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Happy International Brewers Day

July 18, 2008 By Jay Brooks

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Today is the first International Brewers Day. If you see a brewer today, remember to give him or her a hug. Or you could just buy him a beer or drink a toast to her honor, if that’s more your style. I’ve heard from people as far away and as far afield as New Zealand, Australia and Lithuania that are hosting IBD events today.

And hopefully, bloggers and beer writers will likewise take up the cause and write something today about a favorite brewer. If you haven’t already written me to tell me about your participation, please leave a comment here or at the International Brewers Day website. Or if you prefer, just send me an e-mail. Please give me the specific URL or address to your post about a brewer, or, if it’s event, give me the details (or even better send photos of the event and I’ll post them on the IBD website).

As it happens, I’ll be away until Sunday, so in reality you have through the weekend to write something about a brewer. As soon as I get back I’ll start posting links, photos and information about how everybody’s been celebrating the first International Brewers Day.

Filed Under: Events, Just For Fun, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Holidays

Brewers Day Profile: Brian Hunt

July 18, 2008 By Jay Brooks

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Shortly after I launched the website for International Brewers Day, I got an appropriately curmudgeonly comment disdaining the idea from my friend Brian Hunt, who owns Moonlight Brewing. Here’s what he had to say.

Let’s all just make good beer and drink it. The Brewer’s Association will log acres of forests for special posters and mailings. I can see Hallmark jumping on this one big time, and before long you’ll have to wade through all the K-Mart “holiday” ads looking for that right something for the brewers in your life. I vote no on this.

While hardly shy, I think having worked in the moonlight for so many years has made Brian shy away from the limelight. That alone made him the perfect choice for my first IBD profile. He is, to my mind, one of the truly unsung heroes of brewing, quietly making some of the nation’s best beers.

And happily I’m not the only one. In an article entitled Czech Mate, published in Forbes, the author reveals that of all the beers rated on Beer Advocate, Moonlight’s Reality Czech is the only golden lager on their list of the “Top Beers on Planet Earth.” Unfazed, Hunt explains.

“We have almost no concept in this country that we can have a beer that is light but also flavorful and vibrant,” explains Brian Hunt, Moonlight Brewing’s owner (and sole employee). “Making a great lager like that requires more time, more skill and more expense than making an ale.”

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Brian Hunt was, of course, born in a log cabin near Sacramento, and walked ten miles to school, uphill — both ways — through blizzards in winter and punishing heat in summer. Alright, everything in that last sentence, except Sacramento, I made up. But Brian’s past just cries out to be remade as mythic fable.

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Brian started college at U.C. San Diego as a biochemistry major, but soon realized that most of his fellow students were pre-med, a path he decidedly was not interested in pursuing. So he transferred to U.C. Davis to study fermentation sciences with an eye toward becoming a winemaker. But fate stepped in when he was randomly assigned Michael Lewis as his advisor. Needing income, he found himself working in Lewis’ laboratory and found it was easy to be persuaded to concentrate on beer instead of wine. He found his fellow brewing students much closer to his own temperament, more down to earth and fun. “Beer just seemed more enjoyable.” Hunt remarked.

After graduating with a degree in Fermentation Sciences in 1980, Hunt relocated to the heart of early brewing — Milwaukee, Wisconsin — to take a job at the Schlitz Brewery. He loved the history of the place. Everywhere you looked it was there. Hunt spent about eighteen months working for Schlitz. There were no computers in the place. Every step they took was done manually, so you learned the reason why you did certain things, and you could extrapolate those to subsequent steps, too. As a result, he learned a lot in that year and a half, crediting that experience with setting the tone for the rest of his career.

He moved back to California in 1981, brewing at the now long gone Berkeley Brewing Co., making ales and lagers on a 40-bbl system. After that venture went belly-up, he consulted on several brewing projects throughout the Bay Area, before ending up at Acme Brewing in Santa Rosa, California in 1985. He was there two years, but the brewery never had much of a chance owing to financial issues that the owners had not anticipated. The majestic 100-bbl brewhouse finally made its first batch of beer on March 2, 1987, but it was too late. Hunt says of his time there that it was a great MBA project and he learned most of what he needed (whether he wanted to or not) about the business side of the brewing industry.

