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Thursday, December 31, 2020

Seven Reasons To Cheer The Year In Beer - Forbes

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You don’t need me to tell you that this year has devastated a staggering number of people and businesses. 

On top of putting the lives of tens of millions of food-and-drink professionals at acute risk, the COVID pandemic has eviscerated 3.4 million jobs in the leisure and hospitality sector, closed 17% of US restaurants permanently or for the long-term (as of December 1), and completely upended supply and sales chains for alcoholic beverage producers of all sizes. Further, the months-long protests of this spring and summer detonated a fierce and sometimes violent reckoning over racial justice centuries in the making and playing out in the brewery workspaces and taprooms of today.  

But as they say, necessity is the mother of invention. Brewery owners and employees, among so many others, showed that the resilience and innovation that birthed the American craft beer movement remains alive and well, even in the wake of so much tragedy. This year, meritorious brewers and their associates accepted an onslaught of new realities and … yes … pivoted. So whether we’re talking about the accelerated adaptation of a tech-based business tool or more Black and brown writers covering beer, 2020 may actually come to be viewed as a year that changed brewing for the better. 

Packaging, To-Go and Delivery

Immediately after the pandemic shut down bars and breweries around the world, smart thinkers rushed to put draft beer into cans and crowlers to slow the liquid from spoiling. Without the ability to sell to places where people drink on-site — including within their own taprooms — brewers needed to get existing beer into drinkers’ homes as fast as possible. 

As the uncertainty of the pandemic came into clearer focus, those who could turned to liquor, grocery, and convenience stores, along with gas stations, to move their packaged product. Breweries with existing off-premises relationships loaded those accounts up with cans, and some breweries that follow the taproom model opened up some of these accounts for the first time. With off-premises purchasing booming during the pandemic, it was the best they could do with a bad situation. Many even surprised themselves with sales increases. 

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Thanks to the swift but temporary easing of restrictions in most states, breweries handed and trucked supply directly out the door by selling it curbside and delivering straight to customers’ houses. Together with a new — again temporary — ability for bars and restaurants in most states to sell to-go drinks, and in some cases, let those buyers carry and sip from open containers in designated districts in municipalities like Atlantic City, a vastly lower number of breweries closed than initially anticipated. Breweries have also kept innumerable employees on the payroll by putting them to work in packaging and retail operations.  

Though temporarily relaxed states like New Jersey may well go back to their old prohibitive ways once the pandemic threat subsides, consumers in my state of residence will likely continue to amp up their use of existing online platforms like Drizly, which process orders for delivery from local liquor stores. Though we can’t do it here in the Garden State, just across the Delaware River, Pennsylvanians can order beer from a service like GoPuff, which pre-purchases and stores products direct from breweries and delivers them to customers at home.  

According to my Forbes colleague Chris Furnari, online alcohol delivery services in the United States were predicted to make $5.6 billion this year. That’s 80% more than last year.  

E-Commerce and Direct-to-Consumer Shipping

When it comes to direct custom shipping to customers, the wine world has got it all over beer. Thanks in part to wineries’ more concentrated lobbying efforts, most states allow at least some wineries to use this “direct-to-consumer” or “DTC” sales model. Half a dozen states, including California, allow breweries to ship beer to its residents, while the vast majority, like New Jersey, let their citizens receive wine directly from both in- and out-of-state wineries but no beer in the mail whatsoever unless it comes from an authorized retailer (read: not a producer). 

But pandemic lockdowns have finally focused brewers’ attention on the disparity and the necessity. With Craft Beer & Brewing magazine reporting $3 billion in revenue from 2019 DTC wine shipments, it’s time for them to catch up. And with Congress finally passing permanent excise tax reform this month, I predict brewers’ guilds and trade associations will now take this up with a vengeance. 

Wholesalers, however, will oppose this with everything they’ve got. Stay tuned.    

Brewers already have one high-profile, politically active advocate who can attest to the need for loosened DTC laws: Natalie Cilurzo, co-founder of Russian River Brewing in Sonoma County. When Cilurzo and her partner closed their pubs to the public in March to comply with lockdown orders, they immediately started selling beer through their online store (which had been set up to sell non-alcoholic merchandise) and boxing it up by hand to satisfy the thousands of orders that poured in from around California. 

Though she hears a lot of whining from people outside the state who can’t get Russian River beer mail, her fans in the far reaches of California are grateful that for once they can try the limited beers that normally only sell on-site.  And for the first time ever, the brewery will sell bottles of its coveted once-a-year release, Pliny the Younger, exclusively online, in late January. Normally, craft beer lovers fly in from all over the world to wait in line literally all day to sample what’s usually a draft-only triple IPA.

“While we are sad to miss seeing our loyal friends and fans,” Cilurzo writes on the brewery’s blog, “There are some silver linings gained through this whole experience of navigating business and life during a year filled with seemingly endless challenges.... When we started selling online direct to consumer out of necessity, you responded more positively than we ever imagined, and continue to reorder to this day!” 

Beer sales consultant Julie Rhodes doubles down on Cilurzo’s pro-DTC sentiment. “This is not a fad,” she told attendees of an online conference in early December. “Breweries have to embrace e-commerce and they have to do it now.”

Changed Product Mix

Some larger craft brewers, already facing damaging headwinds from all kinds of emerging competitors, decided last year to trim their annual beer offerings. Rather than constantly brewing a different seasonal or one-off to keep up with the cool young kids on their blocks, breweries like Green Flash prepared for 2020 by paring down their lineups and refocusing attention on core brands. 

When the pandemic hit, many smaller breweries followed suit … to an extent. Instead of loading recipes up with expensive adjunct ingredients, they turned to what they figured would sell, sell quickly, and sell in any type of weather: familiar and easy-to-find flagships, hazy IPAs (because IPA) and easier-drinking styles like lagers and low-alcohol or low-calorie session ales. 

