Budweiser: The search for relevancy

Budweiser has brought Project 12 back for a second go around. The last time resulted in the release of Budweiser Black Crown, but that wasn’t exactly the point of the project. This is a story that I wrote last year for All About Beer magazine (thus the reference to October is October of 2012), but the challenges Bud faces remain the same. Sales were down 4.1% in the first quarter of the year.

On the last Saturday night in October a customer stepped up to bar at Off Broadway, a music venue in a part of St. Louis many still call the brewery district. He surveyed six tap handles, three pouring beer from from New Belgium Brewing, two from locally owned Urban Chestnut Brewing, and one from 4 Hands Brewing, also local.

“You have Budweiser?” he asked the bartender, who shook his head from side to side.

“Bud Light?” he asked. The bartender turned and gestured to the bottle selection, represented by those on a shelf behind him. There were no beers made at the Anheuser-Busch brewery less than a 15-minute walk away.

The customer leaned back, closing and opening his eyes with a theatrical look of surprise. “This is St. Louis, isn’t it?” he asked of no one in particular.

Off Broadway1 is not typical. More often, in taverns, pubs and restaurants that share a ZIP Code, 63118, with Anheuser-Busch signs advertising Budweiser hang prominently and Bud and Bud Light are top-selling beers. However, when establishments feel comfortable not even offering Budweiser it reminds those in charge of the brand the challenges they face. In 1988, when one in four beers Americans consumed was a Budweiser almost every new drinker tasted it at least once. Today, when one beer in 12 is a Bud, that’s hardly guaranteed.

“Until two years ago there were a lot of 21 to 27-year-olds who weren’t drinking Bud,” said Nate Scudieri, Budweiser senior brand manager. “It wasn’t as relevant a brand to them.”

Project 12 – which resulted in a variety pack that will be available into the new year as well as the recipe for the next Budweiser, Black Crown – is one of several A-B initiatives intended to keep Budweiser a part of the beer conversation. “What it (Project 12) does, it gets consumers to look at Budweiser differently,” Scudieri said. “It exists to give people a reason to try Budweiser (itself) again, when they see the sort of things Budweiser is capable of.

“(Drinkers 21 to 27 years old) are interested in finding what’s new in beer. Styles, ABV, color. They want to discover the beers and share them with their friends.”

Mike Kallenberger, who operates Tropos Brand Consulting and previously worked for 30 years at Miller Brewing and MillerCoors, put the challenge in perspective. Smaller brewers have claimed much of that territory, of what those in marketing call share of mind. “It’s much, much bigger (for craft beer) than the percentage of sales,” he said. “Maybe 40 or 50 percent of the quote, unquote, conversation.”

When the plans to release Black Crown early in 2013 were announced, a Huffington Post headline called it a “Stodgy Brand’s Crowdsourcing Play For Hipster Cred.” Although A-B collected feedback from 25,000 consumers before picking three beers for the variety pack, the recipes themselves were the product of the dozen brewmasters in charge of the company’s American breweries.

They collaborated on the beers, creating six that took the names of the ZIP Codes where they were brewed. Consumers tasted them and provided feedback throughout the summer, 10,000 of them at the Made in America Festival – a music extravaganza in Philadelphia headlined by Jay-Z over Labor Day weekend, and another effort to entice drinkers to reappraise how they think about Budweiser.

All 12 brewmasters served samples in Philadelphia. “I poured more beer that one day than I have all the rest of my life,” said Jim Bicklein, who is in charge of the St. Louis brewery. He and Katie Rippel from the Fort Collins, Colo., plant wrote the recipe for 63118. Brewers at smaller breweries often pour beer at festivals, but not those who supervise Anheuser-Busch facilities. “One thing that struck me was all the questions,” Bicklein said. “They were genuinely interested in how we make these beers.”

The common component in the six was Budweiser yeast. One beer that didn’t make it into the three-beer sampler included coriander, orange peel and lemon peel. The package includes four each of three beers: a lager aged on bourbon staves and vanilla beans in Virginia (ZIP 23185), an amber lager brewed in Los Angeles (91406), and the beer brewed in St. Louis (63118).

Budweiser Black Crown will be made using the recipe for 91406. That beer is darker and stronger (6% alcohol by volume compare to 5%) than Budweiser and contains 15 International Bitterness Units (versus 10 in Bud).

When A-B representatives offered sample sizes and collected feedback at participating restaurants and bars in the St. Louis area they talked about bitterness units only when pouring 63118, literally warning drinkers – many of whom had left a pale lager behind at the bar or their table to sample the Project 12 beers – that it came with 18 IBU, compared to 10 in Budweiser.

(In fact, A-B seldom talks about IBU in Bud or its other beers. In 1982, Joe Owades, a legend in brewing circles who is credited with developing the first light beer, estimated the bitterness of Budweiser was equivalent to 20 IBU in 1946, and still 17 in the 1970s.)

For the sake of comparison, Blue Moon Belgian White contains 18 IBU and New Belgium Fat Tire 19, but neither has the “hop presence” of 63118. The bulk of the hops, Mittelfrüh from both the Hallertau and Tettnang regions of Germany, are not added until almost the end of boiling. That preserves more essential oils and results in prominent but delicate floral, spicy and even citrus (but quite different, and more delicate, than the citrus is an America hop like Cascade) aromas.