When the Santa Rosa brewery finally shuttered its doors, Brian spent some time working for the other team at Grgich Hills Winery before a brief stint formulating two beers (whose recipes have since changed) and helping layout the brewery itself at the early Anderson Valley Brewing Co. in Boonville.

In 1988, Brian finally opened his own place in Napa with a descendant of the Hamms brewing family. He had a 1/3-share of Willett’s Brewing Co. (now Downtown Joe’s) from sweat equity and $1,100 of his own money. But by 1992, a get-rich-quick lawsuit brought by one of the brewpub’s employees forced Willett’s into bankruptcy. Brian Hunt saw the writing on the wall, and when someone phoned him to offer 100 Hoff-Stevens kegs, he bought them for himself and began … well, moonlighting.

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The original Moonlight brewery was built in a barn behind the house he was renting. He built the entire system himself using equipment cobbled together from a variety of sources. Brian bought old kettles from a winery that couldn’t boil water, and so had to be adapted. Quite a number of items from Sierra-Nevada’s yard sale (when they opened their own larger brewery in Chico) found their way into Moonlight’s brewery barn, including fermenters and a keg washer. The whole enterprise was financed with credit cards and a $20,000 personal loan. The initial brewhouse included a 7-bbl system.

The original name was going to be Old Barn Brewery, but it never sounded quite right. New Moon Brewing was also an early contender of the hundreds of names that were brainstormed. But once the name Moonlight was floated, there was no turning back. It just worked on so many levels and it seemed to mean different thing to different people, a quality Hunt relished.

For the first two-and-a-half years, beginning in 1992, Brian literally slept 5-1/2 nights out of every seven. He was working two jobs, one at the newly opened Downtown Joe’s (where the bankrupt Willett’s brewpub had been) and at his own place in the barn. This continued until he could afford to concentrate just on Moonlight Brewing. But just a few years into the new venture, another monkey wrench was thrown Hunt’s way. His landlord decided he wanted the house Hunt and his family lived in for his own son and told Brian they had to go. Luckily, they let him keep the brewery in the barn until it could be moved. In 1999, Hunt and his family moved to their present location. It would take another four years until all he permits were in place and the new brewery was built. The new system was 21-bbl and was the original Hart Brewing system, which Brian bought from the Thomas Kemper brewery on Bainbridge Island in Washington. The present set-up has pieces from at least fifty different breweries, either ones that went out of business or upgraded.

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Neither the original brewery now the new one has a computer of any kind in it, and that’s by design. It’s because of one of Hunt’s favorite quotes, this one by Albert Einstein. “Imagination is more important than knowledge.” Hunt sees one of the most important aspects of brewing as creativity and thinks of himself more as a tinkerer or toymaker of sorts. And, as he puts it, “you can’t see what’s happening if you’re just pushing buttons.” He believes that many young brewers don’t understand how to make “delicious” because of what he terms “a failure of imagination.” This is because, he says, “many are not taught how to think for themselves.

moonlight-ibd1

The first three beers Moonlight brewed are all still being made: Lunatic Lager, Death & Taxes, and Twist of Fate. Lunatic Lager’s original name, though, was Moonlight Pale Lager, so named because Hunt thought it would translate better to consumers already aware of the newly popular pale ales. The fourth beer Hunt made was Bombay by Boat IPA, also in 1992, and it was one of the first IPAs made in America. At that time, nobody really made one and certainly those few who did, did not call it an IPA.

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Hunt believes that being small also allows him a flexibility that bigger breweries can only dream about. He can follow market trends and turn on a dime. Because he not only brews the beer, but also delivers it (he’s a one man operation, most of the time) he’s not removed from his customer but mingles and converses with them almost every day of the week.

His original plan was to hope that he could make a living in Sonoma selling whatever he brewed. Though his net is spread slightly wider than he originally thought, it’s not by much, and he’s remained true to initial vision. “I don’t find success by selling a lot, I find it by selling to people who respect it or appreciate it.” So long as that’s the case, we won’t be seeing Moonlight beer in grocery stores nationwide or even bottle locally. Brian’s just not looking for that kind of success. He’s content doing what he wants in his own way, an iconoclast to the end. As you’d expect, Hunt also doesn’t think much of competitions either. “Fame is empty.” He says. “Good beer should not be.” So while that may be a loss for the people who can’t find Moonlight beer in their neighborhood, it does make the Bay Area just that much more of special place for beer and provides yet another reason for beer fans around the world to make the pilgrimage to taste California beer.

