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Jay R. Brooks on Beer

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Fritz Maytag & Keith Greggor Talk About Anchor On PBS

April 30, 2010 By Jay Brooks

anchor-steam
This morning on KQED, San Francisco’s PBS station, aired a live interview with Fritz Maytag and Keith Greggor about the sale of Anchor Brewery. The podcast of the interview, Anchor Steam Sold, is now up and you can listen to it on the KQED Archive or download it for you iPod. Or you can just push the play button below.

Filed Under: Breweries, News Tagged With: Anchor Brewery, California, Interview, Mainstream Coverage, San Francisco

Odonata Saison Released Today

April 30, 2010 By Jay Brooks

odonata
Odonata Beer, a new brewery is Sacramento, is releasing their Saison today. Below is the press release with all the details:

ODONATA (OH-DOE-NAH-TA) is ecstatic to announce the arrival of its flagship beer, Saison! Brewed with malted barley, wheat & rolled oats, Saison is a rustic interpretation of the traditionally Belgium-brewed beer. Spiced with Styrian & East Kent Golding hops Saison has an aromatic, floral & peppery aroma and a modest hop bite. Our Belgian yeast strain also lends the slightly wild scents of passion fruit and spice. Saison is designed for refreshment & complexity; perfect on its own, or paired with ripened cheeses or classic Belgian-style seafood dishes. Saison bottles are bottle-conditioned, so serve chilled.

ODONATA Saison will be available on draft at select Northern California retailers beginning Friday, April 30, 2010 and will begin distributing bottled Saison in mid-May throughout Northern California. For further information regarding Saison, its availability or other inquiries, please contact Rick Sellers using the information found below.

ODONATA Beer Company is based in Sacramento, Ca. Brewmaster Peter Hoey is an experienced, award-winning brewer as well as an instructor at UC Davis’ prestigious brewing school and The American Brewers Guild. Sales Director Rick Sellers is an experienced beer journalist and former Beer Director for DRAFT Magazine, the world’s largest beer publication. Together Peter & Rick started ODONATA in 2009, with their first beer release (Rorie’s Ale) scoring a 100 on RateBeer and was named one of the best beers in the world.

Odonata-saison-btl

ABV: 6.4%
IBUs: 24
PKG: 22 oz. bottles
Suggested Food Pairings: Ripened cheese like Cyprus Grove Chevre’s Humboldt Fog; Pasta & Cream Sauce; Steamed Mussels
(The Homebrew Chef has also created a special recipe using Odonata’s saison for Saison-Steamed Mussels.
Serving Suggestions: Store Saison upright at cellar temperature & serve chilled, between 40-48 degrees, in a sturdy glass.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, News Tagged With: California, Northern California, Sacramento

My Lunch With Keith Greggor, New Anchor Owner

April 28, 2010 By Jay Brooks

anchor-steam
I got a call yesterday morning from John Dannerbeck, CEO of Anchor Brewery, who let me know the details about the sale of Anchor and also conferenced in Keith Greggor, the CEO of the Griffin Group, the entity that’s entered into an agreement to buy the brewery. Since he’s essentially a neighbor, we met up for lunch at a bar in downtown Novato to talk.

We met about Noon, and shared a BrewDog Dogma, their 7.8% beer brewed with Scottish heather honey, poppy, kola nut and guarana. Greggor himself was laid back, dressed casually and had kept his British accent nearly intact, despite living in the states for over 25 years, having become a U.S. citizen nearly ten years ago. Greggor, I learned, was born in Bournemouth, on the southern coast of England. When he was nine, he moved to Singapore and began dreaming of one day living in San Francisco. That would take another thirty years to come true, as he returned to the UK for college and then joined IDV (International Distillers & Vintners) in London in 1983. IDV eventually became part of Diageo, owners of Guinness, among much else.