Bicklein discussed the recipe as he walked along a deck in one of three brewhouses within the St. Louis plant. He talked about brewing something similar to Budweiser in the late nineteenth century, but not simply going to the archives for an old recipe. He included rice because Budweiser sales soared after Adolphus Busch authorized the addition of rice in the 1870s. He used hops from the Tettnang and Hallertau region because those were the hops German immigrants naturally preferred. He added a little caramel malt for color, and like Budweiser itself, 63118 is aged on beechwood chips.

Bicklein motioned toward a large mosaic at one end of the brewhouse, called Germania. Another mosaic, called Americana, used to occupy the wall at the other end, but was moved to a brewery entrance foyer when a control room was added at that end of the brewhouse. He talked about German/American heritage, then paused, considered what he said, and allowed it sounded a bit “goofy.” He smiled sheepishly. “But it’s my story.”

He oversees production of 15 million barrels of beer a year in St. Louis, and more Budweiser than at any of the 42 breweries2 (8 of them in China) where Bud is made. It’s no surprise he knows the beer well. He doesn’t need to have a glass of it beside 93118 to compare the two. His variation on the theme is stronger, 6% ABV, and a bit darker. “I like that caramel note. But it’s also very crisp, (it) has that clean finish, characteristic of Budweiser,” he said, taking a sip of 93118 and setting it down. “The hop character is unique. There’s more of that on the aroma. The esters (some fruity) are not as pronounced as Budweiser.”

Maybe not a beer designed to claim much “hipster cred,” but one that was worth talking about.

*****

1 Off Broadway since added cans of Bud Light Lime-A-Rita and Bud Light Lime Straw-Ber-Rita to the shelf behind the bar.

2 The number is now up to 45.

America’s #1 rated brewery?

I’m passing this along because even though it’s not exactly new I hadn’t seen it until the other day and it strikes me as too silly not to point out.

The headline in Madison, Wis., reads: “Feud brews between Capital, Bud.”

Capital Brewery outside of Madison wants to trademark the phrase “America’s #1 Rated Brewery.”

Anheuser-Busch objects, and the legal challenge consists of documents totaling more than 150 pages.

Capital’s trademark application is based on an award from the 1998 World Beer Championships, which are held by the Beverage Tasting Institute. Capital ended the year ranked seventh overall with an average score of 90.6. The six top brewers were all from Europe, hence the phrase “America’s #1 Rated Brewer.”

I’ve rambled on enough here (and of course will again) about the folly of assigning numbers to beer. And although the BTI often gives high scores to beers I really like I wouldn’t base a decision to buy a beer based on their scores or tasting notes.

But now I’m thinking, 150 pages of legal documents . . . A-B seems to be taking this seriously. Maybe I should as well.

On second thought, it’s still nothing but silly.

Have you heard about Bud Dubbel?

The SessionHow excited must the people at Anheuser-Busch be about the advent of The Session?

Certainly they must have been disappointed that nobody blogged about Bare Knuckle Stout for the first round of The Session.

Apparently they don’t want to be left out again.

Is it coincidence that Alan McLeod has chosen dubbels as the topic for April 6 and A-B seems to be brewing a beer to that style?

They are. Really. OK, we won’t be looking for it before April 6. Instead of pretending they did it for us it’s time to remove tongue from cheek (thus making it easier to properly taste beer).

Miller’s Brew Blog reports that A-B filed a certificate of label approval application with the Treasury Department’s Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau for three new beers under the Faust banner. Of course that doesn’t guarantee anything, particularly widespread distribution.

The beers are Faust Belgian Style Dubbel (7% abv), Faust Dortmunder Style Lager (5.5%), and Faust Early American Pilsner (5%). (And how about a collective hmmm for that last one?) The brands are attributed to the Beechwood Brewing Group.

The SessionA-B first created a Faust beer for the Oyster House and Restaurant, naming it for its owner, A. E. Tony Faust (best friend of brewery founder Adolphus Busch). In the 1990s the brewery experimented with a series of specialty beers called American Originals. These included American Hop Ale and a golden colored lager called Faust.

The Brew Blog has a long list of other A-B products recently killed or possibly in the works, but these Faust beers look the most interesting.

Even if the Dubbel isn’t in time for what Alan’s calling the “Son of Session.”

Spike Lee directed beer ads debut

Anheuser-Busch will unveil new advertisements this weekend as part of its “Here’s to Beer” campaign.

This weekend’s ads ask a simple question: With whom would you most like to drink a beer?

In a spot directed by Spike Lee, Lee stars and answers the question himself: Jackie Robinson.

In another ad (also directed by Lee) Michael Imperioli, who plays the character Christopher Moltisanti on The Sopranos, chooses Humphrey Bogart.

Although these ads are financed by A-B they don’t highlight Anheuser-Busch beers. The “Here’s to Beer” campaign officially is a Beer Institute project.

“It does line up beautifully with the whole notion of elevating and enhancing the image of beer,” said Bob Lachky, executive vice president of global industry development at A-B’s domestic brewing unit. “Where else would you do that than with celebrities . . . who you wouldn’t think are beer drinkers?”

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports A-B also will take the idea to the Internet and radio talk shows.

“This whole premise of ‘Who would you like [to have] a beer with?’ has incredible legs,” Lachky said. “We envision this as [an industry] platform that can run a long time.”

Starting Monday, consumers can nominate their own ideal drinking partners at herestobeer.com. The five best entries will post a video explaining why they’d want to share a beer with that person. The winner, selected through an Internet vote, will get a trip to Munich, Germany, to attend Oktoberfest.