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Jay R. Brooks on Beer

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The Economy’s Down, But Alcohol Sales Are Up

June 9, 2011 By Jay Brooks

sales-chart-up
According to a short item today in CNN Money, “[a]lcohol sales climbed with little interruption throughout the recent recession, and have continued to expand in recent months.”

Over the last, for the period ending May 31st, “[a]lcoholic beverage sales grew by nearly 10%,” according to the financial information company Sageworks. During that same period of time, “the average unemployment rate during that time exceeded 9.3%.”

Sales expanded more than 9% in 2008, the first full year of the recession, when the average unemployment rate was 5.8%. Sales slumped dramatically the following year, but were still 1% higher, as the unemployment rate shot up to about 9.3%.

In 2010, sales jumped more than 9% as unemployment grew to 9.6%.

The only other industry showing similar growth is apparently health care. Sageworks analyst Sam Zippin quipped that apart from “going to the doctor, [alcohol] is another need to have.” By which I assume he means there are only two certainties during a recession, that people will either get sick or drink. And the article concedes that the old saw about beer being recession-proof “appears to be true.”

Except that Esther Kwon, who’s identified as “an alcohol industry analyst for Standard & Poor’s, says just the opposite, stating “I wouldn’t say it’s recession proof. People will buy less and they will move to different venues, meaning moving to home instead of a bar. But people will continue to drink, regardless.” Um, maybe she’s been misquoted, but isn’t that contradictory? I’m not trying to pick a fight with Kwon, but I just don’t quite understand her point. I agree with her statement that “people will continue to drink, regardless,” and that to save money, many will choose to drink it at home. But concluding from that information that alcohol isn’t recession-proof doesn’t seem to logically follow or make any sense to me.

Where they buy their alcohol, or where they drink it, has no bearing on how much people buy, apart from the price they pay. And if it’s cheaper to drink at home, that would mean they could actually buy more, doesn’t it? And if the sales growth of all alcohol companies is up nearly 10% that would likewise suggest that people are not just continuing to drink, but are drinking more. It’s a simple ipso facto, isn’t it? There’s a recession. People are drinking (or at least buying) more. Ipso facto. What am I missing that would cause a so-called “beverage analyst” to conclude otherwise?

That confusion aside, this is more good news for the craft beer industry, as within the beer industry, that’s the segment that’s showing the most growth by a very wide margin. In fact, it’s practically the only segment showing strong growth.

Filed Under: Breweries, News Tagged With: Business, Mainstream Coverage, Statistics

Hahn’s “Pioneering Beering”

June 8, 2011 By Jay Brooks

hahn-super-dry
Here’s a fun video forwarded to me by Push Eject, who’s both the Production Director with The Brewing Network and also involved in Heretic Brewing. The commercial is for the Hahn Brewery, founded by legendary Australian brewer Chuck Hahn, who today runs the Malt Shovel Brewery. The Hahn brands were bought by brewing giant Lion Nathan in 1993. In 2005, Lion Nathan launched Hahn Super Dry. I confess that I’m skeptical of any beer that calls itself “super dry,” but I love the notion in the ad that you can imbue the beer with the soul of different ideas by the way you brew it. If you just expose the beer to cool things, it will become cool, too, by osmosis. It’s not quite Rube Goldberg, but it has similar elements. And most importantly, it makes me want to try the beer, even though I know I probably won’t like it very much because I’m not a fan of this type of beer.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun Tagged With: Advertising, Australia, Video

Session #52: Collectibles & Breweriana

June 3, 2011 By Jay Brooks

schlitz-breweriana
Our 52nd Session is hosted by Brian Stechschulte, from All Over Beer. He’s chosen the topic Beer Collectibles & Breweriana, which he explains as follows:

I’ve decided not to focus on the substance of beer, but the material that plays a supporting role. Bottles, coasters, cans, labels, ads, tap handles, church keys, hats, t-shirts, tip trays, glassware and signs have been collected by fanatics ever since beer has been sold. These objects constitute the world of breweriana, a term that surfaced in 1972 to define any item displaying a brewery or brand name. The majority of highly prized objects are from the pre-prohibition era, but ephemera from every period in brewing history, including craft beer, finds a home with each beer drinking generation.

