Craft beer finds growing US fan base

Craft beer finds growing US fan base

After a long day in the classroom, middle school teacher Melissa Repsch likes nothing more than to sit down to a fine dinner with beer — craft beer, that is.

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Like a growing number of Americans, she has developed a passion for full-flavored beers from small-volume, fiercely independent local breweries that are redefining how the United States takes its favorite tipple.

“It’s something we enjoy,” said Repsch, 37, as she and husband Jake, 38, also a teacher, sampled some of the 149 different beers from 74 craft breweries at this year’s edition of Savor, the nation’s biggest beer-and-food event.

“The more (varieties of craft beer) we try, the more it seems we’re pushing for something unique and rare,” she added.

Beer is a $96 billion industry in the United States, dominated by three multinationals — Belgium’s Anheuser-Busch InBev, best known for perennial best-seller Budweiser, Britain’s SABMiller and Canada’s Molson Coors.

But while overall beer sales dipped one percent in 2011, craft beer sales — which account for five percent of the entire market — surged 13 percent by volume and 15 percent by sales value.

What’s more, the total number of breweries in the United States now exceeds 2,000 — more than at any time since the 19th century, let alone the prohibition years of the 1930s.

“Americans have come of age now, wanting diversity and choice in the beers that they enjoy,” said Julia Herz, program director at the Brewers Association, the craft beer industry’s trade group.

“No longer does a light American lager satisfy every beer-lover’s occasion,” she told AFP in an interview.

With 4,000 attendees over two days, Savor — which takes place amid the soaring Corinthian columns and terra cotta friezes of the National Building Museum — is an event not to be missed for craft beer aficionados.

With tasting glasses in hand, chic professional women in smart cocktail dresses, and younger men who could have made more of a sartorial effort, put such brews as Curmudgeon Old Ale, Hardywood Mocha Belgique, Rosemary Swamp Fox, Skookumchuck Wild Ale, Idiot IPA and Hop’solutely to the taste test.

“I wouldn’t say people are giving up on Budweiser, but there is certainly a trend towards more full-flavored beers,” said Steve Kuftinec of Utah’s Uinta Brewing, makers of HOP Notch IPA, a “nicely balanced” India pale ale, and Labyrinth, a “ridiculously big barrel-aged Russian imperial stout.”

IPA, a hoppier version of conventional pale ale, first brewed in England in the 19th century for export to the Indian sub-continent, is far and away the most popular style of craft beer in the United States today.

From distant Hawaii, Garrett Marrero, founder with his wife Melanie of Maui Brewing, brought CoCoNut PorTer and Savrehumano Palena ‘ole as novel examples of their penchant for beer-making with quirky Hawaiian flavors.

“We look a lot to fruits and spices that we have locally,” such as coconut, guava, mango, papaya, passion fruit and pineapple, Marrero told AFP. “We’ve even used Maui onions.”

The Marreros used to work in finance before they put every penny they had into launching Maui Brewing seven years ago — at one point sleeping on the floor of their apartment because they couldn’t yet afford a mattress.

“It’s not something for the faint of heart,” Marrero told AFP. “It’s a lot of hard work… but we had passion and we knew what we wanted to do. We have a very clear vision.”

Social networks help spread the craft beer gospel. So do a raft of specialist publications and smartphone apps like Untappd, a kind of Twitter for hardcore beer fiends.

“It’s fun stuff,” said consultant Rick Silver, who reckons he’s tried more than 6,000 individual types of beer — on top of the ones he brews at home — since he started keeping track in the mid-1980s.

From Durango, Colorado, co-owner David Thibodeau of Ska Brewing was still in a celebratory mood after its Steel Toe Stout took a gold medal at the World Beer Cup in San Diego last month.

Considering how sluggish the US economy has been, he said, “it’s pretty nutty” that the craft beer sector has thrived as it has.

