Showing posts with label craft brewing industry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label craft brewing industry. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Here's a breathtakingly novel thought: "We wear (a mask) for you, please wear one for us."


And this.


And this.


Three different craft brewing entities, but a central point: mask up and make it easier for them to stay in business.

Or, easier for us, right here in New Albany.

But do local operators in New Albany share a universal view of science? My guess, and it's just that -- a guess -- is the answer might surprise you.

In other news ...

Typically toothless city council mask resolution proves that even a pandemic can't compel New Albany’s Democrats to actually GOVERN.

Tuesday, January 07, 2020

Monnik Beer Company will open a second location in downtown New Albany at the former Bank Street Brewhouse.


Win, lose or draw -- and there was plenty of each from 2009 through 2019 -- NABC's Bank Street Brewhouse was my baby, and now that one of my jobs is to report on such matters as its revitalization into Monnik in Hoosierland, I was absolutely determined to get the scoop.

EXCLUSIVE: Monnik Beer Co. plans brewery, kitchen in New Albany at the former NABC facility, by Roger Baylor (Food & Dining Magazine)

Monnik Beer Co. opened in Germantown in 2015 and enjoys a reputation as one of Louisville’s finest breweries. Meanwhile the New Albanian Brewing Company’s Bank Street Brewhouse production brewery in downtown New Albany was shuttered in May, 2019 after ten years of making beer and memories.

Now it’s 2020, and construction continues as Monnik works toward a location in Indiana at the former Bank Street Brewery building (415 Bank Street, New Albany).

The original NABC Pizzeria & Public House (founded in 1987) continues to bake pizzas and brew beer at 3312 Plaza Drive on New Albany’s north side ...

Following are photos I took on December 15, only two of which were needed in the article. Like me, you might be mourning the disappearance of BSB's unique concrete bar top, which evidently has given way to the imperative of kitchen expansion.


But this is small beer. The most important part of this story is the fact it's happening -- along with the February advent of Recbar 812 a block away, The Exchange's "Tavern Hall" expansion into the adjacent former Feast BBQ space, Board and You's future location on Pearl, and whatever else I'm missing.








And a tale of two artistic renderings.



Monday, December 09, 2019

BEER WITH A SOCIALIST: Kings & Convicts, Ballast Point, and beer writer Josh Noel's excellent analysis.


Once upon a time, Ballast Point Brewing was purchased by Constellation Brands for a cool billion, and now the latter has unloaded its costly toy for considerably less, although the exact figure has yet to be released.

The beneficiary of the fire sale is a two-year-old Chicago brewery called Kings & Convicts -- and no, I'd never heard of it prior to the recent headlines.


The Chicago Tribune's Josh Noel explores the Ballast Point deal at greater length here: Unlikely Ballast Point brewery sale executed with help of unidentified wine industry magnate.

How very tiring.



Noel is a fine beer writer. Check him out on Twitter and at his web site, and enjoy this commentary about all that money.

Ranking the craft brewery sales that have made us say UH HOLY WHAT THE F***, by Josh Noel

I was finishing a deadline article for the Chicago Tribune Tuesday afternoon when an email arrived from someone who also writes about the beer industry. The subject line: “who the heck is king's and convicts?”

I opened the email. It said: “no. but really....”

I hadn’t heard the news yet, and wondered why this person was asking about a tiny suburban Chicago brewery that’s so tiny, most Chicagoans haven’t even heard of it. Moments later, a press release popped up in my email. It said that the tiny brewery had bought the iconic Ballast Point Brewing.

I hammered out a reply to that fellow journalist: “UH HOLY WHAT THE F***”

(Yes, it was all caps, and no, there were no asterisks.)

His response: “precisely this.”

All this is to say, during this fevered era of brewery acquisitions that began with Goose Island’s sale to Anheuser-Busch in 2011, there have been dozens of deals. Some have caused barely a flutter: Revolver Brewing selling to MillerCoors, Karbach Brewing selling to Anheuser-Busch and Three Weavers Brewing selling to Canarchy elicited mostly shrugs beyond their home markets.