So what old or new beer related items do you collect and why? It’s that simple. This is your opportunity to share the treasured objects your wife or husband won’t let you display on the fireplace mantle. You don’t need to be a major collector like this guy to participate. In my mind, just a few items constitute a collection. Maybe you have mementos from a beer epiphany or road trips? You can focus on a whole collection or tell the story behind a single item.

session_logo_all_text_200

So breweriana. Collectibles. I have been plagued my entire life — my wife would say afflicted — with a desire to collect stuff. All kinds of stuff. Stuff as varied as my interests, which run fairly far afield and tend toward the arcane. There was a time when I scoured yards sales and flea markets on weekends, now I troll eBay. I love the hunt, especially when I don’t know what I’m looking for, just something that turns my eye.

People who’ve been to our home recently know that I have not exactly been cured, despite my wife’s best efforts over the past fifteen plus years. The problem is, I tend to imbue each object with meaning, its time and place of acquisition, how it fit into my life and the story it holds. Point to any object in my home — and I do mean any — and I can tell you the tale about how I came to acquire it, including when, why and where.

But I have actually scaled back those impulses significantly and with every move and spring cleaning, I shed more and more of what can best be termed useless possessions. Objets d’art, I would say. Junk is what most people would counter. Ah, well, as the saying goes: “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure.”

That doesn’t mean I’ve lost my obsessions, quite the opposite in fact. I just try and pick more carefully these days. Between work and family, there’s far less time than when I was younger. As for breweriana, I’m not nearly as obsessed with it as some of my other hobbies. But I do have a box of coasters, another box of labels, a handful of cans and bottles along with a number of more unique items. I also have a number of Reading Brewery pieces, because I grew up just outside of Reading, Pennsylvania, and I love their logo. For a time before I was married, I also collected globes, mostly desktop globes but I also had a few larger ones, too. That led me to start picking up some old Schlitz stuff from the time when they used the globe logo.

Schlitz-world

For that reason I have more Schlitz breweriana than any other individual brand, though not as much as I once had. I still have a few lighted signs, a couple of bottles and an old label. But the crown jewel, and one of my favorite pieces of breweriana of all-time is this golden Schlitz statue of a woman holding up a stained-glass-like globe. Both the globe and the base lights up. It stands nearly four feet high, around 45 inches. I bought it at a yard sale in San Jose, when I lived there twenty or so years ago. I’d like to say that was the end of the story, but it’s not. See below the statue to learn its ultimate fate.

schlitz-statue-globe

As I said, I’d like to say that was the end of the story, and that it happily and proudly sits in my office today, but unfortunately that’s not what happened to it. It was not, sad to say, universally beloved and when my wife Sarah and I first moved in together after our engagement, it held an uneasy place in our new home, a bit like the wagon wheel table in the film When Harry Met Sally. So when I became the beer buyer at Beverages & more, it seemed like the right decision to decorate my office there with the Schlitz statue. And for several years it stood like a beacon on top of the small refrigerator in my office there where I kept samples.

Then one day I had a meeting with my sales rep. from Spaten USA, whose name I’ll omit to spare him any embarrassment. He was not of an inconsequential size, and for some reason while sitting in his chair, kept rocking back so the front legs were off the ground. Nervous energy, I suppose. But at one point while leaning back, he lost his balance and fell to the ground. The chair fell back, knocking into the refrigerator, setting off a chain reaction of falling objects that ended with the Schlitz lamp on the ground with the globe on top smashed into a million tiny shards of plastic. He offered to replace it, but I honestly didn’t even know how since at the time it not exactly something you could go into a store and buy. And so that was the end of my favorite piece of breweriana I’ve ever owned. Every now and again, I see one come up for auction on eBay and often fetches hundreds of dollars. But even if I found one it would not exactly be welcomed back into our house, so this favorite will have to live on only in my memory. But it was a great advertising piece. The few I’ve seen in circulation still look great, sitting on the bar back in a few old bars. It almost makes me want to drink a Schlitz.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun, Related Pleasures, The Session Tagged With: Breweriana, Schlitz

Wisconsin Legislature Attacks Craft Brewers

June 3, 2011 By Jay Brooks

wisconsin
With craft beer being the only segment of the brewing industry showing strong growth, you’d think that state governments trying to fix our current economic woes would be doing everything they can to help one of the few bright spots in American business. But never underestimate the power of lobbying by interests with more money than the craft brewers, namely beer distributors and Milwaukee-based powerhouse Miller Brewing, operating in the U.S. as MillerCoors, but also part of the international conglomerate SABMiller. (And thanks to a number of people who sent me different links to this emerging story.)

