common in Bavaria. Light, spritzy and fragrant with yeasty aromas, hefeweizen is a wonderful option for a breakfast beer, whether you’re enjoying a light meal or tucking into a more hearty spread. American-made hefeweizen can range from fruity and refreshingly tart to more spice-driven and grainy. Black Market Brewing in Temecula makes a well-balanced hefeweizen that fits easily into breakfast, while Heavenly Hefe from Craftsman Brewing in Pasadena may be the finest hefeweizen in Los Angeles (though you’ll have to find it on draft as Craftsman does not yet package its beer).

The Belgian wit style is another international brew that is comfortable at breakfast. With a light body and energetic effervescence, Witbiers are similar to hefeweizens, but the Belgian wheat beers are flavored with orange peel and spices. If you’re a fan of mimosas, try Allagash White.

Michelada

Also known as cerveza preparada, the zesty combination of lime juice, spices and Mexican lager is a popular alternative to the bloody Mary. And there are limitless variations on the Michelada theme. Some use tomato juice, some Clamato, while others forgo the tomato entirely and lean heavily on the lime juice component. However you mix them, a Michelada is improved with a flavorful craft beer. Experiment with different combinations on Sundays at Indie Brewing Co.’s weekly Michelada bar at the tasting room, try one of the standout craft beer Micheladas during brunch at Eagle Rock Brewery Public House or turn any beer into a Michelada for $1 at San Fernando Brewing Co.’s taproom.

Breakfast in your brew

From fruit to shellfish, craft brewers will add just about anything to a brew in the name of experimentation. Delaware’s Dogfish Head Brewery is no exception. They once used chocolate and Maine lobsters in a beer, and they’ve toyed with more. They also made a beer specifically with breakfast in mind. Beer for Breakfast is a stout that not only features coffee and maple syrup, but also scrapple. The loaf of pork trimmings and cornmeal is a breakfast staple in northeastern states, and it provides an earthy and spicy background to Dogfish Head’s over-the-top ode to the breakfast stout genre.

If you’re unsure about a pork-powered breakfast beer, how about oranges instead? Sierra Nevada Brewing has joined the fruit-in-beer movement with a citrus-heavy take on their iconic pale ale. Sidecar blends some fruity hop aromas with two doses of orange peel for a breakfast-ready pint, and it’s widely available in six packs.

Two Brothers Brewing: Built on a Stubborn Streak and a Dream

Two Brothers Brewing: Built on a Stubborn Streak and a Dream

Click here to view original web page at www.craftbeer.com by MATHEW POWERS

Twenty years ago, Two Brothers Brewing didn’t operate four establishments, nor could it boast countless domestic and international brewing awards. The brewery certainly didn’t play host to 10,000 attendees at a summer festival. Back then, Jason and Jim Ebel, co-founders and the brothers behind the name, had nothing more than a few beer samples, a stubborn streak and a dream.

Jason Ebel sought to transform that dream into a reality by lugging the beer in his small car to a Chicago bar. The car’s trunk was too tiny to fit the beer, so he had to strap it into the seats, which forced his wife to sit in the back. But, the discomfort would all be worth it because once the bar operator drank Jason’s beer, he would buy it and the process of building a brewery would ensue — at least that was the hope.

The bar operator took one sip and promptly said, “Nope.”

“I always joke, if I weren’t so stubborn or stupid, I would have quit years ago. There were so many days I should have quit,” Jason explains. “But I just always wanted this to work, and I had such a passion … I couldn’t let it go. And now 20 years later, I am so glad that I was that stubborn.”

The stubbornness drove him back to the bar until he eventually won over the owner.

It’s Not About the Money at Two Brothers Brewing

The 20-year journey from brush-off to craft brewing stalwart has included multiple GABF medals and World Cup wins. The Two Brothers brand has also grown to include coffee, dining and spirits, but the beer remains front and center. They’ve opened three Chicago locations and another in Scottsdale, Arizona. Along the way, Two Brothers rejuvenated a historic railroad roundhouse (constructed in 1856) and repurposed a 1910 bakery into a beacon of craft culture that is aptly named “The Craftsman.”

Two Brothers remains family owned and staunchly independent. It persists in being faithful to the comradery craft beer is so well-known for.

“It’s always been a fraternal business … always willing to help each other,” Jason says. “We believe in that.”

“I don’t care about the extra dollars. I care about making great beer, and doing things the right way.” ~Jason Ebel

Dedicated to quality, community and sustainability, Jason says he refuses to skimp on resources for the sake of profit.

“Sustainability is not cheap,” he says. “We always try to do it the right way, we think, whether it’s spending five times more for something to be made in the U.S. or buying top-of-the-line ingredients. It gets tougher as the business grows, but we want to lead the business in the right direction. I don’t care about the extra dollars. I care about making great beer, and doing things the right way.”

