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Jay R. Brooks on Beer

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Michigan Beer

January 26, 2011 By Jay Brooks

michigan
Today in 1837, Michigan became the 26th state.

Michigan
State_Michigan

Michigan Breweries

  • Arbor Brewing
  • Arcadia Brewing
  • Atwater Block Brewery
  • BARTS
  • Bastone Brewery
  • B.O.B.’s House of Brews
  • Bell’s Brewing
  • Big Buck Brewery
  • Big Rapids Brewing
  • Big Rock Chophouse
  • Bilbo’s Brewing
  • Black Lotus Brewing
  • Blue Cow Cafe
  • Blue Tractor Brewing
  • Bo’s Brewery
  • BraVo! Restaurant & Cafe
  • Brewery Vivant
  • Chelsea Alehouse
  • CJ’s Brewing
  • Copper Canyon Brewery
  • The Corner Brewery
  • Dark Horse Brewing
  • Detroit Beer Co.
  • Dragonmead Microbrew
  • Fenton Brewery
  • Fletcher Street Brewing
  • Fort Street Brewery
  • Founder’s Brewing
  • Frankenmuth Brewery
  • Frog Island Brewing
  • Grand Rapids Brewing
  • Great Baraboo Brewing
  • Greenbush Brewing
  • Grizzly Peak Brewing
  • Harper’s restaurant and Brewpub
  • Helmar Brewing
  • Hereford & Hops Brewpub
  • Hideout Brewing
  • Hometown Cellars Brewery
  • Hopcat
  • Jaden James Brewery
  • Jamesport Brewing
  • Jasper Rige Brewing
  • Jolly Pumpkin Ales
  • Kalamazoo Brewing
  • Keweenaw Brewing
  • King Brewing [Closed]
  • Kraftbrau Brewery
  • Kuhnhenn Brewing
  • Lake Superior Brewing
  • Leelanau Brewing
  • Liberty Street Brewing
  • Lily’s Seafood & Brewery
  • The Livery
  • The Local Pub and Brewery
  • Lumber Barons’ Charcoal Grill & Brewpub
  • Mackinaw Brewing
  • Marquette Harbor Brewery
  • Michigan Brewing
  • Michigan House Cafe & BrewPub
  • Middle Villa Inn & Micro Brewery
  • Midland Brewing
  • Motor City Brewing
  • Mountain Town Station
  • Mount Pleasant Brewing
  • New Holland Brewing
  • North Peak Brewing
  • Odd Sides Ales
  • Old Boys’ Brewhouse
  • Olde Peninsula Brewpub
  • Old Hat Brewery & Grill
  • Original Gravity Brewing
  • Quay Street Brewing
  • Red Jacket Brewing
  • Redwood Lodge Brewery
  • Right Brain Brewery
  • Rochester Mills Beer
  • Round Barn Brewery
  • Royal Oak Brewery
  • Sanford Lake Brewpub
  • Saugatuck Brewing
  • Schmohz Brewing
  • Sherwood Brewing
  • Short’s Brewing
  • Sports Brew Pub
  • Stoney Creek Brewing
  • Sue’s Coffee House Brewery
  • Sullivan’s Black Forest
  • Tahquamenon Falls
  • Traffic Jam & Snug
  • Travelers Club
  • Tri-City Brewing
  • Walldorff Brewpub & Bistro
  • Wiltse’s Brew-Pub
  • Wolverine State Brewing
  • Woodward Avenue Brewers

Michigan Brewery Guides

  • Beer Advocate
  • Beer Me
  • Rate Beer

Guild: Michigan Brewers Guild

State Agency: Michigan Liquor Control Commission

maps-mi

  • Capital: Lansing
  • Largest Cities: Detroit, Grand Rapids, Warren, Flint, Sterling Heights
  • Population: 9,938,444; 8th
  • Area: 96,810 sq.mi., 11th
  • Nickname: Wolverine State / Great Lakes State
  • Statehood: 26th, January 26, 1837

m-michigan

  • Alcohol Legalized: April 27, 1933
  • Number of Breweries: 96
  • Rank: 6th
  • Beer Production: 6,5774,66
  • Production Rank: 8th
  • Beer Per Capita: 20.4 Gallons

michigan

Package Mix:

  • Bottles: 38.8%
  • Cans: 48.1%
  • Kegs: 12.8%

Beer Taxes:

  • Per Gallon: $0.20
  • Per Case: $0.46
  • Tax Per Barrel (24/12 Case): $6.30
  • Draught Tax Per Barrel (in Kegs): $6.30

Economic Impact (2010):

  • From Brewing: $242,599,259
  • Direct Impact: $2,115,676,429
  • Supplier Impact: $1,547,137,698
  • Induced Economic Impact: $1,268,318,359
  • Total Impact: $4,931,132,486

Legal Restrictions:

  • Control State: No
  • Sale Hours: On Premises: 7 a.m.–2 a.m. (Mon-Sat)
    Noon-2 a.m. (Sunday) *sales may begin at 7 a.m. with special license extension
    Off Premises: 7 a.m.–2 a.m. (Mon-Sat)
    Noon-2 a.m. (Sunday) *sales may begin at 7 a.m. with special license extension
  • Grocery Store Sales: Yes
  • Notes: The Michigan Liquor Control Commission allows the sale of alcoholic beverages until 11:59 p.m. on December 24 and after 12:00 p.m. on December 25. On-premises sales are permitted on January 1 until 4:00 a.m. Local or county ordinance may restrict Sunday or Sunday morning sales.

michigan-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: Michigan

Beer In Ads #296: Labatt’s … The Spirited Ale

January 25, 2011 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
Tuesday’s ad is for Canada’s Labatt’s 50 Ale, which was “Canada’s fastest growing ale because it has “spirit.” I’m not even sure what that means. Perhaps you get “spirit” by sailing? I’m not sure what this was done, it has a 1950s look and the illustration is great, I just don’t get the connection.

labatts50-spirit

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Canada, History

Christianity & Beer: Another Point Of View

January 25, 2011 By Jay Brooks

jesus-drinks-beer
My friend and colleague, Rick Sellers, who writes at Pacific Brew News, published a thoughtful piece entitled Christianity & Drinking — Why Not?. Sellers is no stranger to religion, and in fact has “a degree in Biblical Studies” and even worked briefly as a pastor. It’s definitely worth a read.

Filed Under: Beers, Editorial, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Religion & Beer

Beer In Ads #295: Krueger’s Cream Ale

January 24, 2011 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
Monday’s ad is one of the first advertising canned beers, in honor of the anniversary of the first beer can being sold today in 1935. It’s for Krueger’s Cream Ale, the first beer to be sold in a can. They tested the package in Richmond, Virginia, far from their native New Jersey in case the test went poorly to avoid any damage to the brand in their home market.

krueger-cream-ale

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Cans, History

Beer In Art #113: Pablo Picasso’s Le Bock

January 23, 2011 By Jay Brooks

art-beer
This week’s work of art by one of the modern world’s most famous artists, Pablo Picasso. The painting is known as Le Bock (“The Beer”), but it’s real title is “Portrait of Jamie Sarbartes, the Poet.” Picasso painted it in 1901 and today it hangs in the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow.

Picasso-portrait-of-sabartes

The Pablo Picasso Gallery describes the painting like this:

This is sometimes called Le Bock (The Beer) or simply Portrait of Sabartes; but Picasso himself insisted on ‘the poet’ as part of the title. There was a hint of irony in this as a description of Sabartes, and the painting undoubtedly presents him in an exaggeratedly soulful, glamorous light.

According to Sabartes, it was painted not long after his arrival in Paris from Spain (October 1901). He was sitting alone in a tavern, in a state of myopic isolation and boredom, until Picasso and some companions suddenly burst into the room and cheered him up. A few days later, in Picasso’s studio, Sabartes was shown this painting, which he recognized as portraying ‘the spectre of my solitude’. It is arguably the first work of Picasso’s ‘Blue Period’, characterized not only by all-pervasive blue tones but by a preoccupation with suffering, rejection and poverty.

There’s a biography of Picasso at Wikipedia and also Biography.com. You can also see more of Picasso’s art at Olga’s Gallery, ArtArchive and the ArtCyclopedia. Then there’s Picasso.com and his “official” website.