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Or put another way — as his pint glasses used to read — “good beer is as good beer does.”

Filed Under: Breweries, Just For Fun, News, Related Pleasures Tagged With: California, Interview, Northern California

I Have A Dream …

July 18, 2008 By Jay Brooks

My friend Pete sent me this cartoon by editorial cartoonist Ben Sargent. Thanks, Pete. To most Americans this might seem like a nightmare, and in fact I think that may have been his point. The cartoon plays to the fears of many Americans, but it’s so unlikely that InBev would alter the taste of Bud to such a degree that it’s preposterous. But for many of us who do not revere the taste of Budweiser, it may inadvertently seem more like a dream.
 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

New 21st Amendment Beer Cans Next Week

July 17, 2008 By Jay Brooks

The new beer cans from 21st Amendment Brewery will debut in stores next Tuesday, July 22.

From the press release:

Well, after more than two years of hard work the 21st Amendment’s cans of Hell or High Watermelon Wheat and Brew Free! or Die IPA will be available in stores beginning Tuesday, July 22nd in San Francisco and in Beverages and More stores throughout the state of California. You can find our beer throughout San Francisco at great beer bars and stores such as Benders, City Beer and the Toronado . Please ask your local favorite store and beer bar to carry our canned craft beer and check back often at the 21st Amendment for availability. Both will be distributed by DBI Beverage in San Francisco.
 

To celebrate, the 21st Amendment Brewery is throwing a “Can Release Party” Tuesday July 22nd at 6 p.m. at the legendary Toronado bar, 547 Haight St. in San Francisco. Please join us!
 

“Craft beer in a can? Quite CAN-didly, that’s the number one question we get around here,” says Chief Hop Head and Founder/Brewmaster Shaun O’Sullivan. “The can is actually a brilliant CAN-cept all around for craft beer”, adds Chief Watermelon Officer and Founder Nico Freccia. “Cans are simply better for the beer — they keep it fresher by protecting it from light, they are lined so they don’t affect the flavor of the beer and they fit the craft beer drinker’s lifestyle by going places where glass just doesn’t dare — like beaches, pools, boats, parks and golf courses”. And cans are better for the environment. They use less energy to produce and transport, and they are far more often recycled than glass.
 

  • • Hell or High Watermelon Wheat, an American-style wheat beer made with hundreds of pounds of fresh pressed watermelon.
  • • Brew Free! Or Die IPA, a big, hoppy beer to be reckoned with.

 

Also, be sure and listen to KFOG 104.5FM as Shaun has fun with Dave Morey and the morning show crew this Friday, July 18th at 8:00 a.m. talking great beer in the can. Listen live on-line!
 

Who the heck are these guys? Hey, we’re Nico & Shaun. We live for great beer. In 1920, there were thousands of breweries across America making unique hand-crafted beer. The passage of Prohibition wiped out this great culture. After thirteen years without beer, the states ratified the 21st Amendment, ending Prohibition in America. At the 21st Amendment Brewery, we celebrate the right to brew beer, the freedom to be innovative, and the obligation to have fun.
 

Here’s to original beer…IN YOUR FACE!

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

A One Brewpub Town

July 16, 2008 By Jay Brooks

This struck me as somewhat humorous. I’ve heard of plenty of towns smaller than Clark, Wyoming (pop. @ 300-350 in the whole valley) but what makes Clark stand out is that, according to a short AP story, is that there is only one business in the whole town. And what is that one business? It’s the Edelweiss bar, owned by Peg Potter, but she’s planning on turning into a brewpub. Her goal is to brew “some of the best beer in the world,” with water from Clark’s Fork River, a local source that is fed from the Yellowstone River, as Clark is east of Yellowstone National Park, and just south of the Montana border. So that will make Clark literally a one brewpub town. That alone would make it a destination worth seeking out. What fun!
 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Global Beer Brands

July 16, 2008 By Jay Brooks

Teresa da Silva Lopes is the author of Global Brands, The Evolution of Multinationals in Alcoholic Beverages. And although it was published last fall, it seems like a prescient take on what’s been going on more recently with the beer industry, from the sale of Scottish & Newcastle, Miller and Coors’ merged U.S. operations and, of course, the latest InBev takeover of Anheuser-Busch. On her publisher’s U.S. website, the Cambridge University Press, she gives her perspective on the InBev/A-B deal, entitled A Global Case of Beer.


