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Local? Yes; Craft? Hmmm

That there were more than 4,000 operating breweries in the United States during the 1880s did not mean that drinkers had the variety to choose from they do today, but it does mean there was more local beer.

Today Joe Sixpack looks at the revival of Reading Beer. Legacy Brewing, a micro in Reading, will make the beer, but would you call it craft?

This won’t be a high-priced remake of a classic lager, either. The company will use lower-cost ingredients to produce kegs about the same price as Bud. Initially, it’ll be sold only on draft in taverns around Reading, but if it takes off, there are plans to bottle or can it for wider distribution.

So it won’t just be local – Legacy already does that – but it will also be cheaper and more “accessible” to those who’ve grown up on lighter beer.

Let’s see what happens.

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A historian on beer: Part II

We recently asked Maureen Ogle, author of the Ambitious Brew, a series of questions. This is the second in a series of three posts with her answers. (Part one.)

Ambitious Brew4. How is this book similar/different than the previous two? What’s next?

Ambitious Brew was much more ambitious (no pun intended) than my two previous books. The Key West book covers a longer period of time, but its scope is much narrower. The plumbing book, my “tenure” book, was written for an academic audience and so it had to follow a certain formula.

But with the beer book, I could let my historical creativity roam and the subject itself was so rich and so complex that the project took on a life of its own. Most of the time, the material dictated and I just tried to hang on for the ride.

Also, the book taught me a great deal about myself and about how to “do” history. I think (I hope!) I’m a much better historian now. I believe, anyway, that I rose to the challenge posed by beer, a fascinating, complex beverage with an equally fascinating, complex history.

Having said that, I should also note that my three books share certain attributes. First, I’m fascinated with the way in which American values — our “culture” — shape our material world, whether that be plumbing, cities, or food. Along the way, I’m drawn to the everyday “stuff” that we take for granted and to the lives of men and women whose drive and ambition compel them to create something from nothing.

The plumbing book, for example, examined the way in which the values of the 1840s and 1850s shaped the form and function of household water supply and waste systems. Not ideas about public health or germs, as one might expect, but a desire on the part of a newly emerging (and somewhat insecure) middle class to promote progress and individual initiative. The Key West book chronicles the way in which a handful of ambitious dreamers transformed that infertile island into a profitable venture.

Ambitious Brew examines an everyday staple by looking at the nineteenth-century German emigrés who abandoned their traditional lager and invented a new world version that appealed to the American palate. Their success transformed beer and brewing from a local and small-scale enterprise into one of the nation’s largest industries. The book also records the history of the late twentieth century visionaries who challenged corporate complacency, built “micro” breweries from scrap metal, and reinvented the industry.

I’ve already started a new book: a history of meat in America, from the great pork “factories” along the Ohio River in the 1820s, to the “organic” ranchers of the 1970s. I’m fascinated by the production and consumption of food and drink – perhaps the most revealing of all human activities – so I expect to have a grand time with this project.

5. Pick the three misconceptions you’d most like to set straight.

I think the biggest misconception is that in the 1950s, brewers dumped “adjuncts” such as corn and rice to their beer into their brewvats and did so in order to reduce production costs; to make a cheap beer to sell at a high price. Not so. Brewers began adding corn and rice to their beers in the 1860s and 1870s because non-German-Americans wouldn’t drink a heavy all-malt beer. They wanted a lighter-bodied, more effervescent beer, and the only way to make one using American barley was by adding other grains to absorb the excess proteins. Moreover, those adjunct-based beers were expensive: in the 1870s, a barrel of adjunct-based beer cost about two dollars more to make than an all-malt beer.

Another misconception is that after World War II, brewery numbers plunged as the rapacious giant Anheuser-Busch drove smaller brewers out of business. Again, not so. Between 1945 and the early 1960s, beer consumption declined or remained stagnant. Americans weren’t interested in drinking beer (they either didn’t drink at all, thanks to the prohibitionists, or they preferred hard liquor) and every brewer struggled to stay afloat.

Were the big guys more likely to survive? Sure, because they had the money to invest in things like television advertising, which was a new medium in the 1950s, and because they were able to exploit national markets more easily than were smaller brewers. But the period from 1945 to c. 1961 (when the first wave of baby boomers hit legal drinking age) was the darkest period in American brewing, and no one had an easy time of things.