Breweries that rely on their tasting rooms for a bulk of sales did and do continue to rotate in variants to keep peripatetic customers coming back. But they mostly do that by putting out, you guessed it … more hazy IPAs.

Some breweries have determined that if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em, and are releasing seltzers and kombuchas for the first time. This not only diversifies their portfolio to meet more drinkers where they’re going, it also takes advantage of the tanks under-capacity breweries would normally be using to make beer.  

Outdoor Space

I like to joke that the first plane ride I take in 2021 will bring me straight to Steamboat, Colorado’s Mountain Tap Brewery, which has repurposed three out-of-use gondolas into outdoor seating pods designed to socially distance people from outside one’s party. Shipping containers, like the ones put into service by Southern California’s Brewjeria and Odell Brewing’s RiNo location in Denver, have also found renewed purpose this way. 

The concept of a beer garden has also gained new life in a world where spending too much time indoors might kill you. Even without fanciful seating arrangements, breweries have converted their parking lots; expanded and beautified the spaces outside their buildings; and, in examples like New Jersey’s Little Dog Brewing and Bolero Snort Brewery, have received short-term licenses and blessings from neighbors to put tables, chairs and sometimes tents and heat lamps on adjacent lots, alleyways, sidewalks and streets. 

I laud Philadelphia authorities for letting certain neighborhoods claim their streets for seating. Reminiscing about a nice October evening spent drinking Pennsylvania beers at a table placed on the closed-to-vehicle-traffic road outside Fergie’s Pub in Center City, I lament how much we take for granted all of the space we waste. Sitting in the street (AKA the gutter, as my mom curiously calls it in situations like these), has become one of my favorite activities. I hope local officials keep letting this be a thing.  

Collaboration

The ideal of collaboration over competition irrevocably shapes the craft beer ethos, and professional brewers demonstrably started putting it into play about ten years ago by making and selling one-off beers with their professional brewer friends. In 2017, Natalie Cilurzo invented the idea of a worldwide charity collaboration when her Sonoma Pride campaign raised more than $1 million for Northern California wildfire relief. 

So collaborations aren’t new. But they are getting more attention. 

This year, Black is Beautiful, launched by Weathered Souls Brewing in San Antonio, made major news for months as the first worldwide collaboration beer to raise money for organizations working toward racial equity. Toward the beginning of the pandemic, Brooklyn’s Other Half Brewing signed up 855 breweries in all 50 states and 53 countries to brew All Together IPA, whose proceeds benefited hospitality workers who lost their jobs because of the crisis. 

And in Durham, North Carolina, Durty Bull Brewing gathered a large handful of neighboring breweries this spring to take collective orders and payments through a single e-commerce site and set up an assembly line of employees from the respective businesses to provide touchless curbside pickup, all in one spot. 

Virtual Events

Before the pandemic, I’d advocated for more breweries to host interactive video tastings and meet-and-greets with key personnel. Now that’s pretty much the only way to do it. Without the safe ability to travel or gather, conference planners, festival producers, social facilitators, breweries and hops brokers are deep diving into virtual events. In my opinion, it’s fabulous. 

Personally, I’ve emceed, spoken at and attended virtual versions of the Brewers Association’s Craft Brewers Conference (originally scheduled for Austin, Texas), the Craft Beer Expo (normally held in Louisville, Kentucky), the Beer Culture Summit (usually in Chicago) and the always-online Craft Beer Professionals conferences, all without leaving the comfort of my basement office or my outside-the-frame yoga pants. It’s a bummer to miss out on the networking and, okay, partying, these conferences provide but the better platforms that host them incorporate virtual break-out meeting rooms, after-hours happy hours and even trade show floors for sponsors. 

What’s more, incredible speakers and participants have tuned in from around the world, sometimes checking in from the middle of their night. It’s true that some organizers, like the Brewers Association and Brewbound, have lost a majority of their revenue because of cancelled events. However, some of these conferences wouldn’t have been able to afford to fly these esteemed guests in to appear in person. 

For my own purposes at least, I consider this a net win and hope that future in-person events will retain a video component for people who aren’t attending IRL. 

Yet it’s one thing to stage a conference online and another thing entirely to produce a virtual beer festival, which in the “before times” represented a face-to-face gathering of people who wander from booth to booth to taste beer, buy food, and listen to music. With little notice, the Fresh Fest Beer Fest for Black brewers, drinkers and artists transitioned to “Digi Fest,” complete with several channels of music and presentations, and the Hop Culture media company is owning the virtual beer-party circuit, going so far as to host a second Saturday morning digital breakfast-beer fest in February 2021. 

These festivals, along with most others, arrange or sell a beer box to go with the festivities. Of course, those beers can be tough to get if the breweries are out-of-area, but Hop Culture, for one, has put together a beer box that its retail partner can ship to ticket holders in 30 states. 

The North American Guild of Beer Writers has also found a way around that hurdle … sort of. Before each of its myriad educational happy hours, the group wires $5 to each registered attendee to purchase a local beer for the occasion.

It’s the perfect reason for me to visit the teeny tiny Eclipse Brewing about five miles from my house, owned by a lovely middle-aged couple who, I’ve just learned, are hosting beer trivia nights. Every month. Online. 

It sounds fun. I may “go.” I’m not sure why. 

I’ve never gone to a brewery for trivia before. But there’s something about local beer, yoga pants, friendly acquaintances and my basement couch that sounds very appealing ...     

Black Lives Matter

Celeste Beatty opened Harlem Brewing as the first Black brewery owner in the country in 2000. Since then, fewer than 100 Black-owned breweries have taken their place across the American landscape, and some number of BIPOC beer lovers have joined the ranks as employees. But in the mostly whitewashed world of craft beer, they — and their interests and concerns — have remained largely invisible. 