Right now in Wisconsin, there’s a battle brewing and it looks like the state’s many craft brewers will be hit the hardest by a proposed new wholesale bill that was recently approved by the state Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee. The bill is backed and supported by the Wisconsin Beer Distributors Association, the Tavern League of Wisconsin, the Wisconsin Grocers Association, the Wisconsin Petroleum Marketers & Convenience Stores Association, the Wisconsin Wine & Spirits Institute and MillerCoors. In other words, all the big players, with money, who do most of their business with the big, corporate beer companies.

They claim that the new bill is designed “to stop St. Louis-based Budweiser and Bud Light brewer Anheuser-Busch from buying wholesale distributors in Wisconsin.” And that might be understandable and even believable, except for one little detail. Not only was the Wisconsin Brewers Guild (which represents over 35 independent, small craft brewers) not consulted on the bill, several of the provisions of the bill actively harm the small brewers, and those same provisions have nothing whatsoever to do with Anheuser-Busch InBev in the least. Obviously, someone is lying.

Here’s how several local news outlets in Wisconsin are reporting on the story. First, here’s the Isthmus Daily Page:

Current state law severely restricts the options brewers have to distribute their beer. Only breweries that produce less than 50,000 barrels of beer per year are allowed to sell their beer directly to retailers. All others must contract with wholesalers for distribution.

Worried that perhaps microbrewers were operating in too free a market, legislative Republicans have proposed even more restrictions on the beer distribution business. The legislation that passed JFC gets rid of any exemptions that allow some microbreweries to distribute their own beer, as well as forbids breweries from selling beer on their own property, either as a bar or a retailer.

And what would Walker-era legislation be if it didn’t offer more power to state government? The legislation also takes the power of licensing of wholesalers away from municipalities and puts them under the control of the state Department of Revenue.

But what will most likely happen in reality is that small brewers will have a much harder time bringing their beer to market. Whether the bill actually targets small brewers, or it’s an unintended consequence, is unclear but I can’t help but think that legislators — elected officials, after all — have a duty to look out for all of their constituencies, and should understand how their actions effect everyone. I know that’s overly idealistic, but that’s how it’s supposed to work and I’ll always continue to hope for at least that much. The fact that the big players all had a say but the small brewers did not speaks volumes about how this is working in reality, and it’s a pretty ugly picture, if not of outright corruption, then at least of unseemly favoritism.

Here’s what Sprecher Brewing president Jeff Hamilton had to say about the bill, as quoted in The Milwaukee Business Journal:

“This is limiting our business model,” said Hamilton, who also serves as president of the Wisconsin Brewers Guild. “The current system is working just fine.”

MillerCoors and the state’s distributors “went out on their own” in promoting and developing the legislation, Hamilton said.

“We didn’t have a say and it is devastating to our business,” he said.

Hamilton believes the target of the legislation isn’t Anheuser-Busch but rather craft brewers that have been rapidly growing as major brewers have struggled.

“It’s hedging against future competition,” he said.

Consolidation among the state’s distributors has made it more challenging for smaller brewers to sell their products, given the number of brands distributors carry, Hamilton said. The legislation also would thwart plans by some craft brewers to start their own distributorship.

A spokesman for MillerCoors, Nehl Horton, even acknowledges it would limit craft brewers’ options, but insists that it wasn’t their intention. To which I can only say, so what? They had to have known how this would affect craft brewers, but MillerCoors obviously didn’t care. Why should they? But the fourteen Wisconsin legislators, they should have cared about how this would effect viable Wisconsin businesses.

Obnoxiously, Horton added that “the fundamental issue is whether small craft brewers want to be brewers or want to be brewers, wholesalers and retailers.” Given the way small brewers have been treated by distributors and retailers over the years, as they struggled against some pretty big, entrenched institutions to change how people thought about beer, that’s an awfully insulting thing to say. Craft brewers have had to find creative ways to gain access to market out of necessity, including doing their own selling and distributing, precisely because of all the roadblocks put in their way by distributors, retailers and big brewers, the very people who are trying once more to harm their business with this new legislation. So to hear MillerCoors suggest that small brewers should behave more like them, after making it impossible for them to do so for decades, is a pretty offensive thing to say.

