Beer from a place, and the place is Alaska

Beers from Alaskan Brewing taste like this:

Alaskan Marine Highway

And like this:

Alaskan totem pole

They taste like they are from Alaska, and once you’ve traveled the Alaskan Marine Highway from one port to another you’ll realize that more specifically Alaskan Brewing beers taste of Southeast Alaska.

Quite honestly I paused for a moment last week when Alaskan co-founder Geoff Larson said that the brewery sells more than 70 percent of its beers beyond Alaska’s borders. After all, we’re at the beginning of our Year of Drinking Local, and know full well that many beers suffer the farther they travel from home.

In the next few hours I realized how well timed this stop in our family adventure — generally not a beer trip but a trip in which we are drinking beer — turned out to be. It put the importance of local and place back in perspective. A local beer that doesn’t reflect where it’s brewed doesn’t interest me nearly as much as a beer that comes from a place, even when we may be far from that place.

Of course you understand that much more easily if you’ve been there.

This particular day in Juneau was a working day. I started collecting Geoff and Marcy Larson’s oral history as well as gathering information for two stories. But the days before and after were at least as important in getting to better know beers I’ve been drinking for 15 years. The there in the beers is on a trail overlooking Mendenhall Glacier, on a ferry traveling through the Wrangell Narrows, chilled to the bone hiking in a “temperate” rain forest, or watching a server set down a plate of massive crab legs in a restaurant.

Alaskan beer is everywhere, clearly a source of state pride. Neon signs brighten most bar windows. Souvenir shops that cater to cruise ships prominently display Alaskan T-shirts (a local grocery sells an Alaskan T and hat package), and we saw how many locals wearing Alaskan sweatshirts?

What percentage of drinkers in Seattle or Phoenix (both good markets for Alaskan beers) have shared these experiences? Probably not a huge number. What percentage care that Alaskan Amber is based on a recipe used to brew a regional beer in the early 1900s? Care that Alaskan Winter Ale features spruce tips from local trees (and a tradition that goes back to when Captain Cook traveled the Inside Passage)? Care that that Native Americans determined hundreds of years ago that alder (the only truly hardwood available in Alaska) was best for smoking fish, and now Alaskan smokes malt for its famous Smoked Porter over adler. Again, not as many as I would like.

They mostly care if the beer is good, rather than thinking of the measures Alaskan’s brewers take to assure that beer sold “down South” (as Alaskans refer to the Lower 48) still tastes of Alaska.

One quick report from their quality control lab: Each batch of beer is plated (scrutinized under a microscope) ten times before it goes into a bottle. Each day a tasting panel (all employees participate on a rotating basis) convenes in the QC lab. They taste finished beers, beers in progress, small batches sold only regionally, smaller batches that never leave the brewery and more.

I’m pretty sure they know just what a beer from Alaska should taste like.

6 thoughts on “Beer from a place, and the place is Alaska”

  1. I can’t tell you how much the beer enhanced Alaska and Alaska enhanced the beer on my one journey to the last Frontier. Drink local my friend!
    BTW, did you post (or tell me) that this entire trip will be turned into a book someday? Maybe I’ll suggest your working title: “Drink Local. One Family’s million mile journey around the world in search of local beer”. Ok, that’s no good. I guess that’s why you’re the scribe and I’m not…..

  2. That’s a very enjoyable piece, Stan. Alaska fascinates me. One day I might go there.

    One comment though – you use the expression “server” – is that common in the US? Sounds a bit … demeaning?

  3. I think “server” evolved from a catch-all, politically correct title to use instead of gender-specific waitress or waiter.

    Demeaning? I guess I can see that, better than “serf,” I suppose.

  4. What percentage of drinkers in Seattle or Phoenix (both good markets for Alaskan beers) have shared these experiences?

    Again, not as many as I would like.

    Oh I do, I do…
    And as a Phoenician I long for a beer cultue that can match the allure of the Sonoran Desert.

  5. It was to avoid using waitress (in this case) and shoter than “person who delivered out food.” I’m always open to other suggestions.

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