“This term gets thrown around a lot,” he said, “but I would say it’s an affordable luxury. It’s something that people can treat themselves to without breaking the bank. I think that’s what got us through the downturn.”

Damian McConn, a Dublin native and master brewer at Summit Brewing Company of Saint Paul, Minnesota, found the American craft beer scene so promising that he immigrated 10 years ago to be part of it. He has no regrets.

“In terms of creativity, and innovation, I think the US is the place to be right now,” he said.

“In Germany or Belgium or Czech Republic, you’re seeing some of the most technically outstanding beers in the world — but we’re not seeing the range of beers that we are now seeing in the United States in the craft brewing sector.”

All About Beer with Bill & Sheila


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Beer - Searching DC For This Rare IPA? Good Luck!

Beer – Searching DC For This Rare IPA? Good Luck!

The annual release of Hopslam, the super-rare and coveted Imperial IPA from Michigan’s Bell’s Brewery that often has retailers jacking up their price guns, is upon us again. And, yes, at some outlets, it’s already too late to buy some. Connecticut Avenue Wine Liquors got six cases in on Monday and sold them out by Wednesday. Price: $24.99 per six pack. Chevy Chase Wine Spirits sold out of their four cases before they even arrived on Thursday. That store was charging $21.99 per six pack. Cairo Liquors sold their five cases in a single day. Its price was slightly less: $20.99 for a sixer. D’Vines of Columbia Heights may be cashing in the most on the yearly frenzy, however, selling Hopslam by the bottle at $6.30 a pop—that works out to $37.80 per six pack. And, as of 2:30 p.m. on Thursday, the shop still had a few left.

What’s so special about Hopslam? City Paper‘s former “Beerspotter” columnist Orr Shtuhl explored the brew’s ambrosial qualities in this very space two years ago. For a fresh perspective on its lingering popularity, YH turned to—who else?—ChurchKey‘s walking malt-and-hops encyclopedia Greg Engert, who reminds us of the local connection between the city and its most sought-after seasonal import. Engert points out that Bell’s Brewery founder Larry Bell had attended George Washington University and it was here in D.C. where the young collegian turned into a hophead. “He started drinking craft beer at the Brickskeller and it really opened his eyes and got him to start brewing himself in 1985,” Engert says.

ChurchKey’s brewhound-in-chief is especially fond of Bell’s ultra-hoppy suds. “I think this beer is phenomenal,” he says. “I sold 24 bottles of it the first night it came in ($9 apiece), based on just one tweet. I would put it up against any Imperial I.P.A. in the country. It’s beautifully balanced, hoppy but not a fruit bomb. Not too piney, but with great tropical fruit and herb notes. It’s everything you could want out of Pacific Northwest hops.”

Sipping the stuff during our conversation at Engert’s noted beer hall on 14th Street NW the other night, I had to agree. I tend to dislike hoppy beers. No, I take that back, I despise them (apologies to my beer expert uncle, Peter). Probably has something to do with how my palette was ruined by Busch Light and Natural Light in college. But Hopslam has a roundness that sets it apart from the overly bitter pales I’ve tried in the past. I enjoyed it.

Engert also explains that Hopslam is unique because Bell’s Brewery has never changed its annual, small-batch approach to allocating the beer, despite demand that has increased year after year. In fact, as the appetite for craft beer in D.C. has grown and more high quality watering holes have opened, Engert has seen his yearly allotment go down.

Yet, somehow, he still manages to get an exclusive:  “We have the only cask of Hopslam in the area, and we’re tapping it for a special event next week,” he says (details here).

But whither Hopslam? Can its appeal last forever, in D.C. or elsewhere? Despite changes in craft brew culture, which have new breweries constantly cranking out special batches and one-off beers, Engert still believes Hopslam reigns supreme. “There’s not going to be another Hopslam,” he says. “This beer comes from a different era. It has such credibility because it has been so good for so long.”

Image courtesy of Bell’s Brewery

All About Beer with Bill & Sheila

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