Others have changed the industry. They have made our jaws drop. They have made us say, UH HOLY WHAT THE F***.

But the most stunning deals haven’t all possessed equal UH HOLY WHAT THE F***NESS (yes, now an official craft beer industry term). Here are the Top 10 most UH HOLY WHAT THE F*** craft brewery acquisitions since Goose Island’s sale, ranked in terms of UH HOLY WHAT THE F***NESS ...

Saturday, May 11, 2019

BEER WITH A SOCIALIST: No one asked me, so here's what should happen next at the former Bank Street Brewhouse.

Day old bread, anyone?

After ten years in business the New Albanian Bank Street Brewhouse is closing at the end of May. NABC leaves 415 Bank Street considerably better than the company found it when Resch Construction began the building's renovation in 2008.

NABC "winding down" brewing at Bank Street Brewhouse, and Taco Steve "hanging up his apron."


What's done is done, so let's focus on the future. The sisters and building owner Steve Resch say they'd like to treat the vacated space as a unit, to be taken over as a turnkey.

Here's the inventory.

  • Smallish kitchen
  • Bar and dining room (50 seats?)
  • Streetside patio (with garage doors)
  • Indoor event area (50-odd seats, heated but not air-conditioned)
  • Outdoor beer garden (100 or more potential seats, capable of being opened to the indoor event area by garage doors)
  • Brewery (circa 2,000 barrel annual capacity) with bottling line, kegs, walk-in cooler and all the extras

The puzzle NABC spent ten years trying to solve is how to make these pieces fit together to produce a profit. In essence a brewing system is a machine that can produce a certain number of items each year. When the machine is idle, it costs money.

How much beer needs to be brewed, food served and butts placed in seats?

Naturally the presence of a fully functional brewery places the BSB property in a different stratum than other available restaurant and bar footprints downtown. Ironically, the same is true just two blocks away at the moribund River City Winery -- without the kettle and mash tuns, of course.

As a turnkey operation, and situated at the doorstep of the more populous Louisville market, Bank Street Brewhouse is ideally suited to become the satellite location of a larger, established "craft" brewery. Downtown New Albany is viable and the Sherman Minton is toll-free.

It might be ANY larger, established "craft" brewery, although an existing Hoosier entity would have a leg up in terms of legalities and name recognition. Granted, there aren't many fitting this description. There are a few, and perhaps an outsider lurking, with ambition ... and cash.

Bank Street Brewhouse came into being in 2009 as the larger of two NABC brewing systems, designed to achieve a better economy of scale for those beers intended for outside distribution (which ultimately became our Waterloo). When the BSB brewing system came on line, the pre-existing brewery at the Pizzeria & Public House became the smaller "research and development" brewery, where lesser-volume seasonals and specialties were brewed.

Reverse this scenario and it's easy to see how BSB's brewing capacity (15 barrel hot side, four 30-barrel fermenters) now could become the smaller specialty and seasonal facility for a larger brewer. Much of the brewery's output could be sold right on site. A portion might be shipped back to home base and other satellites, if any. Some capacity might be used to brew beer for other companies under contract, as NABC recently was doing for Mad Paddle in Madison, Indiana.

As BSB's brewery originally was configured, we calculated maximum annual production at approximately 2,250 barrels. In the main these were ales with a brief turnaround. This probably is too much beer for a stand-alone brewpub with on-site drinking and distribution alone.

However, it might depend on the brewing roadmap being followed. Allow me to propose a potential use that makes sense given the space allocations of brewery and public areas at 415 Bank Street.

Most of the existing regional craft brewery candidates for establishing a satellite brewery and taproom at the former Bank Street Brewhouse location in New Albany have product lines dominated by ales as opposed to lagers.

Nationally there has been a recent trend toward craft-brewed lagers, which take a bit longer to brew but in some cases are less expensive in terms of ingredients.

