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Lew Bryson *Is* The American Beer Blogger

November 15, 2011 By Jay Brooks

lew-bryson
A new project was announced yesterday on Kickstarter starring my friend and colleague Lew Bryson. The project is being produced by Rudy Vegliante of Green Leaf Productions and the idea is to create a series of six half-hour television shows starring Lew. Here’s how the project is described on the Kickstarter project page for American Beer Blogger:

AMERICAN BEER BLOGGER is a half hour television series dedicated to all facets of the ever growing craft beer market. From home brewing, to micro beer; viewers will experience the very best of the craft beer culture. In each episode, Lew will visit a different brewer, each of which has their own sets of quirks and ways of doing things. Lew will talk to these brewers, get to know them, will show us first hand the various methods and techniques used in creating a craft beer. From the tiniest bottler to the largest manufacturer, Lew will get his hands dirty. Topics such as bottling, food pairing, manufacturing, distribution, history, technique (and so much more) will all be touched upon as Lew spends a day with these brewers. Some doing well in the business, others not so well. Thankfully, the DIY nature of this business can lead to some pretty unforseeable results as Lew lends a hand and helps out in any way he can. Lew will show us all the kinds of micro-breweries currently out there. From the smallest, hippest label to large manufacturers.

AMERICAN BEER BLOGGER sets out to entertain the viewer as well as educate on this rapidly growing industry. Through humor and a charming, hands-on host, our show will not only be entertaining for the microbeer enthusiast, but also enjoyable for the average viewer as well.

They’re trying to raise $60,000 in two months to fund the project. There’s a variety of pledge levels available if you’re interested in seeing Lew in his very on TV show — and who doesn’t want that? Levels range from a buck to $10,000, with everything in between, getting you various thanks, credit and goodies for each successive level. For example, at the $1,000 level you get an “associate producer” credit and all six episodes on DVD, along with some additional tchotchkes. Below is video of the proposed project.

The teaser trailer was filmed at Stoudt’s Brewery in Adamstown, Pennsylvania, near where I grew up. And it features Lew doing what Lew does best: drinking, talking, eating and laughing … a lot. And that, I think is a very promising beginning. It seems very natural, a casual look at the brewery and the people behind it. I hope lots of people queue up to help the project get made. I know I’ll help out as best I can. You should to.

I think my only quibble — and it’s really a tongue-in-cheek one — is that title. Lew Bryson is the American Beer Blogger! Certainly he’s “an” American Beer Blogger, but “the” American Beer Blogger? It makes it sound like he’s the only one, or at least the only one who can call himself that; the Steam Beer among us California Commons. Plus, it makes him sound like a superhero.

super-lew

Filed Under: Breweries, Just For Fun, News Tagged With: Pennsylvania, TV, Video

Bistro West Coast Barrel Aged Beer Fest Results

November 14, 2011 By Jay Brooks

bistro
On Saturday, the 6th annual West Coast Barrel Aged Beer Fest took place at the Bistro in Hayward. 67 different barrel-aged beers were served to a packed house on a beautiful fall day. Festival goers voting for their favorites chose the following three for the People’s Choice Awards:

  1. Brette Davis Eyes, from Drake’s
  2. Rumpkin, from Avery Brewing
  3. Big Woody Barleywine, from Glacier Brewhouse

Congratulations to all the winners.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, News Tagged With: Awards, Bay Area, California

Belgium’s Liquid Communication

November 12, 2011 By Jay Brooks

belgium
The NPR program PRI’s The World had an interesting piece yesterday by a Clark Boyd entitled In Belgium, It’s Not Just Beer. It’s ‘Liquid Communication.’ I like that turn of phrase, “Liquid Communication,” though the gist of the article is that the author, understandably, worries that ABI might start capitalizing on the romance of Belgian beer as they attempt to launch their “Belgian Beer Cafe” chain in the U.S. There are already 55 of them worldwide, but now they’re seeking to franchise them in the states, too. The concept appears to be making the Belgian beer cafe as famous as the Irish bar or the English pub that can be found in every big city in the world, and probably just as authentic.

