Beer News

Coors Takes #2 In America From Budweiser

Coors Light has officially over taken Budweiser as #2 in America.  This is the first time in almost 2 years that Anheuser-Busch hasn’t been in control of the top 2 spots.

Budweiser’s shipments fell 4.6% last year as opposed to Coors Continue Reading →

VID: Atlanta Summer Beerfest 2011

A video from Atlanta Summer Beerfest 2011.  You’re next drinking opportunity is coming up this month at the  http://atlantawinterbeerfest.com/, on January 28th, 2012.

Dogfish Rezoning Approved, Expansion To Proceed

Dogfish Head’s commerical rezoning was approved yesterday by the Milton Town Council.  The rezoning will allow Dogfish to build on the 39-acre parcel of land they purchased years ago.

“They’re good stewards of the town,” said Milton Mayor Cliff Newlands.

Neighbors of Continue Reading →

Newcastle Founder’s Taps In Atlanta

Newcastle’s newest brew- Founder’s Ale has arrived stateside, and in Atlanta.  Initial tappings in the Atlanta metro area are Taco Mac (the second beer of the month this month.)  This Thursday, get a Newcastle Founders glass with purchase.  Look Continue Reading →

Newcastle Founders’ Ale Now Available

Newcastle’s newest brew- Founders’ Ale has arrived stateside.  Founders’ joins Werewolf & Winter IPA in the brewery’s seasonal release lineup.  The 12oz bottles are arriving nationwide starting at the end of the month, with draft in select cities.

Only one Continue Reading →

Posted in Beer News, Dogfish Head

Sam Calagione Gives Beer Geeks An Earful. And It’s Awesome.

I have a small Op-Ed coming this week.  I don’t do Op-Eds often, but sometimes there are  just a couple of thoughts I want to put out there.  The Op-Ed is on beer geeks, beer drinking, & a few personal resolutions.  Sam Calagione just spelled out part of my Op-Ed.  Insufferable beer geeks need to read this.  It’s brilliant.  He posted it to a BeerAdvocate.com thread, where a reader spoke about over-rated breweries.  It struck a nerve with Sam.  Props, Sam.

It’s pretty depressing to frequently visit this site and see the most negative threads among the most popular. This didn’t happen much ten years ago when craft beer had something like a 3 percent market share. Flash forward to today, and true indie craft beer now has a still-tiny but growing marketshare of just over 5 percent. Yet so many folks that post here still spend their time knocking down breweries that dare to grow. It’s like that old joke: “Nobody eats at that restaurant anymore, it’s too crowded.” Except the “restaurants” that people shit on here aren’t exactly juggernauts. In fact, aside from Boston Beer, none of them have anything even close to half of one percent marketshare. The more that retailers, distributors, and large industrial brewers consolidate the more fragile the current growth momentum of the craft segment becomes. The more often the Beer Advocate community becomes a soap box for outing breweries for daring to grow beyond its insider ranks the more it will be marginalized in the movement to support, promote, and protect independent ,American craft breweries. 

It’s interesting how many posts that refer to Dogfish being over-rated include a caveat like “except for Palo…except for Immort…etc.” We all have different palettes which is why it’s a great thing that there are so many different beers. At Dogfish we’ve been focused on making “weird” beers since we opened and have taken our lumps for being stylistically indifferent since day one. I bet a lot of folks agree that beers like Punkin Ale (since 1995) , Immort Ale (wood aged smoked beer) since 1995, Chicory Stout (coffee stout) since 1995 , Raison D’être (Belgian brown) since 1996, , Indian Brown Ale (dark IPA) since 1997, and 90 Minute (DIPA) since 2000 don’t seem very weird anymore. That’s in large part because so many people who have been part of this community over the years championed them and helped us put them on the map.These beers, and all of our more recent releases like Palo Santo, Burton Baton, Bitches Brew continue to grow every year. We could have taken the easy way out and just sold the bejeezus out of 60 Minute to grow but we like to experiment and create and follow our own muse. Obviously there is an audience that appreciates this as we continue to grow. We put no more “hype” or “expert marketing” behind our best selling beers than we do our occasionals. We only advertise in a few beer magazines and my wife Mariah oversees all of our twitter/Facebook/dogfish.com stuff. We have mostly grown by just sharing our beer with people who are into it (at our pub, great beer bars, beer dinners, and fests) and let them decide for themselves if they like it. If they do we hope they tell their friends about. We hope a bunch of you that are going to EBF will stop by our booth and try some of the very unique new beers we are proudly bringing to market like Tweason’ale (a champagne-esque, gluten-free beer fermented with buckwheat honey and strawberries) and Noble Rot (a sort of saison brewed with Botrytis-infected Viognier Grape must). One of these beers is on the sweeter side and one is more sour. Knowing each of your palettes is unique you will probably prefer one over the other. That doesn’t mean the one you didn’t prefer sucked. And the breweries you don’t prefer but are growing don’t suck either. Respect Beer. The below was my favorite post thus far. 

This thread is hilarious. Seriously, Bells, Founders, FFF, Surly, RR, DFH, Bruery, Avery, Cigar City, Mikkeller are all overrated?  Since I’m from Ohio, I’ll pile on and add Great Lakes, Hoppin Frog, and Brew Kettle to the list. Your welcome. 

Hopefully soon we will have every craft brewery in the US on the list.

Editors Note: I love being from Delaware.  That’s how we roll.

Posted in Beer News

Coors Takes #2 In America From Budweiser

Coors Light has officially over taken Budweiser as #2 in America.  This is the first time in almost 2 years that Anheuser-Busch hasn’t been in control of the top 2 spots.