Consequently BSB's brewing system might be harnessed to a program of lager brewing, wherein the annual brew schedule could be recalculated to allow for the extra time required. The corresponding on-premise beer portfolio would be on the Bavarian model, with perhaps only four or five regular choices and a concise selection of seasonals. For a regional example, consider the Hofbrauhaus in Newport.

A Bavarian-style wheat ale program could accompany the lagers, and the parent brewery would ship in whatever of its other beers make sense. Depending on the investment, a retrofit with long-draw lines is possible. The variables are many, although not endless.

A VERY IMPORTANT INTERJECTION: The first objective is to use the brewing system to capacity. Size indeed matters. The NABC experience would have been very different if we'd have met projections and sold 2,000 barrels of beer after the first two years. Any future use of BSB's footprint by a brewery likely will be hybridized, in the sense that not all of what is being brewed will be consumed in one way (by the glass, carry-out, package, distribution), with the only caveat being that capacity must be achieved.  

In ten years none of us at NABC ever could manage to finish the outdoor space. By removing the old asphalt, adding gravel, planting vegetation and planning shade, the result on a smaller scale could be similar to the aforementioned Hofbrauhaus.


That's just beautiful, don't you think?

Barring a complete remodel of the food production area, it would not be possible to go full-frontal Bavarian. Then again, not every beer garden in Bavaria boasts a full menu card. Do the Bavarian "speisekarte" approach with sausages, snacks, meat and cheese plates, sandwiches and pretzels.

Another parallel example is the Capital Brewery in Middleton, Wisconsin (a suburb of Madison). It's one of my favorite spots in the Midwest.

The Capital Brewery Bier Garten is open April through October and often hosts live music as well as numerous public and private events. It is known as ‘Middleton’s Backyard’ and typically attracts over 1500 patrons on Fridays, May through September.

These are views of our last visit in 2016. The serving area is located behind us.




I'm not suggesting a prospective tenant emulate these examples precisely, only that I've been to Germany (and Wisconsin) often enough to see how the outdoor model works. There'd still be indoor space, but the beer garden could be a Louisville metro showplace.

---

My friend Mark asked if I was sad at the demise of Bank Street Brewhouse, and of course I am. At the same time, my mourning has been carried out in installments -- when those initial production predictions didn't come to pass, and when the founding kitchen closed in 2014, and when I left the company as a result of these and so many other factors.

To repeat, the sisters are doing the right thing in ending operations downtown and putting money back into the Grant Line location. There is no doubt about this, and I think it probably should have happened four or five years ago.

As such, another crucial point: whomever comes "next" will be inheriting equities and possibilities at a relative discount. Investment is required, though not to a ridiculous scale.

The brewing system's unexpected "between-the-cracks" size can nonetheless be an advantage for a larger established company, and the unfinished beer garden is a tremendous potential asset.

I'm optimistic that some one's going to agree with me -- and if they'd like toss a few farthings my way as a finder's fee, I'm down with it. 

Wednesday, April 04, 2018

THE BEER BEAT: Mad Paddle Brewery is coming to Madison, and there's a New Albany connection.

It's déjà vu all over again.

For an amuse-bouche in two parts, Strong Towns offers an explanation of economic growth through "craft" beer.

What the Craft Brewing Boom Can Teach Other Local Industries: Part 1

What the Craft Brewing Boom Can Teach Other Local Industries: Part 2

Having tickled the taste buds, let's have a glance to the northeast. If you ask me, Madison has always deserved a good brewery.

The town's first go-around was Mobreki; for a while it worked, but ultimately sank, with the brewing equipment ending up at Red Foot/Yeti in Jeffersonville. Frankly, the beer quality at Mobreki never achieved a predictable equilibrium, and therein lies the message of pertinence for the owners of Mad Paddle.

As detailed in this article, their plans are very ambitious, not to mention expensive. There's an old building to rehab, and a brewery to be purchased. They already have a beer truck being tricked-out. State of the art self-pouring mechanisms are discussed.