Two Brothers Brewing strives to create the best product possible, rather than attempt to become the biggest-selling brewery.

“We have always had a slow, methodical growth pace on purpose. To me, it’s a very calculated…when wholesalers from new markets call, we often say, ‘not yet.’” In fact, Jason still writes every brewing recipe and actively participates in every level of quality control, just as he did 20 years ago.

Always Pushing to Create Something New

Ebel says what he’s seen change in recent years are beer consumers. Millennials have always had craft beer available to them, and he says their perspective is different from those who remember the days before its emergence.

“The difference in young adults and those who have been around a while presents a brewing challenge, for sure. But we have always been about pushing the envelope and embracing innovation,” he explains. “For example, we produced our first sour 11 years ago. We have our special divisions program and they are always experimenting. It’s great.”

Even when it comes to craft staples, Two Brothers seeks to be innovative. Ebel says a great example is the brewery’s new Pinball Pale Ale, a beer he says “has more hops than anything we’ve ever made” – yet isn’t overly bitter.

“This beer pushes the envelope in creativity. We don’t add any hops during boil, everything happens in the whirlpool, or later,” he says. “The aroma is absolutely incredible.”

Two Brothers will also introduce an IPA with a hop that’s just about to come into the market — the Denali hop — which Jason explains is “like pineapple meets pine and citrus. They are some of the coolest hops I’ve smelled in a while.”

Even after two decades of pushing that envelope, you can tell Ebel doesn’t plan to sit back and put the next 20 years on auto-pilot.

“I can’t help but think about all the cool stuff we can do in the next 10 years or beyond,” Ebel says. “Although, if my kids take over the business, they might be annoyed at all the dumb stuff dad did [laughter].”

I doubt that. It would appear that good beer, “crazy” dreams and a stubborn streak worked awfully well for the Ebels.

After spending most of his life chasing tornadoes, Mathew decided to chase beer as writer, historian and drinker. He possesses a Master’s in Written Communication and History and he’s published regularly in print and digitally on various beer and spirits publications. When he’s not writing (or drinking beer), he’s spending time with family, watching sports, reading history books and dreaming of classic cars he can’t afford.

BrewDog opens brewery in competitive central Ohio beer market

BrewDog opens brewery in competitive central Ohio beer market

by Ben Garbarek Click here to view original web page at abc6onyourside.com

Monday, February 20th 2017

CANAL WINCHESTER, Ohio (WSYX/WTTE) — Scottish brewery BrewDog opened its North American headquarters for the first time Monday in Canal Winchester.

The $30 million facility on Gender Road took nearly two years to build and is the size of about two football fields. It will house BrewDog’s brewing equipment, distribution center and taproom.

The brewery will start brewing in March. It’ll sell its beer across Ohio and perhaps eventually nationwide. The facility in Canal Winchester is designed to be a tourist destination.

“We had people coming from Brazil,” said Keith Bennet, who moved from Scotland to start the brewery in the US. “We’ve had people driving down from Michigan just to have a beer, things like that. So, it’s really exciting. Hopefully, people do make it a destination and we can make it a really cool place to hang out.”

BrewDog will be competing with more than 30 breweries in central Ohio and more than 200 across the state. The Ohio Craft Brewers Association said the number of breweries in Ohio has quadrupled since 2012.

“People have a passion for it,” said Mary MacDonald with the Ohio Craft Brewers Association. “It’s something that they love. A lot of them are former home brewers turned professional and they want to serve something that’s local to their market.”

MacDonald said the market doesn’t appear to have hit its saturation point yet. She said there are more than 60 new ones in the works across the state.

“You’ve got more farmers markets, you’ve got more locally owned restaurants, you’ve got lots of artisan bakeries and things like that and the craft beer scene is kind of following that,” she said.

BrewDog also made headlines last week by announcing a new perk for its employees. Employees will get a week of paid leave if they adopt a dog.

 

American Craft Beer Week 2017 coming May 15-21

American Craft Beer Week 2017 coming May 15-21

Click here to view original web page at beerpulse.com by Press Release

WHAT: For the twelfth consecutive year, the Brewers Association has declared American Craft Beer Week (ACBW), a nationwide celebration of the small and independent craft brewers that make America’s beer culture so exceptional. The weeklong celebration provides a platform for craft brewers and beer lovers to celebrate craft beer. From May 15-21, brewers across all 50 states will hold events including exclusive brewery tours, special craft beer releases, food and beer pairings, tap takeovers and more.

WHEN: Monday, May 15–Sunday, May 21, 2017

WHERE: North to South. East to West. Sea to Shining Sea.
Visit the official American Craft Beer Week event calendar on CraftBeer.com for a full – and growing – list of local celebrations in all 50 states.