In 1985, Greggor moved to New Jersey, where he took a job with one of IDV’s US companies, the Paddington Corporation. There he met Tony Foglio, originally from Brooklyn, and the pair worked together at Paddington until 1998, when they left as Diageo became less fun and assumed more of a corporate culture. They took over management of Skyy Vodka and increased the company tenfold, before completing a long process whereby the Campari Group acquired an ever larger stake in Skyy, eventually taking over control of the company in 2007. Greggor formed the Griffin Group the same year, and Foglio joined him last year.

In October of 2008, the Griffin Group bought Preiss Imports, an importer of mostly spirits in southern California. They do carry two beer brands, and that’s how I knew Henry Preiss, who called on me when I was with BevMo about their Australian beer, Cooper’s. The other brand they recently undertook is BrewDog. The first week after acquiring Preiss, Greggor met James Watt from BrewDog and the pair hit it off, with Watt coming to Greggor for business advice. When it came time for BrewDog to expand in June of last year, the Griffin Group became a minority investor in the Scottish brewery.

According to Greggor, about nine months ago they began talking to Fritz Maytag about an idea they had for a “Center of Excellence” in San Francisco which he describes as an “epicenter of development, education, entertainment and innovation, all designed to further contribute to the culture and heritage of craft beer and artisan spirits.” Given the disproportionate attention paid to wine in northern California, I’d certainly love to see something focused on beer and spirits in the region, too. So they kept talking to Fritz off and on, he checked them out, and they kept talking. Eventually, they reached an agreement whereby Maytag would sell the brewery and distilling operations to them, and the deal is expected to close at the end of June.

The current employees will all remain and nothing much should change around the brewery at all. John Dannerbeck, current president, will continue in that role, reporting to Greggor after the close. Foglio will then become chairman, and Maytag will remain involved as chairman emeritus. The only changes will likely be in marketing. Additional sales people will be hired and will represent the Anchor, BrewDog and Cooper’s brands. Greggor sees lots of opportunities to grow the brand, and that’s really he and Foglio’s specialty.

While no new brands are planned, they are open to that possibility but are adamant about not messing with the current lineup. If anything came through loud and clear, it’s that they’re nearly as passionate as Fritz about protecting the Anchor brand. And that makes sense, frankly, as their careers have been devoted to building up brand names. Greggor told me he plans on doing a lot of listening, finding out how things work and why. There’s a lot to learn, he said, and I think fans can rest assured that the brand will be in good hands that have no intention of messing about with it.

image003
Tony Foglio, Fritz Maytag and Keith Greggor in the Anchor Brewhouse.

The only foreseeable changes are things like their recent announcement that Humming Ale, previously available only on draft, will be bottled this summer. There’s also a possibility that Martin Dickie, BrewDog’s brewmaster, may brew some of his beers at the Anchor Brewhouse, but that probably won’t happen for a while.

I finally got around to finding out about the way in which the news came out on Monday, and it turns out it was as much of a surprise to both Anchor and the Griffin Group as everyone else. Apparently what happened was an embargoed press release was given to a few mainstream media outlets. An embargoed press release is common practice for certain types of events. In effect, news outlets get the news early under strict orders not to release the information until a specific date in the future. In this case, the news of Anchor’s sale should not have been announced until the next day. It’s done for things like presidential speeches, where a copy of the speech itself is given to the press early so they can begin writing it up in advance. The same thing was done here, but the writer assigned to the story accidentally leaked it. Although a 30-year veteran of reporting, he apparently had little knowledge of the beer industry and reached out to both Beer Advocate and DRAFT for a comment on the story, sending them the embargoed press release in the process. They both promptly posted it. Frankly, I would have probably done the same thing with news that big.

Maytag was in the air when it broke, on his way to a micro-distillers’ conference. At first I thought the employees had not yet been told, but I’ve since learned they did find out from him prior to his trip. But once the news leaked early, nobody was sure what to do, and so they decided to not respond until the next day, when they could figure out how to respond, which left everybody wondering and my phone ringing off the hook. And that’s why I got an e-mail from John Dannerbeck first thing Tuesday morning and talked to him on the phone a little later. They had hoped to manage the news a bit better, but everything went haywire when the news came out the way it did. I’m also told that someone at a news outlet somewhere had some heavy explaining and apologizing to do.