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Pliny Picture Show

July 15, 2008 By Jay Brooks

I almost forgot that when I was at Russian River Brewery for the Pliny the Elder bottling on July 10, I shot a couple of short movies with my camera. Here are two of them. Enjoy the brewery porn.
 
Pliny Bottling #1: Slow and Longer.

 
Pliny Bottling #2: Short and Sweet.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

International Brewers Day This Friday

July 14, 2008 By Jay Brooks

My new holiday, International Brewers Day, will have its first observance this Friday, July 18. If you write about beer (or holidays) please consider writing about your favorite brewer on Friday, either as an interview, profile, bio or whatever you think appropriate. You can find out more information about how to participate at the website for International Brewers Day.

If you own or run a brewery, beer bar or restaurant, think about hosting an event to honor your brewer or a local brewer. If not this year, mark your calendars for next year, when hopefully I’ll make a more ardent push to get the holiday going.

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Stephen Colbert Analyzes A-B / InBev Deal

July 14, 2008 By Jay Brooks

Since Stephen Colbert heard Anheuser-Busch sold itself to a Belgian brewer, he’s been drinking non-stop before those waffle humpers change the formula. Hilarious.

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Support Your Local Brewery … No, Really

July 14, 2008 By Jay Brooks

With the recent merger of MillerCoors and the announcement that InBev will buy Anheuser-Busch, power in the brewing industry over resources and access to market are becoming more consolidated than ever before. And that includes lobbying for favorable legislation. But at the same time, neo-prohibitionist groups and anti-alcohol politicians in California are joining forces to raise the tax on beer to help balance the budget. While it’s clear that something needs to be done to fix California’s financial woes, the beer industry did not cause these problems — more than likely politicians did — and it’s patently unfair that brewers and beer drinkers should have to foot the bill to pay for others’ mistakes. In this climate, and with a record number of issues already before the California legislature, the California Small Brewers Association and the political activist group, Support Your Local Brewery, are urging you to sign up to be a Beer Activist. When issues come up in which a letter, e-mail or phone call to your elected official can make a difference in keeping beer prices as low as possible, you’ll simply receive an e-mail with instructions on how you can help. Here’s a recent press release (which I’ve modified) about this from the CSBA:

The craft brewing industry in California is experiencing numerous legislative threats to our industry this summer. First and foremost is the threat of an increase in the excise tax on beer. YOU CAN HELP DEFEND THIS POSSIBLE TAX INCREASE! The California Small Brewers Association asks you to sign up for the “Support Your Local Brewery Campaign.” It is easy to do and may make a huge difference in defeating a tax increase.

Support Your Local Brewery is a grassroots partnership of beer enthusiasts, professional trade associations and brewers (and the Brookston Beer Bulletin is an official partner, too) dedicated to supporting and protecting the legislative and regulatory interests of craft breweries.

Those who have sign up online become “Beer Activists.” The Beer Activists signed up in California can be contacted via email “Action Alerts” and asked to notify their legislative representatives when state regulatory initiatives threaten our craft brewing industry here in California. Beer Activists can be contacted in a specific legislative district or statewide. These Action Alerts are a very effective way to generate a letter writing or phone campaign to the legislators at the state Capitol.

Please Take ACTION! The CSBA needs your help to generate more Beer Activists to sign up. The more names we have in the database, the more effective these Action Alerts will be in protecting our industry. We ask you to simply sign up with SYLB. This is an easy yet very important way to help the CSBA help keep craft beer alive and well in California.

To become a member of the SYLB, please take just a few minutes right now and visit the sign-up page and fill in your e-mail, home state and zip code. That’s all there is to it. Thanks for doing your part for California craft beer.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

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