Black and brown people in beer had started to gain a bit of mainstream craft attention thanks in part to events like Fresh Fest, grants like the North American Guild of Beer Writers Diversity in Beer Writing Grant and celebrated hires like J. Jackson-Beckham as the Brewers Association’s first diversity “ambassador.” But in my view, it wasn’t until this year that awareness of BIPOCs in beer hit a critical mass. 

BIPOC beer experts seem to be getting asked to speak at conferences more often — both about race and other topics. Journalists of color are responding to newly awakened editors’ fervent calls to submit story ideas, while those same editors are asking all writers to add more BIPOC names to their source lists. Non-white owners and activists are making news for bringing more people who look like them into beer, and individuals, universities and organizations are awarding scholarships and internships to recipients from underserved communities to study and practice brewing and beer writing.

A lot of breweries have fielded criticism for virtue signaling by failing to take meaningful action toward equity other than maybe brewing Black is Beautiful and posting #BlackLivesMatter on their social media pages. Fortunately, others, like New Belgium Brewing and Stone Brewing, truly are stepping up, unearthing their unconscious biases, bringing in diversity consultants to revamp their workplace cultures, and taking concrete action to create a welcoming space for the entire community. 

After a year like 2020, I think that’s what we all need most.




January 01, 2021 at 04:01AM
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Seven Reasons To Cheer The Year In Beer - Forbes

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Beer

Brewers dealing with shortage of beer cans - WRBL

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(CBS News) – Even though many traditional New Year’s Eve parties aren’t happening this year, millions of Americans will still crack open a cold one at home tonight and bid farewell to 2020. But some small beer makers are having difficulty getting their brews on store shelves.

Business at the restaurant and brewery Gravity Heights fizzled when the COVID crisis hit. So, with fewer people buying beer in person, the southern California company started canning it.

Many tap rooms and brew pubs have adopted the same sales strategy during the pandemic. But these craft brewers, including Fulton Beer in Minnesota, now face another challenge. There’s a limited supply of aluminum cans to put the beer in. “Fulton and a lot of other brewers, beverage companies​, are experiencing shortages. Now we’re looking at periods in the future where we know that we’re gonna be not able to have the container that we need to put the beer in,” says Ryan Petz, the CEO of Fulton Beer.

Bart Watson with the Brewers Association says, “What we’ve seen is not necessarily a change in the total level of beer consumption but a huge shift in where people are drinking beer. They’re drinking a lot less at bars and restaurants and they’re drinking a lot more at grocery stores, convenience stores, and other package stores. And that means that demand for beer packages, particularly cans has really skyrocketed in recent months.”

Watson says aluminum can makers were facing high demand even before the pandemic, with many beverage companies switching from plastic to more environmentally friendly aluminum.

That has places like Barrel House Z in Massachusetts paying a premium. “We paid through the nose to secure what you’re seeing here, but this is about, you know, two to three month supply for us,” says Russel Heissner, the founder of Barrel House Z.

Can suppliers are working to open new manufacturing sites, but experts say the shortages will continue until the end of 2021 and possibly longer.




January 01, 2021 at 05:15AM
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Brewers dealing with shortage of beer cans - WRBL

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Plaza Midwood Beer Bar Looks to Kiss 2020 Goodbye - Spectrum News

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — America, and the world, will collectively send 2020 packing at midnight Thursday. And while we all look forward to kissing 2020 goodbye, so are local business owners, like the folks at Pinhouse in Plaza Midwood.

The self-pour duckpin bowling alley opened in 2019 to, at the time, the largest grand opening ever for a self-pour beer hall, according to management.


What You Need To Know

  • Pinhouse will be open New Year's Eve and New Year's Day

  • Last year's party brought hundreds, this year will be much more subdued

  • 2020 leaves behind employee cuts and business losses

Pinhouse and staff were expecting, and hoping, 2020 would continue to create growth, interest, and positive buzz about their business. But, 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic had other plans.

"First time to Pinhouse? Love it!” is the question you’ll hear walking into Pinhouse now from Adam Mann, its current general manager turned doorman, barkeep, and cleaning staff.

On one of the last week nights of 2020, the evening crowds Mann wanted or expected for 2020 do not exist. Instead, about 30 people a night after the work day is the new norm, according to Mann.

"We all need to be safe and get through these times, but we’ve got to find some kind of middle ground where businesses can survive,” Mann says.

The general manager adds, the ever-changing COVID regulations, as the pandemic waxes and wanes, is another source of headaches.

"Inconstinency with how businesses can operate. So, some businesses can have large capacities, where some businesses have small capacities, and it seems like it’s not managed by square footage. I don’t know how it’s managed,” Mann explains.

Under the current COVID-19 regulations on capacity, Mann says Pinhouse in Plaza Midwood can hold about 120 people. He noted, the average evening crowd of about 30 is much less than capacity allows.

In another sign of the times, Mann is the lone staff member behind the counter on a week night. He handles everything from check-in, explaining how the bar works to new customers, setting up bowling lanes, cleaning, and keeping an eye on Pinhouse until closing.

"Manageable, I guess is the best way to explain it. Unfortunately, we kind of got a bare and bones staff right now, due to everything our hourly staff, unfortuntely, we had to let them go until things get back to normal,” says Scotty Kent, Pinhouse’s Marketing Director.

The self-pour duckpin bowling alley opened in 2019, was expecting to have a one-year anniversary party this summer, and was going to try to top last year’s New Year’s Eve party, which Kent described as a major business and marketing success.

But now, Kent says they’re not sad to see 2020 hit the road, and all those events have been canceled.

In the meantime, Kent’s been emphasizing the bar’s outdoor space, social distancing requirements, and other measures to help assure customers it’s a safe place to be, and they’re taking COVID seriously.

"For example, that middle table, depending on how many people come in, that middle table if it gets too close will be blocked off and nobody will be permitted to sit there,” Kent explained while touring the upstairs pour room.

The canceled one-year anniversary party and inability to have a New Year’s Eve event due to the liquor-service curfew are major losses for a bar like Pinhouse, according to Kent.