Granted, most major problems and nagging details can be resolved with massive cash infusions. However, as I once learned, reinventing the wheel isn't always the best idea whatever the size of one's stash. Mobreki's lesson is that the beer has to be of quality and consistent, as dispensed by great people -- and even great people can't salvage inconsistent beer.

It's all about the beer. Truly, this is job one.

I'm intrigued to see the mention of Josh Hill and NABC, which signals a contract brewing arrangement, and I've no reason to nitpick a business plan that surely will evolve with passing time, so just a cautionary note: the Mad Paddle beers needn't be avant garde, but they need to be solid, and everything else should rest on this pivot.

Best of luck to everyone involved, and congrats to NABC for taking my contract-brewing advice.

(Insert raised eyebrow here ... and read this update at the same newspaper, which reveals that NABC's contract brew for Mad Paddle will be packaged via mobile canning. Now THERE'S an idea.)

BREWPUB IN WORKS FOR MADISON FEED MILL, by Peggy Vlerebome (Madison Courier)

Brothers with Indiana ties tell Mad Paddle plans

Plans are under way for a brewery and pub in downtown Madison in a former feed mill on the northwest corner of West and Second streets.

Brothers Jerry and Larry Wade said they are developers and investors, not brewers or restaurateurs, so they will get the space ready for partnerships with a brewer and a pub operator. They said they are scheduled to close on the purchase of the building from Peter Ellis this week and hope to have the beer flowing at Mad Paddle Brewery early next year and already have a beer and wine permit from the state.

But the Wades said they plan to make Mad Paddle’s presence known much sooner than that with a 1942 fire truck converted to a beer truck. They bought the fire truck in Osgood and the vehicle is in New Albany for conversion. The truck’s debut will be at the RiverRoots Music & Arts Festival in June, where it will be parked near the festival with a roped-off area to sell beer to customers. It will be at all the festivals, operating with one-day permits from the state Alcohol Beverage Commission, Jerry Wade said.

Until Mad Paddle Brewery is up and running at 301 West St., its first batch will be brewed by Josh Hill, head of brewing operations at The New Albanian Brewing Company in New Albany, Jerry Wade said ...

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Read my profiles of Donum Dei Brewery and Floyd County Brewing Company in the latest issue of Food & Dining Magazine.


The quarterly Louisville edition of Food & Dining Magazine has arrived, and you can view it at issuu: Spring 2016 (vol 51) ... Feb - Mar - April 2016.

Glossy, tactile copies also can be snagged at hundreds of locations throughout metropolitan Louisville.

For the current edition, my "Hip Hops" column is given over to profiles of Donum Dei Brewery and Floyd County Brewing Company. By my reckoning, New Albany has not been home to three brewing companies in 109 years.

Why does it matter? According to writer James Fallows, there are 11 indicators of civic success, one of which is the presence of "craft" breweries:

One final marker, perhaps the most reliable: A city on the way back will have one or more craft breweries, and probably some small distilleries too.

Congratulations to my brewing brethren. In the next issue, I'll be writing about Goodwood Brewing Company in Louisville.

Meet New Albany's Two Newest Breweries


... Pendulums have a fortunate way of swinging back, and brewing returned to New Albany in 2002, when the New Albanian Brewing Company first mashed in.

Then, in 2015, there was an abrupt tripling of numbers: Donum Dei Brewery and Floyd County Brewing Company (FCBC) both opened, and while it may seem novel for such a small city to have so many breweries, this pattern is being repeated all across the country.

For those just learning about Food & Dining Magazine:

Food & Dining is a Louisville-based lifestyle publication focused on food & cooking, the enjoyment of wine & spirits, and the experience of dining out in one of the nation’s top restaurant cities.

We have all the sensibilities of a local magazine, but with the design and photography of a national magazine.

We pack the magazine and with gorgeous photography, engaging feature stories, entertaining articles, unique recipes and a restaurant guide that details over 1,000 restaurants.

The quarterly magazine began in 2003, and I started writing beer columns for John Carlos White a few issues into his run. The mag's his baby, and I'm delighted for him. Lots of other folks have played a part in launching and maintaining the publication, so thanks to all of them, too. May there be many more to come.