And now even the bars and restaurants, many of whom undoubtedly serve craft beer, are also out to get the brewers, too, as the new bill also takes away their ability to sell their own beer, even on their own property. As the Daily Page notes:

But why forbid brewers from operating pubs and restaurants — at least one on their property? It seems a rather blatant attempt to appease the Tavern League, which supported the legislation, and hopes that brewpubs don’t threaten their businesses.

Again, Wisconsin legislators had to know what they were doing, but did it anyway. June 15th, the provisions of the new wholesaler bill comes up for a full vote. Hopefully, an action alert from Support Your Local Brewery will be forthcoming.

And finally, here’s a television report from Channel 9 WAOW, in central Wisconsin:

Filed Under: Breweries, Editorial, News, Politics & Law Tagged With: Beer Distributors, Law, Video, Wisconsin

The Street Picks The “10 Best Craft Beer Vacation Destinations”

June 1, 2011 By Jay Brooks

travel
The Street is a financial media company that covers the business world. Apparently they noticed that craft beer is doing well and put together a list of the
10 Best Craft Beer Vacation Destinations. Here’s the list below, though it’s not clear to me if the destinations are in any particular order or not.

  1. Full Sail Brewery, Hood River, OR
  2. Stone World Bistro and Gardens, Escondido, CA
  3. Highland Brewery, Asheville, NC
  4. Brewery Ommegang, Cooperstown, NY
  5. D.G. Yuengling & Sons brewery, Pottsville, PA
  6. Portland, Maine
  7. Samuel Adams Brewery, Boston, MA
  8. Sierra Nevada Brewery, Chico, CA
  9. Dogfish Head Craft Brewery, Milton/Rehoboth Beach, DE
  10. Wisconsin

I love Yuengling, and it is a great tour, but it’s hard to lump America’s oldest brewery in with the more recent craft brewers. And the new owners of Anchor Brewery will be surprised to learn that they’re owned by North American Brewing, as incorrectly cited in the article.

Overall, it’s not a bad list. I’ve been to seven of the ten destinations and can attest to those, and I’ve heard great things about the other ones. But it seems weird that Colorado, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Portland, Oregon are all noticeably absent. What places do you think are missing?

Filed Under: Breweries, Editorial, Just For Fun, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Mainstream Coverage, Travel

Tennessee Beer

June 1, 2011 By Jay Brooks

tennessee
Today in 1796, Tennessee became the 16th state.

Tennessee
State_Tennessee

Tennessee Breweries

  • Battle Ground Brewery
  • Big River Grille and Brewing Works
  • Black Horse Pub and Brewery
  • Blackstone Restaurant & Brewery
  • Blues City Brewery
  • Boscos Brewing
  • Calfkiller Brewing
  • Calhoun’s Microbrewery
  • Chattanooga Brewing
  • Cool Springs Brewery
  • Craftworks Restaurants Corporate Office
  • Depot Street Brewing
  • Downtown Grill & Brewery
  • Ghost River Brewing
  • Gordon Biersch Brewery Restaurant Group
  • Jackalope Brewing
  • Jubilee Craft Beer Co.
  • Marble City Brewing
  • Mayday Brewery
  • McHale’s Brewhouse
  • Moccasin Bend Brewing
  • Naked Lion Brewing
  • Smoky Mountain Brewing
  • Terminal Brewhouse
  • Woodruff Brewing
  • Yazoo BrewingNashville

Tennessee Brewery Guides

  • Beer Advocate
  • Beer Me
  • Rate Beer

Guild: Tennessee Brewers Guild (TBG)

State Agency: Tennessee Department of Revenue

maps-tn

  • Capital: Nashville
  • Largest Cities: Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Clarksville
  • Population: 5,689,283; 16th
  • Area: 42146 sq.mi., 36th
  • Nickname: Volunteer State
  • Statehood: 16th, June 1, 1796

m-tennessee

  • Alcohol Legalized: December 5, 1933
  • Number of Breweries: 19
  • Rank: 29th
  • Beer Production: 4,114,564
  • Production Rank: 19th
  • Beer Per Capita: 20.5 Gallons

tennessee

Package Mix:

  • Bottles: 38.8%
  • Cans: 55%
  • Kegs: 5.7%

Beer Taxes:

  • Per Gallon: $0.14
  • Per Case: $0.31
  • Tax Per Barrel (24/12 Case): $4.29
  • Draught Tax Per Barrel (in Kegs): $4.29
  • 17% wholesale tax for use of the counties and municipalities