WHY: ACBW provides hundreds of thousands of beer lovers the opportunity to visit and support their local brewery and beer businesses. It’s the perfect time to recognize the ingenuity of the small and independent craft breweries that have made America’s beer culture the richest in the world.

About the Brewers Association
The Brewers Association is the not-for-profit trade association dedicated to small and independent American brewers, their beers and the community of brewing enthusiasts. The Brewers Association (BA) represents more than 70 percent of the brewing industry, and its members make more than 99 percent of the beer brewed in the U.S. The BA organizes events including the World Beer CupSM, Great American Beer Festival®, Craft Brewers Conference & BrewExpo America®, SAVOR℠: An American Craft Beer & Food Experience, Homebrew Con, National Homebrew Competition and American Craft Beer Week®. The BA publishes The New Brewer magazine and its Brewers Publications division is the largest publisher of contemporary and relevant brewing literature for today’s craft brewers and homebrewers.

Beer lovers are invited to learn more about the dynamic world of craft beer at CraftBeer.com and about homebrewing via the BA’s American Homebrewers Association and the free Brew Guru™ mobile app. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

The Brewers Association is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, or marital/familial status. The BA complies with provisions of Executive Order 11246 and the rules, regulations, and relevant orders of the Secretary of Labor.

 

Walmart Just Got Sued For Selling Fake Craft Beer

Walmart Just Got Sued For Selling Fake Craft Beer

CONSTANTINE SPYROU Click here to view original web page at www.foodbeast.com

If you bought one of Walmart’s craft beers, you may have been ripped off.

The giant retailer is being sued for deceiving consumers by selling them a line of private-label “craft beers” that aren’t actually craft beer.

Walmart claims that their line of craft beers was developed in conjunction with a craft brewing company called Trouble Brewing, according to The Consumerist. However, the only Trouble Brewing company that was found was an Irish brewery that doesn’t match up to any of the information Walmart gave about the company producing their craft beers.

The company in Walmart’s paperwork for the alcohol is called WX Brands, and they develop all types of alcohol for brands around the world. They clearly don’t fit into the legal definition of craft beer, which requires production of less than 6 million barrels of beer per year and less than 25% of a non-craft brewer to own it.

However, Walmart puts up their craft beers, which include their Cat’s Away IPA, After Party Pale Ale, Round Midnight Belgian White, and Red Flag Amber beers, next to all of the other craft beers in the store — which further distorts the customer’s image that the beers are in fact actual craft beers.

Because the beers are available in Walmarts across 45 different states, there’s a good chance you saw it and thought it was a craft beer when it in fact wasn’t. If you bought the product, you were also getting deceived by Walmart, who was able to sell the beer for a higher price because it was a “craft beer” that is perceived to be worth more.

As a result, a class-action lawsuit has been brought against Walmart by a group of residents from Ohio, who are looking for compensatory and punitive damages as well as an injunction to prevent the labeling of the beers as craft beer.

The plaintiffs are calling the marketing of the beers “wholesale fiction,” and I couldn’t think of a better way to describe what Walmart is doing.

Hopefully, this makes Walmart stop defrauding the public with its “craft beers.”

 

Lawsuit against Walmart claims nothing crafty about its 'craft' beers

Lawsuit against Walmart claims nothing crafty about its ‘craft’ beers

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A Cincinnati-area man has filed a lawsuit against Walmart over what he says is the retail giant’s “fraudulent, unlawful, deceptive and unfair” marketing of craft beers that aren’t really craft beers.

Walmart sells craft beers with names such as Cat’s Away IPA and Round Midnight Belgian White to residents in 45 other states, presenting the brews as craft beers “when in actuality, nothing about (Walmart) is ‘small, independent and traditional’ to qualify it as an American craft brewer” based on the definition put forth by the Brewers Association, the lawsuit says.

Ragan Dickens, director of national media relations for Walmart’s corporate communications office, replied to an inquiry with the following statement: “We have not yet been served, but we take these claims seriously and will respond appropriately with the court.”

The lawsuit notes that craft beer typically costs $2 or $3 more per six-pack than “macro-brewed or mass-produced beer.” But plaintiff Matthew Adam suggests in the lawsuit that the beers sold as craft beverages by Walmart are brewed by Genesee Brewing, in Rochester, New York.

“Defendant’s craft beer has never been a ‘craft beer,’ nor has it been produced by a craft brewery,” the lawsuit alleges. “Rather, it’s a wholesale fiction created by the defendant that was designed to deceive consumers into purchasing the craft beer at a higher, inflated price.”

Adam asks the court to declare the lawsuit a class-action that would represent all Ohio residents that purchased craft beer at Walmart.

The suit, filed by Cincinnati attorneys Brian Giles and Bryce Lenox, seeks punitive damages, a declaration that Walmart violated the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act, an injunction barring Walmart from marketing its beers as craft beers and attorneys’ fees.

The lawsuit is pending in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court.