Tuesday, October 01, 2013

Roger's column at LouisvilleBeer.com: "Can we really have it all?"

Maybe we can, maybe we cannot.

Can we really have it all?


Just the other day, I heard the news that executive chef Reed Johnson had parted ways with Against the Grain. Actually, I read the news at the Eater Louisville web site, and this merits a brief digression about changing times. It strikes me as noteworthy that a full week later, the transition at AtG still […]

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Indiana State Sen. Jim Banks gets it right about craft beer.

Wine (left) and beer (right) at this year's Indiana State Fair.

In this clear and concise explanation of why Hoosier brewing is good for Indiana, Sen. Banks makes a solid economic development argument. Our Rep. Ed Clere, like Banks a Republican, led last year's artisan distilling effort in the House. It is my hope that the stalled farmers market bill gets some traction this time around.

In its entirety ...

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GUEST COLUMN: “Hopping” the Red Tape for Craft Beer, by State Sen. Jim Banks (R-Columbia City)(In.gov)

As a legislator, I know from experience that some policy topics are more fun to discuss than others. I’ve served a variety of roles in the Senate, and all of them have had their own share of debate and consideration. But no matter how divisive the committee discussions get, we can all agree on our love for Hoosier-grown businesses and products. For me, that includes craft beer.

In 2012, 409 craft breweries opened in the U.S. That’s been reported as the largest increase in brewery openings since the 1880s. As the number of breweries grew, so did the number of job opportunities. Currently, small brewing companies employ over 100,000 people across the country. With these advancements, craft breweries have captured a 10.2 percent share of beer sales.

Indiana isn’t left out of these trends. Our state currently has 68 craft breweries, ranking 14th in the nation. Last year, Hoosier craft brewers produced enough beer to generate a 27 percent growth rate – the 19th-highest in the country. We’re also home to one of the nation’s fastest growing breweries: Sun King Brewing Company. As more brewers seek to open shop, these numbers will only continue to improve.

It’s clear that consumers’ tastes are changing. Beer lovers are now turning toward unique, complex flavors over the traditional manufactured types. That places Indiana in a prime position to continue to profit from these ongoing advancements.

But this issue is more than just connecting consumers to beer makers. It’s about supporting homegrown businesses and, in turn, our economy as a whole. Buying local returns three times the revenue to communities compared to purchasing products from national chains. If we keep that money flowing through local economies, it will ultimately preserve market health and help it prosper.

Farmers’ markets are one popular avenue for buying local goods. Every Saturday, the Whitley County Courthouse Square bustles with farmers selling meat and produce and artisans displaying their handmade merchandise. Now imagine local brewers joining these vendors, sharing their own craft with hundreds of customers every week.

Currently, farm wineries are allowed to sell their products at these markets and trade shows, but craft brewers are still restricted from doing so. In the 2013 legislative session, I introduced two bills that would have made this possible, but they did not gain enough support. For now, it’s an outlet these brewers cannot access.

Indiana has made significant gains in supporting local brewers, which is evident in the high rate of growth this industry has experienced. However, there is still more we can do to help these businesses establish themselves in our state.

Oftentimes, brewers are held back by archaic, Prohibition-era restrictions that limit their ability to share their trade. For example, in Indiana, we have caps in place to restrict how much a brewery may sell and distribute to customers. This puts these businesses at a disadvantage, holding back Hoosier companies from competing in their own state.

Indiana has set itself apart as a business-friendly state, and we can continue that by improving opportunities for our craft brewers. I’m hopeful these discussions will be a focal point of future legislative sessions.

In the meantime, I look forward to discovering new favorites around our great state to fill my growler for the weekend. As they say, “Think globally. Drink locally.”