Third, when I started the book, I assumed that Prohibition began in 1920. It didn’t. The Anti-Saloon League, the lobbying group that spearheaded the prohibition movement, set up shop in 1895 with a plan to drive saloons out of business. They succeeded: by 1910, half of all Americans already lived under some form of prohibition, either local or state. Brewers failed to organize a resistance movement, and were unable to fend off this piecemeal destruction. By the time the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act went into effect in January 1920, brewers had already been out of business for over a year.

Fourth (I know you only asked for three…..): Pabst Blue Ribbon labels still carry a medallion indicating that the beer was chosen as “America’s Best” at the World’s Columbian Exposition in 1893. It wasn’t! (See Chapter Three . . .)

6. Which three principals in the book (dead or alive) would you most like to have a beer with?

Oh, boy, that’s tough. Adolphus Busch and Frederick Pabst for certain. (Although I feel as though I’ve already met them: For about three months, I dreamed about them every night. We ate dinner together, walked through their breweries, took carriage rides. . . . Sounds odd, but that’s what happens to writers when we spend months on end with people, dead or alive!)

Who else? Phillip Best, the man who founded what became Pabst Brewing (Frederick Pabst married his daughter). I’d love to know if he really rolled dice to determine who got the brewery, himself or his brother.

Truth is, I’d love to meet everyone. I’ve met most of the living brewers who are featured in the book, but it would grand to sit down and talk to everyone else who landed on my pages!

Tomorrow: How did beer change for you in the course of researching and writing the book?

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A beer-powered brewery

How Sierra Nevada does it:

FuelCell Energy has upgraded its 1 megawatt Direct Fuel Cell (DFC) power plant at Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. to use fuel created from a waste byproduct of the brewing process.

The brewery’s fuel cell power plant had been running on natural gas. Now, in an effort to increase efficiency and be more environmentally friendly, it runs on the brewery by-product methane.

Manufacturing.net reports that 20-40% reduction in fuel costs for the plant is possible by the 250 to 400 kilowatts of electricity that it can produce via biogas.

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Carolina brewers win first GABF Pro-Am

Jamie Bartholomaus of Foothills Brewing in Winston-Salem, N.C., and long-time homebrewer Tom Nolan teamed up to win the 2006 Great American Beer Festival Pro-Am Competition. Bartholomaus scaled up Nolan’s 11-gallon homebrew recipe for a Baltic Porter.

Scott Yarosh of Papago Brewing (as well as Sonoran Brewing) and homebrewer Barry Tingleff captured the silver medal with Hop Dog IPA, while Whale’s Tail Pale Ale from Odell Brewing Co. won the bronze. Odell’s founder Doug Odell brewed the pale ale with homebrewer Ryan Thomas.

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Goose Island: Another year, another gold

That New Glarus Brewing and Pelician Pub & Brewery earned “brewery of the year” honors at the Great American Beer Festival by winning the same categories in 2006 as 2005 with the same beers shows stunning consistency.

Goose Island Beer Co. in Chicago, on the other hand, seems to have mastered a different sort of consistency. The brewery won for the 10th year in a row at GABF when 312 Urban Wheat took a gold medal. Goose Island has now won gold in 10 different categories.

The brewery has won with Matilda, a Belgian-inspired beer that with a notable addition of Bretanomyces, a wild yeast that just a few years ago no American brewer would have (knowingly) gone near. It’s won with Bourbon County Stout, an imperial stout aged in bourbon barrels – something almost unheard of in 1995 when Goose Island brought the beer to the GABF.

It’s won with a lot of less “extreme” beers as well, standing as an example of what we mean when we talk about American brewers ability to marry innovation and tradition.

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GABF regulars

Yesterday we asked which eight breweries have been present at every Great American Beer Festival since the first in 1982.

They are:

Anchor Brewing Co.
August Schell Brewing Co.
Boulder Beer
Coors Brewing Co.
F.X. Matt Brewing Co.
Joseph Huber Brewing Co.
Jacob Leinenkugel Brewing Co.
Sierra Nevada Brewing Co.

If you are going to be in Denver this weekend be sure to have a beer from each of them (realizing they’ll be 375 more breweries represented on the festival floor).

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Remembering John Young

The Independent in London has Michael Jackson write their obituary for John Young, long te venerable leader of London’s historic brewery. It should be read in its entirety but in case you need a nudge, here’s an excerpt.

He has been described, inadequately, as an eccentric. People thus identified are usually bores. Young was never boring. Barking, perhaps. If the rest of the world were sane, he would indeed have to be judged mad.

He was also a giant, which Jackson’s tribute makes clear.