ABI, of course, has several Belgian beers in its portfolio, including Hoegaarden, Leffe, Belle-Vue and the ubiquitous Stella Artois. According to the pitch, the cafes would also carry non-ABI Belgian beers, but you know which ones would get the most attention and focus. They would no doubt appeal to consumers who are not hardcore beer geeks but have heard the news that Belgium makes some world class beers. And while that’s not necessarily a bad thing, it’s hard not to share the author’s concerns that ABI would fuck it up for everybody. Stella Artois is not exactly the best or most representative Belgian beer, yet it’s now the one most people are aware of. But it’s as far away from what makes Belgian beer great as Bud is from Trumer Pilsner or Radeberger. But I would certainly like to communicate liquidly.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Editorial, Just For Fun, News Tagged With: Belgium, Mainstream Coverage

Washington Beer

November 11, 2011 By Jay Brooks

washington
Today in 1889, Washington became the 42nd state.

Washington
State_Washington

Washington Breweries

  • Adam’s Northwest Bistro and Brewery
  • Airways Brewing Company
  • Aldergrove Brewery
  • Alpine Brewing
  • American Brewing
  • Anacortes Brewhouse
  • Ancient Lakes Brewing
  • Atomic Ale Brewpub and Eatery
  • Back Yard Brewing
  • Bad Jimmy’s Brewery
  • Barhop Brewing
  • Baron Brewing
  • Battenkill Brewing
  • Bellevue Brewing
  • Big Al Brewing
  • Big House Brewing
  • Big Time Brewery & Ale House
  • Big Water Brewing
  • Birdsview Brewing
  • BJ’s Restaurant & Brewery: Tukwila –
  • Black Raven Brewing
  • Boundary Bay Brewery and Bistro
  • Brick Road Brewery
  • Budge Brothers Brewery
  • Chuckanut Brewery & Kitchen
  • C.I. Shenanigans
  • Coeur d’Alene Brewing
  • Columbia Valley Brewing
  • Der Blokken Brewery
  • Diamond Knot Brewery & Alehouse
  • Dick’s Brewing
  • Duo Brewing
  • Ellersick Brewing Company
  • Elliott Bay Brewhouse & Pub
  • Elysian Brewery
  • Emerald City Beer Company
  • Engine House #9
  • Epic Ales
  • Everybody’s Brewing
  • Fathom & League Hop Yard Brewery
  • Fish Brewing & Fish Tail Brewpub
  • Five Dons Brewing
  • Flyers Restaurant and Brewery
  • Flying Bike Cooperative Brewery
  • Foggy Noggin Brewery
  • Forecaster’s Public House
  • Fremont Brewing
  • Gallaghers’ Where U Brew
  • Georgetown Brewing
  • Golden Hills Brewing
  • Gordon Biersch Brewing
  • Grey Parrot Brewing
  • Grove Street Brewhouse
  • Hale’s Ales
  • Harbinger Brewhouse
  • Harmon Tap Room
  • Hilliard’s Brewing
  • Hood Canal Brewing
  • Horse Heaven Hills Brewery
  • Ice Harbor Brewing
  • Harmon Pub & Brewery
  • Icicle Brewing
  • Iron Goat Brewing
  • Iron Horse Brewery
  • Island Hoppin’ Brewery
  • Issaquah Brewhouse
  • Kulshan Brewing
  • LaConner Brewing
  • Laht Neppur Brewing
  • Lantern Brewing
  • Laurelwood Public House & Brewery
  • Lazy Boy Brewing
  • Mac and Jack’s Brewery
  • Maritime Pacific Brewing
  • McMenamins East Vancouver; Mill Creek; Olympic Club, Centralia; Spar Café & Bar, Olympia; on the Columbia; Six Arms
  • Methow Valley Brewing
  • Mount Tabor Brewing
  • MT Head Brewing
  • Naked City Brewery & Taproom
  • Northern Ales
  • Northern Lights Brewing
  • North Fork Brewers
  • North Sound Brewing
  • Northwest Peaks Brewery
  • Odin Brewing
  • Olde World Ales and Lagers
  • Old Schoolhouse Brewery
  • 192 Brewing Company
  • Palouse Falls Brewing
  • Paradise Creek Brewery
  • Parker’s Steakhouse
  • Peak’s Pub
  • Pike Brewing
  • Port Townsend Brewing
  • Powerhouse Brewery and Restaurant
  • Pyramid Alehouse, Brewery and Restaurant
  • Ram Restaurant & Brewery: Kent, Lacey, Lakewood, Puyallup, Seattle, Warehouse
  • Rattlesnake Mountain Brewery
  • Redhook Ale Brewery
  • Republic Brewing
  • Riverport Brewing
  • Rock Bottom Restaurant & Brewery: Bellevue, Seattle
  • Rock Wood Fired Pizza and Brewery
  • Rocky Coulee Brewing
  • Roslyn Brewing
  • Salmon Creek Brewery and Pub
  • Schooner Exact Brewing
  • Scuttlebutt Brewpub
  • 7 Seas Brewing
  • Silver City Brewing
  • Skagit River Brewing
  • Skookum Brewery
  • Skye Book & Brew
  • Snipes Mountain Microbrewery & Restaurant
  • SnoHo Brewing
  • Snoqualmie Falls Brewing
  • Soos Creek Brewing
  • Sound Brewery
  • Stix Billiards & Brewhouse
  • Trade Route Brewing
  • 12 String Brewing Co
  • Two Beers Brewing
  • Two Sisters Brewing
  • Underground Lighthouse Brewing
  • Urban Family Brewing
  • Valhöll Brewing
  • Vashon Brewing
  • Walking Man Brewing
  • West Highland Brewing
  • Westport Brewing
  • White Bluffs Brewing
  • Whitstran Brewing
  • Wingman Brewers
  • Yakima Craft Brewing

