From Beverage Daily, an interesting article about the search in barley proteins for the source of beer’s foam. It’s titled Scientists look for secrets of foamy beer.
Bay Area Breweries Celebrate Ben Franklin’s 300th Birthday
Four Bay Area breweries are participating in the brewing of Poor Richard’s Ale in honor of Benjamin Franklin’s 300th birthday, which is today, Tuesday, January 17. Today they’ll tap the specially designed recipe along with dozens of breweries across the nation. Check out what breweries in your area will also be pariticipating.
Bay Area Breweries Making Poor Richard’s Ale
Half Moon Bay Brewing
Magnolia Pub & Brewery
Steelhead Brewing – Burlingame
21st Amendment Brewery
Avery Releases Mephistopheles’ Stout
Adam Avery and the gang from Boulder, Colorado have announced the release of Mephistopheles’ Stout, the final installment in their Demons of Ale series. The terse press release had this to say about the new beer:
Mephistopheles is the crafty shape shifter, the second fallen angel. Amazingly complex, coal black, velvety and liqueurish, this demon has a bouquet of vine-ripened grapes, anise and chocolate covered cherries with flavors of rum-soaked caramelized dark fruits and a double espresso finish. 15%abv.
Cellarable for 10+ years.
Sounds tasty. I can’t wait to get my hands on a sample.
Russian River Announces Valentine’s Day Beer
Pabst For Sale
The San Antonio Business Journal is reporting that local company Pabst Brewing has “hired Merrill Lynch to facilitate a possible sale of the company.” Pabst CEO Brian Kovalchuck acknowledged that the New York financial powerhouse has already sent out a prospectus to potentially interested parties, who include breweries as well as “leveraged buyout firms.” With annual sales of around $575 million, Pabst is the fourth largest brewer in the country, despite owning no physical brewery and contracting their beers through Miller. They own almost thirty brand names, including Pabst Blue Ribbon, Old Style, Old Milwaukee, Lone Star, Schlitz, McSorely’s, Olympia, Stroh’s and Colt 45.
With PBR recently finding new life by currying retro favor with young people, it will be interesting to see who will be interested in buying the brand. If Anheuser-Busch hadn’t bought Rolling Rock earlier this year, I would have put them at the top of the list. But who knows, maybe they still might make a play for it. But I think the most obvious potential buyer, among brewers at least, is SABMiller, if for no other reason than they’ve been doing the contract brewing for a number of years and could use the shot in the arm of another popular label.