Budweiser’s shipments fell 4.6% last year as opposed to Coors Light’s rise of just 1%.  Interestingly, Budweiser shipments have dropped 60% since 1988.  Coors Light shipped 18.2 million barrels last year and Budweiser shipped 17.7 million.

Each brewery seems to be attempting to innovate to gain market share.  Bud just launched the Draftmark Home Draft System,and is in the process of launching Bud Light Platinum as you read this.  This January you’ll see Budweiser’s new reality program, “The Big Time” on top of Major League Baseball team branded cans this spring.  Bowtie Cans launched last year also.  Coors launched cold activated bottles & cans last year – when the mountains turn blue, your beer is as cold as The Rockies.

In contrast, craft brewer Sam Adams has seen sales surges as high as 30%. [Adage]

 

Posted in Beer News

VID: Atlanta Summer Beerfest 2011

Atlanta Summer BeerfestA video from Atlanta Summer Beerfest 2011.  You’re next drinking opportunity is coming up this month at the  http://atlantawinterbeerfest.com/, on January 28th, 2012.

Posted in Beer News, Brewery Expansions, Dogfish Head

Dogfish Rezoning Approved, Expansion To Proceed

Dogfish Head’s commerical rezoning was approved yesterday by the Milton Town Council.  The rezoning will allow Dogfish to build on the 39-acre parcel of land they purchased years ago.

“They’re good stewards of the town,” said Milton Mayor Cliff Newlands.

Neighbors of the nearby Cannery Village fought Dogfish Head’s request to rezone the land, citing fears of increased industrial traffic,  and fears of the building’s future if the brewery moves.  The rezone means great things for Dogfish Head, but the new vote still doesn’t thrill some of the residents.

“I think the town has been bullied,” said Cannery Village resident John Horan.

Not all residents spoke out against Dogfish Head –

“Dogfish came here as a good neighbor, they’ve been a good neighbor, they give back to the local community. … If the town is going to survive, we need those businesses,” said resident Paul Yannucci. “It’s going to mean a good future for this town moving forward.”

So what’s next?

Currently the brewery has to submit a site plan that has to be approved before anything can be built on site.  New packaging lines & storage space are in future expansion plans. The total cost of the expansion is current estimated at $50 million. [DelawareOnline]

Posted in Beer News, Heineken NV, Newcastle

Newcastle Founder’s Taps In Atlanta

Newcastle’s newest brew- Founder’s Ale has arrived stateside, and in Atlanta.  Initial tappings in the Atlanta metro area are Taco Mac (the second beer of the month this month.)  This Thursday, get a Newcastle Founders glass with purchase.  Look for it on draft in more establishments in the metro area this month.

Founder’s joins Werewolf & Winter IPA in the brewery’s seasonal release lineup.  The limited release series is currently only available in Atlanta, Chicago, Boston, Denver, Las Vegas, Minneapolis, Phoenix, California, Virginia, North Carolina, & South Carolina.  Draft only, with 12oz bottles hitting stores in February.

Only one Limited Edition is special enough to bear the name Newcastle Founders Ale. The name, like the star on its label, is a tribute to the heritage of the five founding brewers of Victorian-era Newcastle. Its nutty brown color, light-bodied flavor and malty dry, bitter finish will make you as proud of our heritage as we are.

Style: English Bitter
Taste Expectations:
Availability: 12oz bottles (6/12pks) Draft.

4.8% ABV

Posted in Beer News, Heineken NV, Newcastle

Newcastle Founders’ Ale Now Available

Newcastle’s newest brew- Founders’ Ale has arrived stateside.  Founders’ joins Werewolf & Winter IPA in the brewery’s seasonal release lineup.  The 12oz bottles are arriving nationwide starting at the end of the month, with draft in select cities.

Only one Limited Edition is special enough to bear the name Newcastle Founders Ale. The name, like the star on its label, is a tribute to the heritage of the five founding brewers of Victorian-era Newcastle. Its nutty brown colorlight-bodied flavor and malty dry, bitter finish will make you as proud of our heritage as we are.  Available for the first time in the U.S., Newcastle Founders’ Ale is a full-bodied, drinkable brew with dry, hoppy and roasted flavors. The classic Bitter ale is balanced by subtly sweet aroma notes of caramel and fruit with a short, clean finish.

“The iconic five-point star on our label recognizes the five founding breweries of Newcastle, and this beer further celebrates the legend of our original, hard-working Geordie brewers and patrons,” said Charles van Es, brand director Newcastle Brown Ale. “With Founders’ Ale we are answering consumer demand by offering all of Newcastle’s Limited Editions nationally in 2012, giving everyone a chance to enjoy a bit of authentic English history.” 

Style: English Bitter
Hops: Styrian Goldings
Taste Expectations:
Availability: 12oz bottles (6/12pks) Draft.

4.8% ABV, 20 IBUs

 


Posted in Beer News

New Allagash Saison Series Headed To Atlanta

Allagash Brewing is sending a new round of draft only brews to the southeast this year.  It’s a rotating saison series, each with a unique set of ingredients.   The first is called Saison Genever, brewed with honey, juniper, and lemongrass.

Tasting notes on Saison Genever:

This dark amber saison has an aroma consisting of a pronounced fruitiness, with highlights of honey and pine throughout.  The flavor is a great balance of malts (both light and dark), hop bitterness and citrus fruit, while still leaving room to showcase a rich honey presence.  Saison Genever is medium to full bodied, yet dry and very refreshing.

Availability: Draft only.
Arrival: Jan-Feb, 2012