Economic Impact (2010):

  • From Brewing: $15,107,865
  • Direct Impact: $1,069,412,196
  • Supplier Impact: $474,906,880
  • Induced Economic Impact: $975,718,114
  • Total Impact: $2,520,037,191

Legal Restrictions:

  • Control State: No
  • Sale Hours: On Premises: Mon-Sat: 8 a.m. to 3 a.m.; Sun: 12 p.m. to 3 a.m. Hours of alcohol sale can be modified by local jurisdictions if approved by the alcohol control commission.
    Off Premises: 7 a.m. to 3 a.m. Mon–Sat
  • Grocery Store Sales: Yes
  • Notes: Wine is only sold in liquor stores. Sales of liquor are limited to on-premises in restaurants on Sundays. Beer above 5% ABW / 6.3% ABV must be sold in liquor stores. Open container law only applies to drivers, not passengers.

tennessee-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: Tennessee

Kentucky Beer

June 1, 2011 By Jay Brooks

kentucky
Today in 1792, Kentucky became the 15th state.

Kentucky
State_Kentucky

Kentucky Breweries

  • BBC Brewing Co.
  • Beer Engine
  • Better Days Brewing
  • BJ’s Restaurant Brewery
  • Bluegrass Brewing
  • Browning’s Brewery
  • Cumberland Brews Restaurant & Brewery
  • Hofbräuhaus Newport
  • Lexington Brewing and Distilling
  • Red Ear Brewing

Kentucky Brewery Guides

  • Beer Advocate
  • Beer Me
  • Rate Beer

Guild: None Known

State Agency: Kentucky Office of Alcoholic Beverage Control

maps-ky

  • Capital: Frankfort
  • Largest Cities: Louisville, Lexington – Fayette, Owensboro, Bowling Green, Covington
  • Population: 4,041,769; 25th
  • Area: 40411 sq.mi., 37th
  • Nickname: Bluegrass State
  • Statehood: 15th, June 1, 1792

m-kentucky

  • Alcohol Legalized: December 5, 1933
  • Number of Breweries: 13
  • Rank: 39th
  • Beer Production: 2,625,938
  • Production Rank: 27th
  • Beer Per Capita: 19.1 Gallons

kentucky

Package Mix:

  • Bottles: 38.4%
  • Cans: 58.4%
  • Kegs: 6.6%

Beer Taxes:

  • Per Gallon: $0.08
  • Per Case: $0.18
  • Tax Per Barrel (24/12 Case): $2.50
  • Draught Tax Per Barrel (in Kegs): $2.50
  • 11% wholesale sales tax; 6% on premise sales tax. Wholesale tax changed in 2005 from 9% to 11%.

Economic Impact (2010):

  • From Brewing: $124,158,766
  • Direct Impact: $769,002,906
  • Supplier Impact: $337,841,508
  • Induced Economic Impact: $433,361,880
  • Total Impact: $1,540,206,295

Legal Restrictions:

  • Control State: No
  • Sale Hours: On Premises: 6 a.m. to 4 a.m. on Monday through Saturday
    Off Premises: 11 a.m. to 4 a.m. on Sundays
  • Grocery Store Sales: Yes
  • Notes: Local ordinance may vote to permit Sunday sales at restaurants. Sales from 2–4 a.m. only in Louisville. As of 2005 Sunday sales were allowed per state law, but may still be prohibited in some areas by local ordinance (as of early 2006, such a situation existed with smaller cities within Louisville Metro, though these cities have since changed local ordinances).

    Alcohol sale restriction and wet/dry (both by drink and package) allowed by both county and city local option. Approximately 53 counties in the state (mostly eastern and southern counties) are dry, all alcohol sale and possession prohibited; 16 “moist” counties (with “wet” cities allowing package liquor sales in counties otherwise dry); 21 counties that are otherwise dry but have communities with local option that allow sales of liquor by the drink or under special exemptions allowing sales at wineries. Majority of wet counties around major metropolitan areas in state (Louisville, Lexington, Covington, Owensboro, Paducah).

kentucky-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: Kentucky

Wisconsin Beer

May 29, 2011 By Jay Brooks

wisconsin
Today in 1848, Wisconsin became the 30th state.