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In print: Newspapers do beer

What newspapers are writing about local breweries:

“‘Wet”‘ hops come to Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports on East End Brewing’s Big Hop Harvest ale. West Coast breweries aren’t the only one serving fresh hop ales.

Getting ready for GABF. This story from the Idaho Statesman is being repeated hundreds of times across the nation this week (though not often in print). Two Idaho brewers send their beers off to be judged during the Great American Beer Festival, which celebrates its 25th anniversary next week in Denver.

More GABF. Kevin DeLange and Kevin Kellogg, owners of Dry Dock Brewing, offer readers of the Aurora (Colorado) Sentinel & Daily Sun tips for enjoying the festival. Their best advice? “Don’t be fooled. If there for the party, don’t let anyone trick you into tasting the contents of the dump buckets.”

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John Young dies

John Young, long the chairman of the family run Young’s Ram Brewery in London, died Sunday. He was 85. The obituary from the British Guild of Beer Writers points out:

. . . his most successful brainwave was a decision, against all contemporary trends and advice, to promote traditional draught beer instead of the keg beers that most brewers were heavily supporting in the 1960s. The ploy paid off and Young’s sales rocketed well before the foundation of the Campaign for Real Ale in 1971.

His death comes in the week when Young’s beers are being brewed for the last time at Wandsworth. In May Young’s announced it would merge brewing operations with Bedford-based Charles Wells.

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Brewers who blog: Update

– The Saint Arnold Brewhouse, one of the first blogs from brewers that we found but unfortunately off line for some time, is back.

Post fromt he brewhouse certainly capture the spirit of the brewhouse, like this one:

If you are at all disturbed by shocking images of elaborate machinery being assembled by unorthodox means, then don’t look here! (I think that one image probably voids our warranty, so look quick before Brock makes me remove it!)

– Added to FeedDemon (our reader of choice) today: Lost Abbey’s Brewer’s Blog. Tomme Arthur promises to be properly dangerous when posting here.

It’s at least a little amusing that they feature the drawing of a monk writing in his journal, beer at his side, that adorns the bottle of Lost and Found Abbey. Shouldn’t he be at the keyboard, banging out a blog post?

– You can count on a post at the Flossmoor Beer Blog about every two weeks. Ones like this are worth the wait.

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Sewage problem in Latrobe

The deal to keep Latrobe’s brewing plant – long the brewery for Rolling Rock – open has hit a possible snag.

City Brewing out of La Crosse, Wis., plans to make not only beer in Latrobe, but sports drinks and other beverages like Mike’s Hard Lemonade and Arizona iced tea, drinks containing sugar and other additives that may be too much for some sewage treatment plants to handle.

“The proposed waste that’s coming in from the new facility is approximately five times strong than the existing waste now,” Water Authority consultant Mark Gera told ThePittsburghChannel. “So for them to reach their ultimate capacity, we have to be able to provide treatment capacity for that.”

Brewing officials said the issue is not a deal-breaker.

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Keeping family breweries going

The BBC profiles Bateman’s Brewery, one of the UK’s (relatively) few remaining independent family brewers.

George Bateman, 78, the grandson of the brewery’s founder, gets right to the point.

So why was it so important to keep the brewery as a family concern?

“This is back to the intangible of being a community,” he says.

“In a small town – you might say village – there was a consciousness through the years that I and my father before me and my grandfather before that had depended on the strength of local people.”

The good news is that his grandchildren are already getting involved in the brewery.

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Bud TV due after Super Bowl

When we wrote a couple of weeks back about Anheuser-Buisch’s push into providing program content the headline More ‘Bud TV’ seems likely was mostly meant to be flip.

But not according to today’s New York Times (registration required; free), which reports:

. . . as in Bud TV, an online entertainment network that Anheuser-Busch, the nation’s biggest brewer, is preparing to introduce the day after Super Bowl XLI is played in early February.

The network will be on a Web site that will have the bud.tv address.

This would be no small project. Just a few of the highlights:

– Bud TV would offer six channels of comedy, reality, sports and talk programming created for and by Anheuser-Busch. The tentative names for the channels include Comedy, Happy Hour and Reality.

– A-B in discussions with Joe Buck, the sportscaster, to develop a talk show.

– A seventh channel on Bud TV, tentatively named Bud Tube, will be styled after the popular Web site YouTube , giving consumers a chance to “generate their own Anheuser-Busch ads, comedic in nature,” which can be shared with other computer users.

That’s just the start.

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