However, he wants customers to know that on New Year’s Eve they will be open and have beers and bowling on tap

"Last year we had a huge party here, hundreds of people came out, unfortunately we're not able to do that this year. Us along with other small businesses are kind of struggling to find ways to keep our doors open,” he says.

While the beer is flowing and balls are rolling in the last minutes of 2020, there’s a new sound which will likely stay deep into 2021.

It’s the ‘tzz, tzz, tzz’ of a spray bottle of 3-second disinfectant after someone pours a beer, just another task to remember in a year the staff wants to forget.

Pinhouse will be open New Year’s Eve from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. They’ll reopen New Year’s Day from noon to 9 p.m. The bar is located at 2306 Central Avenue in Charlotte.

Kent and Mann say if you feel safe and comfortable venturing out, consider visiting and supporting a local business to start your New Year.




January 01, 2021 at 12:56AM
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Plaza Midwood Beer Bar Looks to Kiss 2020 Goodbye - Spectrum News

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Beer

How St. Louis ranks among top cities for beer drinkers - St. Louis Business Journal

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[unable to retrieve full-text content]How St. Louis ranks among top cities for beer drinkers  St. Louis Business Journal


January 01, 2021 at 12:37AM
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How St. Louis ranks among top cities for beer drinkers - St. Louis Business Journal

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Beer

The Science of Making Non-Alcoholic Beer - Popular Mechanics

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Maybe you’ve seen it at the bottom of a restaurant’s beverage menu or a brewery’s extensive beer list: the “NA” or “nonalcoholic” option. There, it might feel like an afterthought. But the nonalcoholic movement, especially when it comes to beer, is gaining traction in the adult-beverage market.

Nonalcoholic beer dates back to Prohibition, but it’s having a resurgence, fueled by changing consumer habits and brewers’ successful tinkering with the complex processes required to make it. Between this past July and September, NA beer sales were up approximately 38% in the U.S. compared with the same period in 2019, according to data analytics group IRI. Craft operations dedicated to NA suds have sprung up across the country, not to mention beer giants like Heineken and Anheuser-​Busch—the maker of Busch NA and O’Doul’s, two long-running NA beers that clock in below 0.5% alcohol by volume (ABV)—which are also investing millions to launch alcohol-free products.

“We’re looking to go forward with Budweiser Zero, a truly 0.0% beer,” says Adam Warrington, vice president of corporate social responsibility for Anheuser-Busch. “With the category growing and the equity we have in a brand like Budweiser, getting people the taste of a Budweiser with zero alcohol and zero sugar is a key point of differentiation for us.”

According to the Food and Drug Administration, a nonalcoholic beer can contain 0.5% ABV or less. To make one, manufacturers typically brew a beer as they normally would, then remove the alcohol using tricky, often expensive techniques. Now, breweries are finding ways to create a beverage without yielding any alcohol to remove in the first place, therefore producing a true 0.0% ABV beer.

You love cracking open a cold one. So do we. Let’s nerd out over all things booze together.

Brewing NA beer is all in an effort to support sober but still-social drinkers, whether it’s a lifestyle choice or for a specific occasion. Maybe they need to drive, are training for a marathon, or are at a work lunch. “We’re coming into a time of moderation,” says Philip Brandes, founder of NA craft brewery Bravus Brewing Co., based in southern California. “Think of the White Claw movement, right? Low alcohol and low sugar. That completely exploded.” Brewers like Brandes are focused on giving people quality nonalcoholic options, including darker and hoppy beers.

“There was just a shocking lack of quality products out there that were thoughtful,” says Paul Pirner, who cofounded Minneapolis-based Hairless Dog Brewing Co. about four years ago with Jeff Hollander. They both had previously given up alcohol. “By thoughtful, I mean products that were conceptualized and thought of with someone like us in mind, as opposed to just being a pity product on the end of somebody’s line,” Pirner adds. The exclusively nonalcoholic beer list at Hairless offers an ale, lager, IPA, and coffee stout.


Give These Non-Alcoholic Beers a Try


Creating a quality NA beer is not easy. There are three common production methods: vacuum distillation, reverse osmosis, and arrested fermentation.

During vacuum distillation, beer is heated so the alcohol evaporates out. The vacuum chamber lowers the boiling point from around 173°F to as low as 93°F, which helps preserve aromatics and flavor. Reverse osmosis operates like a kidney dialysis machine: Fermented beer is pushed through a membrane filter with microscopic pores where alcohol molecules and water are separated out. Water is then added back in. With arrested fermentation, brewers can remove yeasts or stop them from becoming active, in order to prevent the yeasts from creating high levels of alcohol. This is usually done by cooling down the beer.

But these methods have drawbacks. A high-end vacuum distillation or reverse osmosis filtration machine can cost as much as $3 million, a prohibitive amount for many startups. Perhaps even more challenging is extracting the alcohol without altering the taste. Even with a vacuum, the heat involved in distillation can strip flavor, whereas arrested fermentation doesn’t allow for that flavor to fully develop, which can result in a worty taste.

That’s why new proprietary methods are so attractive. Hairless Dog relies on an alcohol-free production system, about which Pirner wouldn’t share specifics. “We use a really standard brewing process with a couple of major differences just in terms of how things are set up and how we treat the ingredients,” he says. “By the time it gets through the brew kettle and everything else, it’s a finished product.” Heavily guarded processes like this are often an appealing option for craft NA operations that are unable to invest in the expensive systems used in conventional methods, says Roger Barth, a chemistry professor at West Chester University and the author of The Chemistry of Beer: The Science in the Suds. Marketing also comes into play. By aligning these techniques with traditional production methods, Barth says breweries push back on the negative perception of NA beer flavor.