Wednesday, February 06, 2013

The Publican on megaswill and doublespeak, at LouisvilleBeer.com

When they talk smack, they need to be smacked down. It helps them learn.


george_orwellYears before most of us were born, there was an Englishman named Eric Blair, who is better known by his pen name, George Orwell.
During a lifetime cut regrettably short, Orwell spent much of his writing career pondering abuses and misuses of the English language. Orwell decried the mutability of language and words, particularly when these bastardized word meanings were deployed unnaturally, to become instruments of bad intent, or sometimes even de factoweapons against freedom itself.
Now, it is clear that the decline of a language must ultimately have political and economic causes: it is not due simply to the bad influence of this or that individual writer. But an effect can become a cause, reinforcing the original cause and producing the same effect in an intensified form, and so on indefinitely. (Orwell)
In our day and age, we remember Orwell primarily for his anti-totalitarian novels, including “Animal Farm” and “1984,” the latter of which introduced the seminal concepts of “doublethink” and “newspeak.” Subsequently, another word was coined to meld these ideas into one enduringly disturbing tool for the use of dictators and advertising directors: Doublespeak.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

RateBeer users declare NABC's Pizzeria & Public House the top brewpub in Indiana.


Congratulations to our comrades in the list above. Metro Louisville is an under-rated craft beer destination, and both Indiana and Kentucky are exploding in terms of craft beer in the hinterlands. It's an exciting time to be in the business.

It's true that I'm fairly ambivalent about beer ratings, but there are two things about such rankings that I always find pleasing.

First, just being included as part of any conversation about best beer bars and brewpubs is reward enough for me. I've always felt we deserve to at least be mentioned, and I'll leave the exact numbers to the calculation of others.

Second, it's wonderful to see New Albany's name alongside New York, Chicago, New Orleans and San Diego in accountings pertaining to the "best of" anything.

Obviously, we could not do any of it without our workers and without you, the customer. Your patronage and their efforts are much appreciated, and we thank you all.

In 2012, we marked 25 years for the business overall (founded 1987), 20 years for me at the Public House, and 10 years as a brewery. Once upon a time, I sat down at a bar somewhere with a pint of Guinness in hand, and the next time I looked up, a career seemed to have found me. Problem is, I still don't know what I'd like to do when I grow up. This will do, at least for now.

Here's the press release.

RateBeer Best 2013 -- AWARD RESULTS

By RateBeer's Joe Tucker, Executive Director, 2001-present

(Santa Rosa, CA) First and foremost, I'd like to raise a glass to the people who make the beer we drink. These men and women are the artists, engineers, visionaries, chefs, CEOs and of course janitors and many other roles combined that are today's craft brewer. I've had the pleasure of listening to many in my role here and there are no more passionate, skilled, brave and hard working people on the planet. The great success of craft beer around the world proves this.

It's my great pleasure to honor them, and all those in the craft beer industry, with the results of this year's RateBeer Best.

Over 4.5 million times, RateBeer beer reviewers worldwide have raised a glass to review a new beer. We have tallied those scores and now present them as our competition results. For our summaries, a particular emphasis was placed on tastings made in the last twelve months. Additionally, brewpubs, bottle shops, restaurants and bars from around the world were awarded prizes. Cheers to all the winners and to everyone who keeps the world of craft beer growing as a fun, cooperative community devoted to artfulness and excellence.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Legislative libations 1: Matters of distilling and brewing.

In Indiana legislative news, HB 1293 (creation of artisanal distilling permits) will be heard in committee this very morning. As currently written, it would broaden the scope of distilling permits for existing small wineries wishing to enter or expand distilling, and enable existing small breweries to obtain permits on what amounts to a leveled regulatory playing field.

Our own representative Ed Clere is carrying the ball for this bill, and he is joined as sponsor by Rep. Rhonda Rhoads from the adjacent District 70. I support this measure sans self-interest, seeing as though NABC has no immediate plans to get into distilling, and I'd like to publicly thank Ed Clere (sans irony) for seeing the merit of enabling craft distilling in Indiana.