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Spain

Guinness Ad #52: Cow Paddy

January 22, 2011 By Jay Brooks

guinness-toucan
Our 52nd Guinness poster by John Gilroy shows a farm scene with bossy racing the farmer to the tractor, where a Guinness bottle and pint glass is there for the taking. It uses the tagline “My Goodness My Guinness.”

Guinness-cow

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Guinness, History

Beer In Ads #294: Miller High Life, For The Taste Of Your Life

January 21, 2011 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
Friday’s ad is for Miller High Life from 1956, displaying a busy, chaotic mess of images including a high life bottle being poured into what looks like a ceramic stein. Then there’s a loaf of a bread and summer sausage with a knife to cut it and napkins (one red and one with a checkerboard pattern) to keep one’s hands clean along with a large pipe and a sculpture of a rooster sitting on a beer keg in the background. With the high life logo hanging in the background, this as just seems way too busy. Sorry for the bad pub, but for me, that’s not in good taste.

56millerbeer

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, History, Miller Brewing

ABI To Include Stella Artois In Super Bowl Ads

January 21, 2011 By Jay Brooks

stella-artois
Anheuser-Busch traditionally pulls out all the tops for the Super Bowl, one of the most-watched television events of the year, especially for their core demographic. And that looks to be true for this year’s game, as well. But according to a report from Advertising Age yesterday, they’ll be trying something new this year.

The biggest overall change is that “instead of running nine ads for a total of five minutes, as it did last year, A-B will air five ads that run over three-and-a-half minutes.” The ads themselves will be similar to past efforts. But 2011 will mark the first time they’ve deviated from their core brands of Budweiser and Bud Light. One of their spots, a 60-second ad, will be for the uninspired Belgian lager Stella Artois under the banner of a new campaign, “She is a thing of beauty.”

I’m fairly certain this isn’t the ad they’ll be running, but this one was supposedly directed by Wes Anderson and Sophia Coppola.

Despite the Marin Institute’s incessant complaining about alcohol advertising during the Super Bowl — oh, the horror, why won’t anyone think of the kiddies? — of the 28 planned advertisers, only one is an alcohol producer, Anheuser-Busch InBev. So not only are they misplaced about who watches the Super Bowl, but seeing as a mere 3.5% — exactly one — of the advertisers are alcohol producers it hardly seems worth all the hue and cry they’ve raised. Of the 3-4 hours of the game, just 3-1/2 minutes are taken up by beer ads, representing less than 2% to under 1.5%, depending on how long the game ultimately runs. Even at that, it assumes anyone watching would be glued the set the entire time, a dubious proposition at best, especially applied to children. But the Marin Institute won’t be happy until they’ve “freed the bowl” from even those three and half minutes.

Personally, I’m looking forward to this year’s Super Bowl, especially if my beloved Packers manage to win on Sunday. It’s been more then a decade since I’ve actually cared about who wins the game, it would sure be nice to have someone to root for this year.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Editorial, News Tagged With: Advertising, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Big Brewers, Sports

“How Beer Saved The World” To Be Revealed January 30

January 21, 2011 By Jay Brooks

earthday
The documentary that the Discovery Channel was rumored to be working on, How Beer Saved the World, is now scheduled to air on Sunday, January 30 at 8:00 p.m. Pacific time. The trailer is a bit overwrought, but they appear to have some good people being interviewed on camera, such as Charlie Bamforth and Gregg Smith. This should be interesting.

If you want a good laugh, check out the ignorant comments on the YouTube page for this trailer. Their hilarity is only matched by their inanity. It’s certainly amazing how effective anti-alcohol propaganda is as evidenced by some of the nonsense being spouted. It’s also funny, and a little sad, to see the contrast between beer people, who can readily admit that there are some people who abuse alcohol and cause problems for themselves and others, and neo-prohibitionists who cannot bring themselves to concede that alcohol has any positive aspects to it whatsoever.

Filed Under: Beers, Editorial, Events, News Tagged With: Announcements, History, Television, Video

Beer In Ads #293: Blatz, The End Of The Hunt For Good Taste

January 20, 2011 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
Thursday’s ad is for Blatz Pilsener Beer from 1944, displaying a hunting motif to go with the cheesy ad copy, “The End of the Hunt For Good Taste.”

Blatz-1944

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, History

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