Whatever processes are used, it’s likely the beer industry will continue to experiment in an effort to produce a quality selection of NA beers, from IPAs to oatmeal stouts. That means NA newbies should try a slew of different styles and brands, then try them again. “There is a huge call for improvement [in NA beer production] because the craft beer palate is what it is today,” Pirner says. “There’s just going to be a ton of innovation over the next few years and a ton of improvement as we all fiddle with our processes. There’s just going to be so many more options, and there’s going to be so much more quality.” We’ll raise a glass to that.


The Lowdown on Low-Alcohol Beer

Nonalcoholic brews are having a moment, but nowadays beer lists are also starting to include options that range from 2% to 4% ABV. Previously, social drinkers looking to mitigate their alcohol, sugar, or carbohydrate intake might turn to a low-alcohol option, such as a session, which usually hits 5% ABV or lower. But “the trend now is to go even lower,” Philip Brandes at Bravus Brewing Co. says.

Beer in the 2% to 3% ABV range can be made more or less normally, but using less fermentable sugar like malt, says chemistry professor Roger Barth. “The body can be bumped up with maltodextrin or some other carb that is unfermentable by brewer’s yeast,” he adds. “One can also fiddle with mashing conditions, usually by mashing at high temperature, which suppresses production of small, fermentable sugars.”

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December 31, 2020 at 11:35PM
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The Science of Making Non-Alcoholic Beer - Popular Mechanics

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Should Wine Be Among Your Health Resolutions? - The New York Times

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In other words, Avaline is for those who have never been curious how the sausage was made. For these consumers, wine may be a pleasure, but not one worth the modest effort to visit a specialist or to learn a little more about it themselves.

Nothing is inherently wrong with that, even if Ms. Diaz and Ms. Power exaggerate both the ills of conventional wines and the benefits of Avaline. And they have corrected some of their initial problems, like promising transparency but offering no information about who made the wines.

This has changed. We now know that Avaline’s sparkling wine, introduced for the holiday season, is made by Raventós i Blanc in Catalonia, an excellent producer whose wines I’ve recommended regularly. The rosé comes from Mas de Cadenet in Provence, and the white from Can Ràfols dels Caus in the Penedès region of Spain.

The red, we’re told, is made by a family that requests anonymity. But all the wines, the company promises, are made from organic or biodynamically grown grapes, are fermented with indigenous yeast and are appropriate for vegans, meaning the wines have not been clarified with egg whites or other traditional, animal-derived products.

Why the additional information? Abbott Wolfe, the chief executive of Avaline, told me that the company didn’t originally publicize its producers because it didn’t want to create problems for them with their importers and distributors who might consider their relationship with Avaline a conflict.

“The Avaline community showed very strong interest in knowing more about who is making Avaline’s wines,” he said. “We re-approached our producers, and three of the four agreed to allow us to now communicate our relationship.”

Other clean wine companies are not so transparent. Instead, they speak generally about selling wine made by “traditional methods.” They use terms like Scout & Cellar’s trademarked “clean-crafted.” They promise, like Good Clean Wine, to “make wine that pairs well with a healthy lifestyle,” without feeling the need to explain what that means.




January 01, 2021 at 12:28AM
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Should Wine Be Among Your Health Resolutions? - The New York Times

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6 Winter Wine Pairings To Try This Season - Forbes

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When the temperatures drop, there are few things better than digging into a warm bowl of hearty comfort fare. The perfect wine pairing can further enhance your experience of both the meal and the wine, taking your home-cooked or takeout meal that much closer to a restaurant experience while staying safe and socially distanced. Sarah Quider, the executive winemaker of Ferrari-Carano Vineyards & Winery in Sonoma County, has graciously shared her pairing recommendations for some popular winter dishes.

Risotto: pair with 2018 Ferrari-Carano Chardonnay

The acidity of a classic Chardonnay is just the thing to cut through the richness of a creamy risotto.

Quider explained that Ferrari-Carano’s Chardonnay is mostly made up of grapes from Alexander Valley, with some grapes from Russian River Valley and Napa Carneros blended in. “The Russian River Valley and Napa Carneros have cooler climates, and we blend those grapes with ones grown in the warmer Alexander Valley,” she said. The fruit coming from Alexander Valley has flavors of ripe apple and pear, plus more tropical characteristics, whereas the fruit from the cooler climates have more citrus, bright acidity and structure. 

Beef Stew: pair with 2017 Ferrari-Carano Cabernet Sauvignon

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The rich flavors of a Cabernet pair well with the rich flavors of beef stew.

“This is a wine that is grown in two of our hillside vineyards,” Quider said. “Most of our Cabernet is grown at around 1,000 feet in elevation; one of the mountains we source fruit from is by Knights Valley in the east side of Sonoma County and the other one is in the North part of Sonoma County.” The small clusters of hillside berries are fermented in barrels made of French and Hungarian oak, which gives the wine jammy berry flavors (like blackberry and cassis), plus warm spices and a hint of leather.

Chicken and Dumplings: pair with 2018 Ferrari-Carano Pinot Noir

The lighter, fruitier flavors of a Pinot noir pair nicely with the lighter flavors of this dish and won’t overpower it.

“Our Pinot noir comes from two different hillside vineyards in Mendocino,” Quider said. “The berries are grown at 1,600 feet in elevation and six miles from the ocean so it’s a pretty extreme Pinot noir wine growing area.” The resulting wine is light and delicate, with a fruity brightness similar to strawberries or acai.

Dal: pair with 2018 Ferrari-Carano Siena

The spices and acidity of this red blend of Sangiovese and Malbec complement the richness and earthiness of Indian lentil soup.

“We are a third-generation family from Italy, so we make a lot of Italian wines,” Quider said. “Sangiovese is a type of grape that has higher acidity, great structure and tannins. You have a lot of pomegranate and black cherry characteristics, so there’s a high tone spice that comes through. We blend it with a little bit of Malbec, so you get this nice acidity but you also have this softening from the Malbec.”