My colleague, Brent Ainsworth, a reporter at the Marin IJ — and fellow Novato neighbor — spoke with Greggor right after we had lunch yesterday, and his interview, Novato man, new co-owner of Anchor Brewing, reflects on deal and beer industry, is up on the IJ’s website.

Keith Greggor
Keith Greggor outside Finnegan’s yesterday in downtown Novato.

UPDATE 4.29: Don Russell talked to Fritz Maytag by phone today, and has a Q&A posted on his Beer Radar that has some more insights into the impetus to sell.

Filed Under: Breweries, News Tagged With: Anchor Brewery, California, Interview, Northern California

Anchor Brewery Sold

April 26, 2010 By Jay Brooks

anchor-steam
Today around lunchtime, I heard the rumor from two separate sources that Anchor Brewery had been sold and started working the phones, calling everyone I knew, to no avail. But apparently at least two beer publications received the following press release, which is below. In addition, see below for some updates and thoughts. Also see a second update below.

The Griffin Group, an investment and consulting company focused on beverage alcohol brands, announced its acquisition of Anchor Brewing Company which includes its portfolio of craft beers and artisan spirits, including the award winning Anchor Steam Beer.

The Griffin Group is led by beverage alcohol veterans, Keith Greggor and Tony Foglio, two longtime San Francisco residents who have been working with Anchor Brewing Company’s owner, Fritz Maytag to maintain the iconic brewery and distillery in San Francisco.

“Anchor Brewing Company has a long history in San Francisco and The Griffin Group is ushering in an exciting era while maintaining our proud, time-honored history,” said Fritz Maytag. “Combining Keith and Tony’s passion for the Anchor Brewing Company, their industry experience and expertise only means that Anchor will be enjoyed in San Francisco for generations to come.”

“Since 1896, Anchor Brewing Company has been an icon of San Francisco’s history and culture,” stated Griffin’s Founding Partner, Keith Greggor, “I am honored to bring Anchor Brewing Company into our family of craft beers and artisanal spirits through establishing Anchor Brewers & Distillers, LLC.”

Anchor Brewers & Distillers intends to establish a “Center of Excellence” in San Francisco for craft brewers and artisan distillers from around the world. An epicenter of development, education, entertainment and innovation, all designed to further contribute to the culture and heritage of craft beer and artisan spirits.

“San Francisco is the perfect place to establish this center,” stated Tony Foglio, “Through our extensive portfolio of craft beers and fine spirits our focus will be to educate and satisfy the increasing consumer demand for authentic, quality and natural products that reflect the passion of their creators.”

Continuing the Anchor heritage, Mr. Maytag has been named Chairman Emeritus of Anchor Brewers & Distillers.

The Griffin Group operates as both boutique merchant and investment bank for premiere craft beers and artisan spirits. In addition to the Anchor Beers, The Griffin Group will assume control of the spirits brands including Old Potrero Whiskey, Junipero Gin and Genevieve Gin through the acquisition of Anchor Brewing Company. Additional affiliated companies to be held under Anchor Brewers & Distillers include Preiss Imports, a leading US specialist spirits and beer importer, and BrewDog USA, LLC, the US division of the leading UK craft beer.

The Griffin Group is headquartered in Novato, Marin County, California.

UPDATES & THOUGHTS: Since the news came out, several odd bits have emerged, which leaves me wondering about all this. First of all, the news itself, the press release. They appear to be from just two sources, Beer Advocate and DRAFT magazine. Inc. magazine has slightly more, including the information that the two principals of the Griffin Group made their money with Skyy Vodka.