Washington Brewery Guides

  • Beer Advocate
  • Beer Me
  • Rate Beer

Guild: Washington Brewers Guild

State Agency: Washington State Liquor Control Board

maps-wa

  • Capital: Olympia
  • Largest Cities: Seattle, Spokane, Tacoma, Vancouver, Bellevue
  • Population: 5,894,121; 15th
  • Area: 71303 sq.mi., 18th
  • Nickname: The Evergreen State
  • Statehood: 42nd, November 11, 1889

m-washington

  • Alcohol Legalized: December 5, 1933
  • Number of Breweries: 123
  • Rank: 2nd
  • Beer Production: 4,403,963
  • Production Rank: 16th
  • Beer Per Capita: 20.8 Gallons

washington

Package Mix:

  • Bottles: 37.3%
  • Cans: 50%
  • Kegs: 12.4%

Beer Taxes:

  • Per Gallon: $0.26
  • Per Case: $0.59
  • Tax Per Barrel (24/12 Case): $8.08
  • Draught Tax Per Barrel (in Kegs): $8.08
  • 7% surtax (included in figures shown) added to excise tax rate plus environmental tax of $150 per $1 million value at the producer, wholesaler and retailer levels.

Economic Impact (2010):

  • From Brewing: $222,811,254
  • Direct Impact: $1,297,535,641
  • Supplier Impact: $935,595,943
  • Induced Economic Impact: $1,830,518,353
  • Total Impact: $4,063,649,937

Legal Restrictions:

  • Control State: No
  • 6 a.m.–2 a.m. A local government subdivision may fix later opening hours or earlier closing hours than those here specified
  • Grocery Store Sales: Yes
  • Notes: Beer and wine available in grocery stores and convenience stores every day (including federal holidays) from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. Spirits for off-premise consumption are sold only in state-run or state-contracted liquor stores. All state-owned stores are open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon-Thurs and 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Fri-Sat. Contract stores may still set their own hours, but liquor sales may not be rung up before 8 a.m. and may not be rung up after 11 p.m. A handful of state and contract stores are open Sundays from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. State stores are open on most federal holidays, excluding New Year’s Day, Easter, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. Contract stores have the option to remain open on any holiday at the discretion of the store manager.
    Currently set to transition to a non-control state by June 2012.

washington-map

Data complied, in part, from the Beer Institute’s Brewer’s Almanac 2010, Beer Serves America, the Brewers Association, Wikipedia and my World Factbook. If you see I’m missing a brewery link, please be so kind as to drop me a note or simply comment on this post. Thanks.

For the remaining states, see Brewing Links: United States.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries Tagged With: Washington

Montana Beer

November 8, 2011 By Jay Brooks

montana
Today in 1889, Montana became the 41st state.