Shakshuka: pair with 2019 Ferrari-Carano Fumé Blanc 

This versatile wine made with Sauvignon blanc grapes has citrusy grapefruit flavors that would pair nicely with eggs.

“Our Sauvignon blanc is not like a normal Sauvignon blanc; it’s more of a tropical style,” Quider said. “In the vineyards, we open up the canopy and get sunlight into the fruiting zone to try to burn off the grassy green pyrazines that are in grapes to make them turn more tropical. There’s Sauvignon blancs out there that are grassy and green that I didn’t think would pair quite as well. We put our Sauvignon blanc in neutral barrels so there’s this soft roundness that comes through.” 

Tonkotsu Ramen: pair with 2018 Ferrari-Carano Pinot Grigio

The acidity and brightness of pinot grigio is the perfect complement to a rich, warm pork ramen.

“Our pinot grigio has nice acidity and brightness,” Quider said. “Ramen is warm and it’s got that richness and earthiness from the pork. To me, our pinot grigio has a peachy apple kind of character. That acidity will cut through some of the flavors of the ramen.”




December 31, 2020 at 11:04PM
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This New Tabletop Wine Opener Is So Elegant You May Never Put It Away - Robb Report

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The art of uncorking just got a little more elegant—and easier.

Though many of us are often eager to take that first sip of our favorite varietal, getting the cork out of the way can prove a challenge. Even if you have the best implements, the manual labor that follows is often cumbersome and not the kind of time we want to spend at the dinner table. Enter RBT’s Tabletop Corkscrew.

Geometric and almost sculptural in appearance, this device has a firm base that can rest on any flat surface and is engineered so any standard wine bottle (750ml or 1.5L) swiftly slots in place. Once there, a hand lever allows you to efficiently remove the porous topper in one smooth motion. Its modern style is forged with premium materials like the genuine acacia wood that forms the base, as well as iron and, notably, the gleaming brass accents placed both above and below your bottle.

RBT tabletop corkscrew

The sleek device includes handsome brass and wood detailing.  RBT

Every element of the device was designed to make the experience of actually using it—not just looking at it—easy and seamless. When at rest, the small brass dish set into the base remains flush with the surrounding wood. However, once the weight of your favorite cabernet is applied, it gently tilts. This not only allows it to rest more securely in place, but the angle also allows the force required to open a given vessel to work to your maximum advantage.

Of course, it doesn’t hurt that the Tabletop Corkscrew is easy on the eyes. There’s something to be said for a useful kitchen tool that doesn’t need to be tucked into a cabinet when not in use (we’re looking at you, food processor). It looks so good, in fact, don’t be surprised if you end up displaying it next to your chicest wine glasses.

The RBT Tabletop Corkscrew is available for $150.




January 01, 2021 at 03:02AM
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Pedaler's Fork offers 108 beers on tap, varied menu - The Gazette

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CEDAR RAPIDS — When Ryan Evans, Wade Leslie and Marv Anselm decided to open their new restaurant, Pedaler’s Fork, in northeast Cedar Rapids, they thought it would be a quick project. But 2020 had different ideas.

The location previously was the Broken Spoke, which closed after a fire at the adjacent Riley’s Cafe damaged both restaurants. Evans said when he took over the space, he thought the damage repair would be simple, but there was extensive fire damage in the walls that wasn’t apparent until they started working.

“It was such a huge project, I was not expecting what I was getting into,” he said. “I was hoping to do something very small, but when we opened the wall, it was basically ruined. We decided to completely gut it.”

Repairs also were slowed down by the pandemic, as things like inspections were paused for a while. Then they were reluctant to open in the uncertain climate of changing COVID-19 restrictions.

“We didn’t want to open if we were just going to be selling to-go,” Evans said. “We didn’t know what was going to be allowed to be open.”

But he said at some point they just needed to take the chance and open, because they were paying rent on the space and had poured so much into renovating it. The Pedaler’s Fork opened Dec. 8.

Evans also owns the Blind Pig and Cocktails. He said he’s drawn to the restaurant world and keeps adding to his portfolio of businesses because he loves the high energy of the industry.

“I can’t sit still. Once I get places going and get good managers, I need something to do with my time,” he said.

He laughed and added, “But after this, I’ll never do another one.”

He grew up in a restaurant family. When he was in high school, he was forced to work at the family business, even if there was a school dance or football game he’d rather be at. But despite his resistance, he became hooked, he said.

“Over the years, I just grew to love it. It’s just in you,” he said. “When you do a good job, (you) just see it in people’s faces.”

The name Pedaler’s Fork is an allusion to the location just off the bike trail and an ode to the former Broken Spoke, which was bike-themed.

“We wanted it to be catchy and fun, bicycle related and not say bar and grill,” he said.

The space is sizable, with a long bar — currently the bar seating is not in use due to COVID-19 restrictions — and tables are spaced for social distancing, plus pool tables. There is a large patio in the back that will open in the spring.

The menu is varied, with mac & cheese bowls, Asian and Italian bowls, burgers, sandwiches, tacos and salad options. The bar has 108 beers on tap.

They do not partner with any delivery services but do offer carryout, including to-go beers. For those dining in, they offer beer flights and 25-cent beer samples, with the price of samples going to a local charity.

“We want it to be very beer forward and not just a restaurant,” manager Mia Suntken said.

She said her favorite part of the job is seeing people enjoying themselves.

“When you get a compliment that someone had a blast, and the food is good and the beer is cold — it feels like an accomplishment,” she said. “It’s kind of a thrill when it’s really busy.”

Comments: (319) 398-8339; alison.gowans@thegazette.com

If you go

• What: The Pedaler’s Fork

• Where: 2010 Sylvia Ave. NE, Cedar Rapids

• Hours: 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Tuesday to Saturday, 11 a.m. to midnight Sunday

• Details: (319) 826-2490, thepedalersfork.com




December 31, 2020 at 08:07PM
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Drink of the Week: Alibi Ale Works' Your Dad's Beer - Tahoe Daily Tribune

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Alibi Ale Works’ Your Dad’s Beer. Rob Galloway / Tahoe Daily Tribune

 

In our Drink of the Week segment, we’ll showcase one unique type of beer, wine, cocktail — you name it — to try at one of the countless breweries, bars and restaurants from around the basin.