Now, some thoughts. This may sound like sour grapes — it’s not — but it seems odd that such big news would be disseminated by two national beer sources and not through local beer sources or local mainstream news outlets. This is especially odd given that the company is in the very town I live in, yet I learned of it from sources outside California. Every other beer journalist I’ve spoken to or corresponded with never got a press release and neither, apparently, did any mainstream newspapers or other media. Why would the news be released that way? I don’t know. In speaking with other beer industry insiders, everybody was caught off guard by the news, and no one I know has been able to reach anyone at Anchor for comment. I was only able to get through to one person I know there, and he couldn’t say anything. I left messages for several others and have not heard back from anyone. I’m not sure what that means, but it does seem odd, almost like we’re being punk’d. But the longer there’s nothing to contradict the news, the more likely it becomes.

That no one has been able to reach anyone from the Griffin Group is likewise somewhat strange. With such big news, you’d think someone would be available and not so hard to reach. I hope I’m wrong, but it doesn’t seem like the best way to ingratiate oneself with the beer community. People are already speculating the worst, as often happens, and it would be great to get additional information one way or the other. Not sure what all of this means, but it’s the talk of the town, and people are getting concerned about the lack of information from either side.

UPDATE 4.27: I have now received confirmation of the deal from John Dannerbeck, CEO of Anchor Brewery. Dannerbeck writes. “Fritz Maytag has entered an agreement to sell the Anchor Brewing Company. This will be an exciting time for us as we begin the process of transitioning to the next generation of owners.” I’ve sent back some additional questions that are likely on all of our minds and will update this once I know more.

I had lunch today with Keith Gregger, one of the principals at the Griffin Group. It’s been a busy afternoon and I”ll have more from our talk shortly.

Filed Under: Breweries, News Tagged With: Anchor Brewery, California, San Francisco

A Visit To Three Floyds

April 24, 2010 By Jay Brooks

three-floyds-logo
Today, of course, is the annual Dark Lord Day at Three Floyds Brewery in Munster, Indiana. Since many people will not have a golden ticket and be waiting in line to buy this year’s Dark Lord Russian Imperial Stout, here’s a little tour of the brewery I took the Sunday after CBC a couple of weeks ago. Three Floyds’ sales manager Lincoln Anderson was kind enough to drive Sean Paxton and me from our hotel in Chicago (and then dropped us off at the airport, thanks Lincoln) after we spent a thoroughly enjoyable few hours n Munster drinking and eating. I knew the beer would be good, I’d had plenty of it before, but I was blown away with how good the food was. Even the frites were top notch (look for a frites review soon) but everything else on the diverse menu we tried was spectacular. The walls were decorated with beer labels and cool original graffiti art. For a lazy Sunday afternoon, the brewpub filled up quickly with tourists, young couples and even families obviously just come from church.

We also had a chance to walk around in the brewery. It was fun to see the Lagunitas fermenters again that Tthree Floyds had bought from them, especially Kaboom. I also shot a short video tour of the brewery, which is below. Happy Dark Lord Day.

While we were there, preparations for Dark Lord Day were well under way, and Lincoln explained to us what else would be added, just for the day’s activities. One hiccup was that during a CBC tour it appears someone stole a bottle of Dark Lord 2010 and had put it up on eBay. Rawmar2 from Spring Grove, Illinois sold it for $12,800, though I suspect that was a false bid so no one could buy it. Even though an eBay win is a contract, it couldn’t be enforced if the goods being sold were stolen.

Three Floyds Entrance
At the entrance to the brewery.

Dark Lord Day banner from 2009
A Dark Lord Banner from 2009 hangs in the brewery.

Below is a slideshow of the Three Floyds Brewery. This Flickr gallery is best viewed in full screen. To view it that way, after clicking on the arrow in the center to start the slideshow, click on the button on the bottom right with the four arrows pointing outward on it, to see the photos in glorious full screen. Once in full screen slideshow mode, click on “Show Info” to identify each photo.

A here’s a short video of me walking through the brewery.