The other two items of interest to the Brewers of Indiana Guild, of which I'm a director, both originate in the Senate and are explained below in excerpts from a mailing by the guild's executive director. SB 0401 would rationalize the paperwork for small breweries to legally pour samples at fests and events. SB 0100 would allow us to sell pre-sealed bottles and growlers at farmers' markets. Needless to say, I'm in favor of these measures, as well.

We have filed three bills: SB 0100 (to permit brewers to sell product at farmers markets), SB 0401 (to create a streamlined process for serving at festivals and special events) and HB 1293 (to create an artisan distiller permit) ...

 ... There will be other hearings and opportunities to support all of our bills. In order to become law, a bill must have a committee hearing and vote, debate and vote on second reading, and debate and vote on third reading. The bill then goes "across the hall" (from Senate to House, or House to Senate) where the entire process repeats. In reality, only a fraction of bills make it to the governor's desk, and those that do are rarely in the same form as they started (because of amendments).

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

In which "Bats, Baseball, Beers & Bucks" are examined.

My second of two February columns has been posted at LouisvilleBeer.com, which is the repository of most of my beer writing these days.

Bats, Baseball, Beers and Bucks


Photo by Flickr User: Andrew Malone
Professional baseball’s spring training is underway, and it isn’t too early to begin considering the prospects for locally brewed craft beer at Louisville Slugger Field in 2012. The Louisville Bats begin play in April, and only then will we know if the fragile, halting forward progress of craft beer availability during the past three years will be repeated this season.
I shan’t be holding my breath, but as usual, I hope I’m mistaken.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

John Holl on "Craft Beer's Positive Community Impact."

I've been saying this for a long time, but don't just take my word for it; listen to the dude who wrote the book about our Hoosier brewing industry.

From Danville VA to Boston MA ... to Richmond IN (and New Albany) ... the verdict is clear.

Craft Beer's Positive Community Impact, by John Holl

... Craft breweries are good for local economies. They create jobs, contribute to city coffers, are often generous to local charities and causes, and are usually willing to move into areas that are in need of rehabbing.

Monday, May 09, 2011

A collaborative day at NABC.

The notion of "collaboration beer" is an outgrowth of craft beer's intrinsic vitality as a genre, and illustrates the cooperative spirit therein. Brewers come together to share ideas and experiences, and the consuming public is the biggest winner, because craft fans have the chance to taste the result.

Imagine Miller and Budweiser working together on a beer recipe. You cannot. It could not possibly happen up there in multinational land ... but it's increasingly common within the craft segment.

Yesterday afternoon, Urbain Coutteau of De Struise Brouwers (Belgium) brewed a collaboration batch at Bank Street Brewhouse with NABC's Jared Williamson and David Pierce. Lori Beck and Tyler Trotter (Louisville Beer Store, Holy Grale) organized Urbain's tour of the States, which included stops at Three Floyds Brewing Company and the Kentucky Derby.

Brew photos here: Naughty (Girl) Brew Day, May 8, 2011

The fun continues today at NABC's Pizzeria & Public House, where a second collaboration beer will be brewed, followed by Office Hours with the Publican, which tonight will take the form of a reception of sorts with Urbain -- think of it as a going away party.

More information here: Urbain madness at Bank Street and the Public House, Sunday and Monday -- for collaborations and more.

Thanks to everyone who helped make yesterday such a great time -- Urbain, Lori & Tyler, NABC's brew team, Bank Street Brewhouse staff (they handled a huge Mother's Day crowd) and anyone else who grasps the meaning of Progressive Pints.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Hopback ... and brewing back downtown.

This is the view into the hopback. After the boil, the hot wort pours through these "finishing" hops in route to the chiller and the fermenters, where yeast performs its magic.

Yesterday, Dave and Jesse put the brewing equipment through the paces to make a yeast feeder batch, which means that there is yeast multiplying in each of the four fermenters. Today, they brewed a 15-barrel batch of Beak's Best. Tomorrow comes Elector, and on Friday and Saturday there'll be Hoptimus. Bob's Old 15-B Porter follows on Sunday, at which point the fermenters will be full, nature's way will be in full swing, and the crew will decamp to Wisconsin next week for the annual Great Taste of the Midwest. With several intermediate steps yet to come, during the week of the 10th there'll be beer for shipping to the wholesalers.