Wisconsin
State_Wisconsin

Wisconsin Breweries

  • Ale Asylum
  • Angry Minnow Brewpub
  • Barker’s Island Inn Resort & Conference Center
  • Bay View Brewhaus
  • Big Bay Brewing
  • Black Husky Brewing
  • BluCreek Brewing
  • Blue Heron Brewpub
  • Brady’s Brewhouse
  • Brewery Creek Brewing
  • Buffalo Water Beer Co.
  • Bull Falls Brewing Company
  • Capital Brewery
  • Central Waters Brewing
  • Chameleon Brewing
  • City Brewery
  • The Coffee Grounds
  • Courthouse Pub
  • Cross Plains Beer Company
  • Das Bierhaus
  • Das Brewery
  • Dave’s BrewFarm
  • Delafield Brewhaus
  • Farmers Brewing
  • Fat Boy Beverage Company
  • Fauerbach Brewing
  • Five Star Brewing
  • Fountain City Brewing
  • Fox River Brewing
  • Fratellos Restaurant and Brewery
  • Furthermore Beer
  • Granite City Food & Brewery
  • Gray Brewing
  • Gray’s Tied House
  • Great Dane Pub and Brewing
  • Grumpy Troll Restaurant and Brewery
  • Hinterland Brewery and Restaurant
  • Horny Goat Brewing
  • Jacob Leinenkugel Brewing
  • Lakefront Brewery
  • Lake Louie Brewing
  • Lazy Monk Brewing
  • Legends Brewhouse & Eatery of Ashwaubenon
  • Log Jam Microbrewery at Monster Hall Camp Ground
  • Lucette Brewing Company
  • Miller Brewing (MillerCoors)
  • Milwaukee Ale House
  • Milwaukee Brewing
  • Minhas Craft Brewery
  • Minocqua Brewing
  • Moosejaw Pizza & Dells Brewing
  • New Glarus Brewing
  • Nicolet Brewing
  • Northwoods Brewpub Grill
  • Old Bavarian Brewing
  • Old Milwaukee (MillerCoors)
  • O’So Brewing
  • Pabst Brewing (No longer brewing in Milwaukee)
  • Pangaea Beer Company
  • Pearl Street Brewery
  • Potosi Brewing Company
  • Rail House Restaurant and Brewpub
  • Randy’s Fun Hunters Brewery, Restaurant and Banquet Center
  • Red Eye Brewing Company
  • Rhinelander Brewing Company
  • Riverside Brewery & Restaurant
  • Rock Bottom Restaurant & Brewery — Milwaukee
  • Rowland’s Calumet Brewery
  • Rush River Brewing
  • Sand Creek Brewing
  • Shipwrecked Restaurant, Brewery & Inn
  • Silver Creek Brewing
  • South Shore Brewery
  • Sprecher Brewing
  • Stevens Point Brewery
  • St. Francis Brewery & Restaurant
  • Stone Cellar Brewpub & Restaurant
  • Stonefly Brewing
  • Thirsty Pagan Brewing
  • III Dachshunds Beer Company
  • Thunder River Beer Co.
  • Titletown Brewing
  • Tyranena Brewing
  • Vintage Brewing
  • Water Street Brewery
  • Water Street Lake Country
  • West Bend Lithia Beer Company
  • White Winter Winery

Wisconsin Brewery Guides

  • Beer Advocate
  • Beer Me
  • Rate Beer

Guild: Wisconsin Brewers Guild

State Agency: Wisconsin Department of Revenue

maps-wi

  • Capital: Madison
  • Largest Cities: Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, Kenosha, Racine
  • Population: 5,363,675; 18th
  • Area: 65503 sq.mi., 23rd
  • Nickname: Badger State
  • Statehood: 13th, May29, 1848

m-wisconsin

  • Alcohol Legalized: December 5, 1933
  • Number of Breweries: 101
  • Rank: 5th
  • Beer Production: 5,042,825
  • Production Rank: 12th
  • Beer Per Capita: 27.8 Gallons

wisconsin

Package Mix:

  • Bottles: 32.9%
  • Cans: 50.7%
  • Kegs: 15.8%

Beer Taxes:

  • Per Gallon: $0.07
  • Per Case: $0.15
  • Tax Per Barrel (24/12 Case): $2.00
  • Draught Tax Per Barrel (in Kegs): $2.00

Economic Impact (2010):

  • From Brewing: $1,032,177,290
  • Direct Impact: $2,484,025,728
  • Supplier Impact: $1,877,442,260
  • Induced Economic Impact: $1,724,136,014
  • Total Impact: $6,085,604,002