While ringing in the New Year will take on a bit of a new look this year, it doesn’t mean you can’t go old school with your choice of beverage. Which is exactly where Your Dad’s Beer comes into the picture.

Brewed as a collaboration with the Mountain Gazette, the beer is a tribute to simpler times. Ahhh, simpler times. Let’s just marinate in that thought for just a second longer … Ok, back to reality.

This beer was a little bit nostalgic for me. I can remember sneaking a sip of my dad’s banquet beer back in the day and this beer brought me back to that place. Now, the taste here is much cleaner and crisper than that sip I remember, so it brought back memories, just with a better taste. Wait, did I just get Inceptioned?

Nevertheless, this pilsner is light on its ballerina toes. And while the tagline on the can reads, “The beer that tastes like beer,” it’s quite possibly even more beer-y than that. It has more flavor than a typical pilsner without being overly beer-y. I know that makes no sense, but when you drink it, it will.

At 5% ABV, it’s probably a little higher than what your dad was throwing down back in the day. Unless he was an animal chucking back barleywines, you should find that added little bump a perfect addition.

The can design walks the line like Johnny Cash between retro and modern so don’t look past it on the shelves of your local grocery store (or at one of their locations). That might be the best part of this beer – it’s portable and ready to welcome in 2021 with open arms. And if it includes visions of dad along with it – even better – unless it’s just a by-product of having too many. Either way, cheers to 2021!

Alibi Ale Works has two Public House locations around the lake: Incline Village (931 Tahoe Blvd.) and Truckee (10069 Bridge St.). In addition to those beer and food establishments, the Brewery and Barrel House is also located in Incline Village at 204 E. Enterprise St. For information and availability on all, visit them online at alibialeworks.com.




December 31, 2020 at 08:39PM
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West Loop Bar And Liquor Store 1340 Beer Wine Spirits Permanently Closing Thursday - Block Club Chicago

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WEST LOOP — Liquor store 1340 Beer Wine Spirits is permanently closing after more than five years in business.

The half bar, half liquor store at 1340 W. Madison St. will close 9 p.m. Wednesday, owners said in an emailed newsletter to supporters.

“With a new year comes new beginnings and unfortunate endings. December 31st will be our last day of business,” owners wrote in a newsletter. 

“We can not say thank you enough for the love and support over the years. It has truly been a pleasure to run a business in the West Loop amongst such great people. You will all be missed.”

The store also served wine, beers on tap and cocktails at the bar. Private and corporate events were hosted in its tasting room.

The shop was known as Madison Wine Shop before owner Cody Berek partnered with Derrick Westbrook to redesign the store and bar.

Berek is leaving Chicago and “starting new adventures,” according to the email.

Berek and Westbrook could not be immediately reached for comment Wednesday. 

Subscribe to Block Club Chicago. Every dime we make funds reporting from Chicago’s neighborhoods.

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December 31, 2020 at 02:55PM
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The most overlooked wine stories of 2020 - San Francisco Chronicle

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Writing an end-of-year recap in 2020 is a strange exercise, because it feels like we’ve been recapping 2020 all year long. At every chance, we’ve reminded ourselves that the world is undergoing a fundamental change. The word “unprecedented” has crept into so many headlines that it’s become cliche. Forecasts of a post-pandemic world — Zoom meetings forever? — have been plentiful, and often very insightful.

All that is to say that you don’t need another end-of-year recap in this newsletter. Besides, we’ve pretty much already done an end-of-year recap for the California wine beat in the form of our 12 wines that define 2020 package — a collection of bottles that illuminate the big themes that affected California wine this year, from wildfires to racial justice to the “clean wine” craze.

So today, on the final day of this most unprecedented year, I want to share a different sort of recap: the wine stories of 2020 that went overlooked or underestimated. It was hard for any news to compete with the coronavirus, but many developments within the world of California wine deserved more attention than they received. (And no, I’m not going to mention the buttery Chardonnay lawsuit again, though I still maintain its canonical importance.)

Some of California’s most important wineries changed hands.

Two of Napa Valley’s most beloved legacy estates were sold from families to larger companies. Last week, Long Meadow Ranch sold Chardonnay legend Stony Hill Vineyard to Gaylon Lawrence, Jr., the Arkansas agriculture magnate who’s been buying up prestigious Napa properties at an impressive pace. He also bought Napa’s Burgess Cellars over the summer. We’ll be closely following these wineries and Lawrence’s growing empire in the coming year.

Stony Hill Vineyard in Napa Valley was sold to new owners, just two years after its previous owners had bought it.

Meanwhile, in March the French Champagne company Maison Louis Roederer purchased Diamond Creek Vineyards, the iconoclastic Cabernet producer in Napa’s western mountains. The sale followed the death of Adelle “Boots” Brounstein, who had founded Diamond Creek with her late husband, Al.

Randall Grahm, a winemaker given to philosophical speeches, sold his Bonny Doon Vineyard business to a new company, WarRoom Cellars.

The other major winery acquisition of the year — and maybe the one that raised the most eyebrows — was of Bonny Doon Vineyard, in January. Founder Randall Grahm sold his wine brand, which had been one of California’s most influential, to a young company called WarRoom Ventures, which was relatively unknown at the time of the announcement but is quickly becoming better known. (Now called WarRoom Cellars, the company recently launched Bubble Butt, a brand of canned “rosé seltzer.”) Grahm, always dependable for a shockingly candid interview, admitted that he was “deeply ambivalent” about the sale.