Montana
State_Montana

Montana Breweries

  • Bayern Brewing
  • Beaver Creek Brewery
  • Big Sky Brewing
  • Bitter Root Brewing
  • Blackfoot River Brewing
  • Blacksmith Brewing
  • Bones Brewing Pub & Eatery
  • Bozeman Brewing
  • Carter’s Brewing
  • Draught Works Brewery
  • Flathead Lake Brewing
  • 406 Brewing Company
  • Glacier Brewing
  • Great Northern Brewing
  • Harvest Moon Brewery
  • Kettlehouse Brewery
  • Lewis & Clark Brewing
  • Lewistown Brewing
  • Lone Peak Brewery
  • Madison River Brewing
  • Missouri Breaks Brewing
  • Montana Brewing
  • Neptune’s Brewery
  • Quarry Brewing
  • Raven Pub and Grill
  • Red Lodge Ales
  • Spanish Peaks Brewing
  • Tamarack Brewing Alehouse & Grill
  • Wildwood Brewing
  • Yellowstone Valley Brewing

Montana Brewery Guides

  • Beer Advocate
  • Beer Me
  • Rate Beer

Guild: Montana Brewers Association

State Agency: Montana Department of Revenue Liquor Control

maps-mt

  • Capital: Helena
  • Largest Cities: Billings, Missoula, Great Falls, Butte, Bozeman
  • Population: 902,195; 44th
  • Area: 147046 sq.mi., 4th
  • Nickname: Treasure State
  • Statehood: 41st, November 8, 1889

m-montana

  • Alcohol Legalized: December 5, 1933
  • Number of Breweries: 30
  • Rank: 21st
  • Beer Production: 993,496
  • Production Rank: 43rd
  • Beer Per Capita: 31.8 Gallons

montana

Package Mix:

  • Bottles: 34.6%
  • Cans: 53%
  • Kegs: 12.3%

Beer Taxes:

  • Per Gallon: $0.14
  • Per Case: $0.31
  • Tax Per Barrel (24/12 Case): $4.30
  • Draught Tax Per Barrel (in Kegs): $4.30

Economic Impact (2010):

  • From Brewing: $41,418,747
  • Direct Impact: $307,661,400
  • Supplier Impact: $129,447,052
  • Induced Economic Impact: $178,191,531
  • Total Impact: $615,299,983

Legal Restrictions:

  • Control State: No
  • Sale Hours: On Premises: Closing 2am
    Off Premises:
  • Grocery Store Sales: Yes
  • Notes: ABV > 16% wine sold in state-contracted stores, ABV < 16% may be sold in grocery stores.
    Brewery tasting rooms cannot serve beer after 8 pm (10am-8pm) and can only sell 48 oz. per customer per day.

montana-map

Data complied, in part, from the Beer Institute’s Brewer’s Almanac 2010, Beer Serves America, the Brewers Association, Wikipedia and my World Factbook. If you see I’m missing a brewery link, please be so kind as to drop me a note or simply comment on this post. Thanks.

For the remaining states, see Brewing Links: United States.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries Tagged With: Montana

High Alcohol, Low Calories: Bud Light Platinum

November 8, 2011 By Jay Brooks

abib
This is a bit of a head scratcher. Though it’s been rumored for a while now, apparently it is coming, as AdAge is reporting that the TTB has given label approval for Bud Light Platinum. Though thought to be somewhere between 6% and 8% a.b.v., AdAge indicated the new low-calorie beer will weigh in at 6% and have 137 calories. Regular Bud Light is 4.2% a.b.v. and has 110 calories. And as regular Budweiser is 5% and 145 calories, it’s hard to see the point. Apparently, the idea is “to tap into the rising popularity of craft beers, which tend to be fuller bodied with more alcohol.” Sure, just throw in some alcohol, that should fool people. Apparently they’re missing the point that craft beer drinkers want flavor, not just higher octane. But given how successful the big brewers have been at convincing people to drink low-calorie light beers, I have little doubt this couldn’t work, too, however illogical I find the very notion of light beer.

ABI has also apparently registered the domain name budlightplatinum.com, but it’s not yet an active website. There’s not even a placeholder there so it may be some time before we see the actual beer. ABI has also not yet made an official announcement or sent out a press release.