Legal Restrictions:

  • Control State: No
  • Sale Hours: On Premises: 6 a.m-2 a.m. Sunday–Thursday, 2:30 a.m. Friday–Saturday, no closing time on New Year’s Day.
    Off Premises: 8 a.m.–12 midnight for beer (some counties and municipalities only allow sales until 9 p.m. for beer), 8 a.m.–9 p.m. for liquor and wine
  • Grocery Store Sales: Yes
  • Notes: Wisconsin permits the consumption of alcohol by minors, provided they are being supervised by parents/guardians/spouses. Most municipalities have a uniform 9 p.m. restriction on all alcohol sales. Notable exceptions: La Crosse, Maple Bluff (near Madison), Baraboo (near the Dells). Supermarkets, liquor stores, and gas stations may sell liquor, wine, and beer.

wisconsin-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: Wisconsin

Rhode Island Beer

May 29, 2011 By Jay Brooks

rhode_island
Today in 1790, Rhode Island became the 13th state.

Rhode Island
State_Rhode-Island

Rhode Island Breweries

  • Coastal Extreme Brewing
  • Coddington Brewing
  • John Harvard’s Brew House
  • Narragansett Brewing Company
  • Trinity Brewhouse

Rhode Island Brewery Guides

  • Beer Advocate
  • Beer Me
  • Rate Beer

Guild: Craft Beer Guild of Rhode Island / Rhode Island Beer Guild

State Agency: Rhode Island Division of Commercial Licensing and Regulation

maps-ri

  • Capital: Providence
  • Largest Cities: Providence, Warwick, Cranston, Pawtucket, East Providence
  • Population: 1,048,319; 43rd
  • Area: 1545 sq.mi., 50th
  • Nickname: The Ocean State
  • Statehood: 13th, May 29, 1790

m-rhode-island

  • Alcohol Legalized: December 5, 1933
  • Number of Breweries: 5
  • Rank: 46th
  • Beer Production: 687,150
  • Production Rank: 46th
  • Beer Per Capita: 20.3 Gallons

rhode-island

Package Mix:

  • Bottles: 47.0%
  • Cans: 40.5%
  • Kegs: 12.2%

Beer Taxes:

  • Per Gallon: $0.10
  • Per Case: $0.22
  • Tax Per Barrel (24/12 Case): $3.00
  • Draught Tax Per Barrel (in Kegs): $3.00
  • Plus 5 cents per case tax on packaged beer (earmarked litter/recycling tax)

Economic Impact (2010):

  • From Brewing: $1,663,809
  • Direct Impact: $202,955,727
  • Supplier Impact: $66,588,600
  • Induced Economic Impact: $154,453,326
  • Total Impact: $423,997,654

Legal Restrictions:

  • Control State: No
  • Sale Hours: On Premises: 1 a.m. seven days a week. 2 a.m. in Providence only on Friday and Saturday nights and nights before a state-recognized holiday.
    Off Premises: (Mon-Sat) 9 a.m. – 10 p.m.
    (Sunday) 12 p.m. – 6 p.m.
  • Grocery Store Sales: No
  • Notes: All alcohol may be sold only in liquor stores. Thus, convenience stores and supermarkets in Rhode Island are dry.

rhode-island-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: Rhode Island

Schlitz Brewery, Circa 1900

May 28, 2011 By Jay Brooks

schlitz
Another gem I found in the digital archives of the Library of Congress is this series of photos and illustrations used in a pamphlet made around 1900 by the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Co. The title of the pamphlet was “Schlitz, the beer that made Milwaukee famous.” Each of the photos in the Library of Congress were made from the original negatives and the photos depict the brewery in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Today, Pabst owns the Schlitz brands and re-introduced it in bottles in 2008.

Schlitz-brewhouse
The Brewhouse. Original caption: “View in brewery of Schlitz Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.”

Schlitz-wash-house
The Wash House. Original caption: “Men washing kegs in brewery of Schlitz Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and insert of exterior of the building.”

Schlitz-bottling-dept
The Bottling Department. Original caption: “Two views of men and women working in bottling department of brewery of Schlitz, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.”

Schlitz-shipping-yard
The Shipping Yard. Original caption: “Kegs of beer being transported on horse-drawn wagons at brewery of Schlitz Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.”

Filed Under: Breweries Tagged With: History, Milwaukee, Schlitz, Wisconsin

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