There were a number of other significant transactions. The giant Constellation Brands bought media star Gary Vaynerchuk’s brand-new Empathy Wines brand, seemingly before it had even gotten off the ground. Bill Foley bought Sonoma’s Ferrari-Carano. Clay Shannon bought Steele Wines, merging two of Lake County’s most prominent players.

Winemakers became firefighters.

During this fall’s wildfires, some winemakers and other civilians took matters into their own hands (sometimes, it should be stressed, against the advisement of Cal Fire). While the lightning fires were blazing in August, vintners in at least three different areas of Napa Valley effected rogue firefighting operations with vineyard equipment, including big bulldozers. In Napa’s Pope Valley, the efforts culminated in a controlled burn that one civilian referred to as “the 5-mile hail Mary.”

Jon Berlin, winemaker at El Molino Winery in Napa Valley, rode his Vertigo Trials Motorcycle around Spring Mountain during the Glass Fire to help spread communications about fire locations and extinguish flames.

One especially notable effort belonged to Jon Berlin, owner of Napa’s El Molino Winery, during the Glass Fire in October. Berlin rode his specialized stunt motorcycle around Spring Mountain, scouting flare-ups for the professional firefighters, extinguishing spot fires and cutting fire lines with a chainsaw. Many of his neighbors called him a hero.

New wineries opened to the public, pandemic be damned.

Despite the fact that 2020 was probably the worst year to open a winery tasting room since Prohibition, a number of Bay Area businesses were undeterred. Lola Wines began hosting wine tastings at its quaint Calistoga hideaway in January, barely two months before all wineries were ordered closed. Bricoleur, a lush estate in the Russian River Valley with farm-to-table meals, ended up launching over Memorial Day weekend, as soon as wineries were allowed to reopen in a reduced capacity. And the Faust Haus in St. Helena, the latest wonder from the Huneeus Vintners universe, poured high-end Cabernet in a setting that resembles a gothic fairy tale.

Seth Cripe and Rafaela Costa at the Lola Wines tasting room in March.

The wine industry lost some beloved trailblazers.

We said goodbye to Milla Handley, whose Handley Cellars helped put Mendocino County’s Anderson Valley on the map as a fine-wine region. She died in August at age 68. The cause: COVID-19.

Winemaker Milla Handley, shown here in her Gewurztraminer vineyard in Anderson Valley in 2009, died this year due to COVID-19.

Barry Sterling, founder of Iron Horse Vineyards in Sonoma County and a key player in the establishment of high-quality California sparkling wine, died of natural causes in July at age 90.

Another member of the nonagenarian club, Dolores Cakebread, died in October, also of natural causes. She created Cakebread Cellars with her husband, Jack, and played a crucial role in elevating hospitality — especially as it related to California cuisine — in Napa Valley.

Wine(s) of the Week

What really makes a New Year’s Eve party isn’t gathering with friends or making out with someone to “Auld Lang Syne” — but, rather, sparkling wine. In a mega-edition of Wine of the Week, I share seven California bubbly options that would be perfect for tonight’s festivities.

Birichino's 2016 sparkling Chenin Blanc from the Jurassic Park Vineyard in Santa Barbara County, one of Esther Mobley’s recommended sparkling wines for New Year’s Eve.

Holiday break reading list

Wine sales at grocery stores surged this year, but maybe not enough to make up for the losses of wine sales at restaurants.

• Elin McCoy’s list of predictions for wine in 2021, in Bloomberg, is a good one. She foresees virtual tastings as the new company perk, a big opportunity for wine-based seltzers and a lot of pink Prosecco.

• Here’s a visually striking, easily digestible feature about an experiment underway in Bordeaux to adapt winemaking to climate change, in the Washington Post.

• The tiki bar has come under fire in recent years for the cultural insensitivities that many people see as baked into the genre. With the help of some cute, colorful illustrations, Sammi Katz reviews that problematic history and highlights some bartenders who hope to stage an equitable tiki comeback.

• Writer R.H. Drexel named her top 25 wines of 2020, and I have to say I love the understated, staccato-like style of tasting notes she uses here.

• Another major wine story this year — though not quite on the California wine beat — was that of Italian winemaker Valentina Passalacqua. Passalacqua is the maker of the Calcarius brand, which had become a darling of the natural-wine set until her father was accused of exploiting migrant workers, leading many of her fans and U.S. importers to question how much Passalacqua knew about it. In the Cut, Angelina Chapin writes about the winemaker’s “spectacular rise and fall.”

Drinking with Esther is a weekly newsletter from The Chronicle’s wine critic. Follow along on Twitter: @Esther_Mobley and Instagram: @esthermob




December 31, 2020 at 07:00PM
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Rebel Cheese takes NYE celebration virtual with wine and cheese tasting - KXAN.com

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AUSTIN (KXAN) — With new COVID-19 restrictions coming out just days before New Year’s Eve, many restaurants and bars are having to scramble and change plans.

Rebel Cheese owner Fred Zwar and his wife opened the vegan shop that serves soups, sandwiches, salads along with cheese and wine a little more than a year ago. Five months into opening, the pandemic hit and they had to adjust like everyone else.

“We never thought we would start doing takeout, and never thought we would start having delivery,” Zwar said.

Zwar says a big part of his business is customers being able to come into his shop and sample the items and see them first hand. New safety protocols stopped that from happening, but he says his customers responded well and embraced the new system of pick up and delivery.

“We have had a lot of success with the virtual tasting,” Zwar said.

This New Year’s Eve, the celebration will go virtual with an online wine and cheese tasting.

“We will hand out our cheese board and a bottle of wine that accompanies it,” Zwar said.

From there, customers will return home and turn on the computer for the virtual tasting.

“They have been a life saver for us essentially,” Zwar said, referring to the virtual tastings.

While Zwar is ready to return to in-person dining, he says some of their new features might stick around once the pandemic ends.

“I don’t know if they are ever going to go away now,” Zwar said.




December 31, 2020 at 06:38PM
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