Filed Under: Breweries, Events Tagged With: Brewery Porn, Indiana, Photo Gallery, Video

I Am A Canadian Craft Brewer

April 21, 2010 By Jay Brooks

canada
In an effort to promote Vancouver Beer Week, which is set to take place May 10-16 throughout the Vancouver, Canada area, the organizers have created a wonderful video, I Am A Canadian Craft Brewer.

I am a Canadian Craft Brewer from VancouverCBW on Vimeo.

Filed Under: Breweries, Just For Fun Tagged With: Beer Weeks, Canada, Vancouver, Video

Clear As Mud

April 17, 2010 By Jay Brooks

zima
While clear beer is not exactly new, it has never proved economically successful despite polling that seems to suggest people would drink it. In the real world, once faced with a purchasing decision, people don’t buy beer that doesn’t look like beer. Thank goodness. The first clear malt beverage I recall trying was Zima, when it debuted in 1993, also from Coors. Though it wasn’t a beer per se, it was malt based and somewhat similar. It eventually got lumped into the Alcopop category, though it was not originally marketed that way, but simply as an alternative to beer. The first true clear beer, also from 1993, was Miller Clear.

miller-clear

Happily, it failed in test marketing and was halted in October of that year. I’m sure this ad, by Don Austin Creative, had nothing to do with its lack of success.

Here’s what Michael Jackson wrote about Miller’s Clear Beer, back in 1994:

Clear Beer was never available in the UK, but I encountered it in the United States, where it was presented in marketingspeak as “in the finest tradition of the Miller Brewing Company, full-flavored but without heaviness”.

This curious product was a lager the colour of 7-Up, which formed little head and tasted like a sweetened seltzer with the faintest touch of oily, medicinal happiness in the finish. It looked like a soft drink, but contained 4.6 per cent alcohol by volume, a level found in many “premium” lagers on both sides of the Atlantic.

Miller has a history of trying to remove the character from beer. It popularised Lite Beer, memorably described as “wet air” by the native American writer William Least-Heat Moon; and it marketed a so-called Genuine Draft in a can long before Irish and British brewers developed their rather better approximation.

But as George Santayana wrote in Reason in Common Sense. “Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” Seventeen years later, apparently nobody at MolsonCoors or MillerCoors is a student of history. MolsonCoors’ UK division, who launched the BitterSweet Partnership to reach female beer drinkers and increase their numbers, has announced they’ll be introducing a clear beer to the UK market. The full story can be found in Marketing Magazine and the UK’s Metro.

Bitter-Sweet

To me, the BitterSweet Partnership is ridiculous (as is the similar Dea Latis). First of all, none of the female beer writers or brewers I know are involved in the organization, it’s strictly about marketing. The whole “team” is made of female Coors UK employees, and they’re all from HR, sales, finance, etc. I’m sure they’re lovely people but they’re hardly experts on beer. The notion of finding female-friendly beer seems wrong on so many levels. Beer is beer. Trying to make one that’s strictly for women is absurd. Remember Virginia Slims — cigarettes for women? It also reminds me of something Lionel Trains did back in the mid-20th century. They made pink trains with pastel-colored cars aimed specifically at girls. Guess what, it flopped because the girls wanted real trains like the ones their brothers had, not some watered down girly trains some marketing pinhead thought would appeal to them.

So far, the beer has no name — and they’ll be a naming contest to come up with one. That should be good for a laugh. Then it won’t be available on draft, bottles only, because in polling 30,000 women, a majority were convinced that bottles “offer better protection against having them spiked in bars and pubs.” WTF? Since when did that become a major problem? And if it has, I’d think there were more pressing concerns like stopping an entire nation of men from poisoning the opposite sex. Additional research shows that the women polled think beer is “too calorific and a ‘man’s drink.'” Please tell me we’ve moved beyond such stereotypes? Apparently not. Who are these people? No woman I know thinks like that.