Bud-Light-Platinum

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, News Tagged With: Anheuser-Busch InBev, Announcements, Health & Beer, new release

El Cerrito Brewpub Owner Injured By Police During Occupy Oakland

November 7, 2011 By Jay Brooks

elevation-66
I was really hoping to avoid writing about the Occupy Oakland horrors currently going on in the city I used to call home. But last Thursday, Oakland Police apparently injured yet another war veteran — two tours, one each in Iraq and Afghanistan — simply trying to walk to his home, rupturing his spleen in the process and refusing him medical attention for eighteen hours! It turns out the man, Kayvan Sabeghi, is a co-founder of Elevation 66 Brewing, a new Bay Area brewpub which opened in nearby El Cerrito this past September. As a result of his beating, Sabeghi ended up in intensive care fighting for his life, but nobody knew about it until Friday, because the police that beat him bad enough to give him a lacerated spleen and a few broken ribs ignored his pleas for help, instead hurling insults at him and calling him a heroin addict, an alcoholic and a diabetic, none of which were true.

So that means the police injured not only another war veteran, but also a small business owner — in right wing parlance a “job-creator” — who according to what I’ve read posed no real threat to the peace at all. What’s perhaps most disturbing of all is the comments on news websites where many are suggesting his story is not true, or he deserved it or simply applauding the police for hurting him. That people can be so cruel is not exactly news to me, but it’s still pretty hard to stomach.

The Daily Kos posted a story, now updated three times, on Friday, which includes an interview with the victim’s sister. There are also reports on the UK’s Guardian, Reuters and the Huffington Post.

The El Cerrito Patch also covered the incident, as they’d previously written about his brewpub, Elevation 66, in Made-In-El Cerrito Beer: Elevation 66 Brewer Describes New Pub’s Approach. In addition to the brewpub’s website, their Facebook page also has updates about Sabeghi’s progress. Let’s all wish him a speedy recovery. And if you’re hankering for a beer, perhaps a trip to El Cerrito is in order.

Filed Under: Breweries, News, Politics & Law Tagged With: Bay Area, California, Oakland

Fire In New Belgium Grain Silo

November 7, 2011 By Jay Brooks

new-belgium-new
The Denver Post has breaking news about a 2-alarm fire at the New Belgium Brewery “in what appears to be a grain silo.” Apparently some of the employees have been evacuated and hopefully no one has been injured. More details will be posted here as they emerge.

UPDATE: Dave Butler, a.k.a. Chipper Dave, is reporting that the “fire is put out” and that it was “empty grain silo caught fire as worker was dismantling it. No affect to other brewing operations.”

UPDATE #2: ABC Channel 7 has an update on the story, and posted the photo below on their website, taken by Major King.

nbb-fire

Filed Under: Breweries, News Tagged With: Colorado

Session #57: Beer Geek Confessional

November 6, 2011 By Jay Brooks

confession
Our 57th Session brings us into the confessional, courtesy of our host, Steve Lamond, from Beers I’ve Known, who magnanimously agreed to fill in for the recently pilfered Pete Brown. Stephanos — Steve’s alter ego — has chosen the topic Beery Confessions: Guilty Secrets/Guilty Pleasure Beer, which he describes as follows:

One of the things I most enjoy about blogs and personal writing in general is the ability to have a window into another’s life, in a semi-voyeuristic way. So I’d like to know your beery guilty secrets. Did you have a particularly embarrassing first beer (in the same way that some people purchase an atrocious song as their first record) or perhaps there’s still a beer you return to even though you know you shouldn’t? Or maybe you don’t subscribe to the baloney about feeling guilty about beers and drink anything anyway?

You’re also welcome to write about bad drinking experiences you’ve had as a result of your own indulgence or times when you’ve been completely wrong about a beer but not yet confessed to anyone that you’ve changed your mind.

Its fairly wide open, take your pick. Variety is the spice of life as they say (and I hope there’s more than 57 of them…)

session_logo_all_text_200

Since Stephanos says he likes discovering personal things about his fellow beer bloggers, getting “a window into another’s life, in a semi-voyeuristic way,” I’ll recount my own, vaguely embarrassing first taste of not beer, close in a way, but actually “Near Beer,” non-alcoholic beer that was, believe it or not, aimed at kids when I still was one. In fact, my mother bought me some when I was around twelve and my friends and I tried it one day. It was so bad it’s a wonder I ever tried beer again.

near-beer

I wish I remembered more details about it. I thought the can was silver in color, but I also remember bright colors. Of course, this was the early 1970s so bright colors were everywhere. I’ve written about this before, though I thought I’d remembered more details than I can now, but unfortunately that’s just not the case. Back in November of 2006 I participated for the third, and final time, in NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month. NaNoWriMo is a great exercise for writers. Every November for over a decade, it challenges writers to complete a 50,000-word novel in 30 days. That works out to 1,667 words a day, every day.