It's relief to the max. Thanks to every one for waiting so patiently.

Photo credit: Jesse Williams.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Today's LEO column: On the integrity of craft brewing.

I've decided to begin publishing the text of my "Mug Shots" columns for LEO. The link will be added later, and then you can go back and see if I was edited.

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“One of the truest tests of integrity is its blunt refusal to be compromised.”

This quote by the Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe appears at the end of “I Am a Craft Brewer,” a four-minute video created by Greg “Arrogant Bastard” Koch. It was screened during Koch’s keynote speech in Boston during the recently concluded annual Craft Brewers Conference.

In the video, craft brewers from across the United States take turns reading a manifesto of revolutionary intent and recapping the achievements of craft brewing, detailing the positive principles that the better beer movement supports – local commerce, community commitment, environmental sustainability – and reiterating the malice and vacuity of the monopolistic status quo, which made revolt necessary in the first place.

Koch’s typically uncompromising beers – Double Bastard, Old Guardian, Vertical Epic and others – have always been favorites of mine. Now, like Frank Capra’s memorable World War II documentary series, Koch has given us an inspirational reminder of “why we fight.”

“Craft beer is innovation, independence, curiosity and collaboration, character and family.”

American craft brewers have revitalized a domestic industry, served as an impetus for brewers and brewing entrepreneurs worldwide, helped reanimate moribund brewing cultures, and provided a renewed, vibrant ethos that encompasses the best that beer can be.

As with any dynamic, constantly evolving movement, the ever expanding American craft beer consciousness cannot be confined to the fermented liquid in the glass. It is an ethos all its own, a lifestyle, a way of looking at the world, and as with most worldviews, it cuts both ways -- necessarily. Craft beer stands “for” and “against,” and this duality is forcefully stated in Koch’s video.

“We must draw hard lines. We must expose those who would seek to capitalize on what we have created.”

I’ve been drawing those hard lines for more than 25 years, ever since my first day at the package store, and I’ve tasted thousands of different beers since then. Even so, my own education is still ongoing, but long years of experience in the “better beer” game have given me a solid foundation of knowledge, as well as the confidence to express what I know, allowing me to pursue my prime mandate of teaching beer.

Consequently, make no mistake: My personal integrity, which represents the sweat equity I’ve earned during all those years in the trenches, absolutely compels me to tell the whole story, positive and negative, for and against, and while there will always be gray areas, some matters are painted in black and white, such as my certainty that price tags cannot be affixed to one’s ideals, honesty and commitment to living what’s true – and for better or worse, that’s what I do. I live them, and wouldn’t have it any other way.

Moreover, neither ideas nor ideals can be contested with mere dollars. However, they can be contested with improved ideas and ideals – assuming they exist.

Is beer as important a topic as politics, health care, unemployment, war, and peace? Admittedly unlikely, and still I remain prepared, willing and eager to show that elements of each are surely present in the study of beer as an art, a science, a business pursuit and a beverage that makes life more livable.

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This week is American Craft Beer Week, and the Brewers Association (http://www.beertown.org) has released a Declaration of Beer Independence. Excerpts follow:

“The beer I drink furthers our culture and teaches us geography and helps to nurture a sense of community, and helps to make the world a better place, and I declare to practice the concept of ‘Informed Consumption’ which has me deserving to know if my beer comes from a small and independent brewer or if it is owned by a mass production brewing company.

“I want to know why so many of my local beer brands are not available in many of my favorite restaurants, bars and beer stores, and I encourage beer sellers to offer a wide selection of beer styles and beer brands that includes beer from my local and regional breweries …

“I therefore declare to support America’s small and independent craft brewers during American Craft Beer Week May 11-17, 2009 and beyond.”

Quotes in bold above are from the Koch video, which can be viewed here: http://www.vimeo.com/4432533