In a related bit of nonsense, the BitterSweet Partnership also has research showing “that 31% of women thought beer glassware is ‘ugly and manly.'” Seriously? Again, these must be some of the strangest women on the planet, and lots of less kind epithets spring to mind. Who thinks “I’d love to drink that tasty beverage, if only it came in a glass I liked better?” Let’s ignore centuries of trial and error to get to the right glassware — flutes for champagne, snifters for brandy, a weissbier vase for wheat beers — and bow to a minority of women whose sense of fashion dictates what they drink. WTF? Let’s not try to educate them why they’re complete morons. Even though 69% think that beer glassware is fine the way it is, they’ve instead opted to design “four new glasses to serve beer in to bring a bit more style into the drinking experience,” whatever that means. You can see the four designs that were voted on here. Below is the “winner.”

lyla-black

First of all, you can’t even see the beer you’d be drinking in the glass, whether it’s clear or not. What a terrible idea that is. But that’s what misinformation and ignorance will get you. How stylish. What unmitigated bullshit.

While I can’t pretend to speak for women or give the woman’s perspective on this, happily, both Julie from Brusin’ Ales and Ashley at the Beer Wench have ranted beautifully about it and are as angry and offended by it as I would have expected. Their screeds mirror what I’d think would be the response from any self-respecting female fan of craft beer.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Editorial, News Tagged With: Advertising, History, MillerCoors, Women

Native But Unnatural

April 17, 2010 By Jay Brooks

colorado
Earlier this month, AC Golden Brewing — a wholly-owned subsidiary of MillerCoors — announced their newest project, Colorado Native. AC Golden is essentially just the Coors pilot brewery located inside Coors’ massive brewery complex in Golden, Colorado. Pretending they’re a small, separate, independent company may work on paper, for legal purposes, but I’d like to believe that most people can see through the deception.

The idea behind Colorado Native, while arguably laudable, seems too calculated to be sincere, especially when it’s being done by a global multinational company. Designed to appeal to locavores, it’s “brewed in Colorado with virtually all Colorado ingredients, more than any other beer.” More than any other beer? Do they mean more than any other beer in Colorado? Or any other beer, regardless of where it’s from? If the latter, I believe they may be forgetting Sierra Nevada’s Estate Ale.

colorado-native

The beer itself is an amber lager, which should at least please Michael Lewis, who at this year’s CBC famously dissed any craft beer that’s not a lager. Still, it’s hard to get worked up about a beer, no matter how well-intentioned, that’s made in the heart of one of the largest single breweries in the world. To me that sends a mixed message at best. The beer may taste fine, and probably does, but it’s not be marketed on taste, it’s being used instead to sell an idea. And that’s where I think it’s doomed to fail. No matter how native Colorado Native is, it still can’t separate itself from the unnaturally large parent company that’s about as un-local as a business can be.

The other odd bit about Colorado Native is that it’s also being promoted using social media, as detailed in Advertising Age. They have a Facebook page and will be using SnapTag technology on its packaging, something other “small” companies like Unilever, Ford and Crayola are also using to reach and data mine customers. In the AdAge piece, here’s how they characterize breweries using social media.

Brewers have typically been slow to move into mobile and social-media channels because of concerns that age verification presents too big a hurdle for consumers to be willing to jump over — Anheuser-Busch InBev’s Michelob is perhaps the only major-brewery owned brand on Twitter, for instance — but that isn’t stopping MillerCoors here.

Huh, how did they miss the literally hundreds of small breweries on Twitter and Facebook, so many it’s a damn phenomenon. Over the past two years, the Craft Brewers Conference has held two panel discussions about the use of social media by breweries, one of which I sat on the panel. And their comment about age verification continues to stick in my craw. Where the hell does it say only adults can TALK or READ about alcohol? Drink, yes, I disagree with that but understand it. That people under 21 aren’t allowed to read about beer on websites is something that makes no earthly sense.