That year, I wrote Under the Table, A Fictional Memoir of Growing Up With Beer, the first draft of which is still online. As far as I know, the only people to actually read it were my mother-in-law and Shaun O’Sullivan, from 21st Amendment, who was sick for a good portion of that November in 2006 and needed something to do. The story was a mostly true account of 24 episodes in my life, from the first memories of my parents drinking beer — I grew up with an alcoholic, psychotic stepfather — to my own adventures drinking in New York City in my late teens and early twenties. I chose 24 chapters because that’s a case, and each chapter starts with a particular beer remembered from my childhood as a starting point for my admittedly self-indulgent reminiscences.

Chapter 7, Not So Close, ends with the time my friends and I first tried the truly awful Near Beer.

This was also the same time that I first tried near beer. I don’t remember why my mother bought it for me, but it was in the basement refrigerator with the rest of the real alcohol. Perhaps she was afraid that my stepfather’s influence might turn me into an alcoholic, too, who knows? But some friends and I tried it one afternoon when I was in my early teens, probably around twelve or so. It was truly awful, as I remember it, and I wasn’t the only one. We all hated it. If this was what beer tasted like, I didn’t understand why adults seemed to drink so much of it. But it did seem like so many other aspects of the life I’d imagined for myself. It was as close to beer as my life was to being normal, not even close.

Happily, I didn’t give up on beer and found that it was much better than that first near experience. I continued drinking the somewhat bland regional lagers available in 1970s Eastern Pennsylvania. They offered not much in the way of variety but in retrospect were more varied than beer became in the following decade when consolidation, mergers and takeovers gave us “The Big 3,” with little else to drink. But after joining the Army Band out of high school, I was stationed in New York City. For a musician, the city was a great place to be at that time. It offered endless places to see live music. Although I liked rock & roll, I was a bigger fan of jazz, especially big band. And there was some terrific places to see jazz, a number of them in the village. There were even these private loft clubs in some warehouse district that I couldn’t find today if my life depended on it, but we knew people who knew people and thus had the address to some of these unmarked jazz clubs. Many of the jazz clubs in New York were selling beers like Guinness, Bass and Pilsner Urquell, beers utterly different than anything we had back home. That’s actually the genesis of my own love affair with beer and was also detailed in Chapter 23 of Under the Table, Jazz in the Dark.

homer-simpson_catholic_confession

But the confession part of that story is that although I began to learn more and more about beer, and tried as many different ones as we encountered, I continued to drink the familiar regional lagers and even the mainstream national brands when nothing else was available. I hadn’t yet become the annoying beer snob that I am today, when I’ll politely decline a beer if there isn’t anything I deem worthy of drinking at that moment. So there was a good decade where I drank craft beer whenever I could, but wasn’t too fussy when offered something not as tasty. I regret putting social considerations ahead of my taste buds. Of course, I wasn’t as curmudgeonly then, either, and probably had more friends. Is there a connection? Probably.

And one final confession:

leslie-nielsen-leslie-nielsen-shirley-confess

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun, The Session Tagged With: History, Literature, Non-Alcoholic

Lagunitas Brewhouse Destroyed At Sea

November 4, 2011 By Jay Brooks

lagunitas-circle
Ouch. As many of you probably know, Lagunitas Brewing is in the process of installing a new 250-barrel brewhouse, but there may be a bit of a delay. Apparently the brewhouse was on its way to California, tied down on the top of the deck in the Caribbean, when a storm hit the cargo ship. As it “rolled back and forth by more than 40 degrees a crane came loose from its chains and crushed the brewhouse. The 30′ diameter lauter tun caught the blunt of the attack, and appears to be a total loss.”

lagunitas-destroyed-575

Filed Under: Breweries, News Tagged With: Bay Area, Brewery Porn, California, Northern California

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