colorado-native-btl

But back to Colorado Native. Using tools that only very large companies can afford doesn’t make them seem particularly small or local, which as far as I can tell is the image they’re trying to project. In the Denver Business Journal, SnapTag’s chief marketing officer Jane McPherson was quoted. “Rather than just looking at the bottle, they [consumers] can have a much fuller brand experience.” I know marketing is important, but really? A “fuller brand experience?” I have no doubt that the brewers tried to create the best-tasting beer they could, but this whole “project” seems more about the image and marketing than the beer. It’s more about trying to fit an identified niche than just creating a beer they like and trying to see if people like it and will buy it, too. It just feels too calculated. And that’s why, to me, it may be a native beer, but it still seems entirely unnatural.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Editorial Tagged With: Big Brewers, Colorado

The Top 50 Annotated 2009

April 14, 2010 By Jay Brooks

ba
This is my fourth annual annotated list of the Top 50 so you can see who moved up and down, who was new to the list and who dropped off. So here is this year’s list again annotated with how they changed compared to last year.

  1. Anheuser-Busch InBev; #1 last year, no surprises
  2. MillerCoors; ditto for #2
  3. Pabst Brewing; ditto for #3
  4. D. G. Yuengling and Son; Moved up 1, over Boston Beer again
  5. Boston Beer Co.; Moved down 1 to behind Yuengling, where they’d been the 2 years prior to 2008
  6. Sierra Nevada Brewing; Same as last year
  7. New Belgium Brewing; Moved up 1
  8. Craft Brewers Alliance; Moved down 1
  9. Spoetzl Brewery (Gambrinus); Moved up 1
  10. High Falls Brewing; Moved down 1
  11. Minhas Craft Brewery; Up 3 over last year
  12. Pyramid Breweries (IBU); Down 1, after two years moving up
  13. Deschutes Brewery; Down 1
  14. F.X. Matt Brewing; Moved up 1, after dropping down 1 last year
  15. Magic Hat Brewing (IBU); Up 3 from #18 last year
  16. Boulevard Brewing; Same as last year, as others move all around them
  17. Harpoon Brewery; Up 3 from #20 last year
  18. Alaskan Brewing; Up 1 from #19 last year
  19. Bell’s Brewery; Up 2 from #21 last year
  20. Goose Island Beer; Up 2 from #22 last year
  21. Kona Brewing; Up 2 from #23 last year, after Shooting up 14 the previous year
  22. Full Sail Brewing; Down 5, primarily from removing contract beers from their total to give a more accurate figure of their own brands
  23. Stone Brewing; Up 5 again this year from 28, same jump as last year
  24. Dogfish Head Craft Brewery; Shot up 9 from #33, after being up 5 and 4 the two previous years
  25. Iron City Brewing; Plummeted 12, after a Chapter 11 bankruptcy and moving production out of Pittsburgh
  26. August Schell Brewing; Down 1 from last year
  27. Brooklyn Brewery; Up 4 from #31 last year
  28. Abita Brewing; Up 2 from #30 last year
  29. Summit Brewing; Down 2 from #27 last year
  30. Anchor Brewing; Down 6 from #24
  31. Shipyard Brewing; Down 5 from #26 last year
  32. New Glarus Brewing; Same as last year
  33. Great Lakes Brewing; Up 4 from #37 last year
  34. Rogue Ales/Oregon Brewing; Up 2 from #36, canceling being Down 2 last year, and Up 2 the year before that
  35. Long Trail Brewing; Down 1 from #34 last year
  36. Lagunitas Brewing; Up 2 from #38 last year, after being up 3 for the prior 2 years
  37. Mendocino Brewing; Down 8 from #29 last year
  38. Gordon Biersch Brewing; Down 3 from #35
  39. Sweetwater Brewing; Up 1 from #40 last year
  40. Firestone Walker Brewing; Down 1 from #39 last year
  41. Victory Brewing; Up 5 from #46 last year
  42. Flying Dog Brewery; Down 1 from #41 last year
  43. BJs Restaurant & Brewery; Down 1 from #42 last year
  44. Odell Brewing; Up 1 from #45 last year
  45. Rock Bottom Brewery Restaurants; Down 2 from #43 last year, a reversal of the year before
  46. Straub Brewery; Up 1 from #47 last year
  47. BridgePort Brewing (Gambrinus); Down 3 from #44 last year
  48. Lost Coast Brewing; Not in Top 50 last year
  49. Big Sky Brewing; Up 1 from #50 last year
  50. Stevens Point Brewery; Not in Top 50 last year

Two breweries are new to the list this year, Lost Coast and Stevens Point (who’ve transitioned to primarily all-malt brewing), while two dropped off the list; Cold Springs Brewery (fka Gluek Brewing) and Mac and Jack’s Brewery.

If you want to see the previous annotated lists for comparison, here is 2008, 2007 and 2006.

Filed Under: Breweries, Editorial, News Tagged With: Big Brewers, Statistics, United States

Top 50 Breweries For 2009

April 14, 2010 By Jay Brooks

ba
The Brewers Association has also just announced the top 50 breweries in the U.S. based on sales, by volume, for 2009. This includes all breweries, regardless of size or other parameters. Here is the new list:

  1. Anheuser-Busch InBev; St Louis MO
  2. MillerCoors; Chicago IL
  3. Pabst Brewing; Woodridge IL
  4. D. G. Yuengling and Son; Pottsville PA
  5. Boston Beer Co.; Boston MA
  6. Sierra Nevada Brewing; Chico CA
  7. Craft Brewers Alliance (Widmer/Redhook); Portland OR
  8. New Belgium Brewing; Fort Collins CO
  9. Spoetzl Brewery (Gambrinus); Spoetzl TX
  10. High Falls Brewing; Rochester NY
  11. Minhas Craft Brewery; Monroe WI
  12. Pyramid Breweries (IBU); Seattle WA
  13. Deschutes Brewery; Bend OR
  14. F.X. Matt Brewing; Utica NY
  15. Magic Hat Brewing (IBU); Burlington VT
  16. Boulevard Brewing; Kansas City MO
  17. Harpoon Brewery; Boston, MA
  18. Alaskan Brewing; Juneau AK
  19. Bell’s Brewery; Galesburg MI
  20. Goose Island Beer; Chicago IL
  21. Kona Brewing; Kailua-Kona HI
  22. Full Sail Brewing; Hood River OR
  23. Stone Brewing; Escondido CA
  24. Dogfish Head Craft Brewery; Lewes DE
  25. Iron City Brewing; Pittsburgh PA
  26. August Schell Brewing; New Ulm MN
  27. Brooklyn Brewery; Brooklyn NY
  28. Abita Brewing; New Orleans LA
  29. Summit Brewing; Saint Paul MN
  30. Anchor Brewing; San Francisco CA
  31. Shipyard Brewing; Portland ME
  32. New Glarus Brewing; New Glarus WI
  33. Great Lakes Brewing; Cleveland OH
  34. Rogue Ales/Oregon Brewing; Newport OR
  35. Long Trail Brewing; Burlington VT
  36. Lagunitas Brewing; Petaluma CA
  37. Mendocino Brewing; Ukiah CA
  38. Gordon Biersch Brewing; San Jose CA
  39. SweetWater Brewing; Atlanta GA
  40. Firestone Walker Brewing; Paso Robles CA
  41. Victory Brewing; Downington PA
  42. Flying Dog Brewery; Frederick MD
  43. BJs Restaurant & Brewery; Huntington Beach CA
  44. Odell Brewing; Fort Collins CO
  45. Rock Bottom Brewery Restaurants; Louisville CO
  46. Straub Brewery; Saint Mary’s PA
  47. Bridgeport Brewing (Gambrinus); Portland OR
  48. Lost Coast Brewing; Eureka CA
  49. Big Sky Brewing; Missoula MT
  50. Stevens Point Brewery; Stevens Point WI

Here is this year’s press release.

Also, the Annotated List is now up.

Filed Under: Breweries, News Tagged With: Big Brewers, Statistics, United States

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