Monday beer links, because pleasure should not be problematic

Some good reading from the past week after a reminder that Alan McLeod will host “The toe in the water revival edition of The Session.” The topic is “What is the best thing to happen in good beer since 2018?” Participation is welcomed.

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LEDE OF THE WEEK

Alcohol research has a problem with pleasure. On the one hand, pleasure is a difficult phenomenon to research, at least from an epidemiological or clinical perspective. On the other, because of its predominating focus on harms, public health-oriented alcohol research and advocacy can appear to find pleasure problematic in the moral sense. Although most people drink because they enjoy it, much public health discourse downplays pleasure as either marginally significant or as a kind of misperception driven by external forces including marketing, custom, social norms and peer pressure.

From Taking pleasure seriously: Should alcohol research say more about fun?

This is something of a cheat. The link is to an academic paper (h/T Phil Mellows). There have been plenty of posts the past week related the surgeon general’s warning about alcohol and risk of cancer. Lots of good, bad and ugly. I am linking to none of them. There is no denying the negative impact alcohol has on your body. It is stupid to claim otherwise. The rest I leave to Mary-Chapin Carpenter.

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QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“When I know I’m lighting the fire, that’s when I love to have (Leann Folláin). It’s a beer to savour and enjoy. I’ll make sure the doors are closed, that I’m not going to be disturbed. It’s something you want to spend a bit of time with.”

          — Ed Cahill, who runs Tully’s pub in Carlow town
From The Irish for Stout — O’Hara’s Leann Folláin and the Making of a Cult Classic

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YOU MIGHT ALSO ENJOY

Rule #1: Beer Is Almost Never About Beer. “The idea of having a beer comes with guilt, obligation, wonder, intellectual curiosity, respect for tradition, desire for novelty, camaraderie, budgetary concern, the potential to do someone a good turn, and the sheer joy of bouncing around the city like a pinball. The promise of an idle afternoon that might be wasted but isn’t frittered away. Hopefully people will be happy to see me.” To which I will add, it’s also OK if at least sometimes it is about beer.

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Monday beer links: The future, Belgian woes & Grodziskie

The other side of Marcin Ostajewski, head brewer at Browar Grodzisk

The back side of Marcin Ostajewski, head brewer at Browar Grodzisk in Poland, whose sweatshirt signals how happy he is to share information about brewing Grodziskie. Details in final link below.

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In the final Taplines podcast, frequent guest Maureen Ogle joins host Dave Infante to talk about the future of America’s beer industry. There’s a big picture and a smaller picture. As usual, it is the niche that interests me. So hang around for the final eight minutes.

That’s when Ogle says, “It’s easy to focus on A-B and Molson Coors and so on and so forth, but, in fact, a lot of families, thousands of them, have been able to build small businesses based on alcohol.” And, “A lot of families are raising their kids and paying their mortgages, by owning a small brewery.”

Ogle has been at work for some time on a book about the Marti family and August Schell Brewing, which has been family owned since 1860. It’s a great story, but many breweries with shorter histories (meaning every one in the United States other than Yuengling) have similar stories to tell. I thought about this listening to what Lauren Buzzeo has to say — during the Drink Beer, Think Beer podcast labeled Predictions for Beer in 2025 — about finding stories. There are not many predictions tossed about, but toward the end, Buzzeo and John Hall and Andy Crouch talk about how much they like reading full stop in print. Me too.

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QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“He called me a ‘bitch of a landlady’, to which I said, ‘From you, I’ll take that as a compliment’. He wanted to fight me.” . . . “I don’t take shit. Me and my husband have a rule that if there is an issue with a man, I deal with it – there’s less danger of confrontation.”

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It’s Monday and these are neither beer links nor authorized Golden Pints

I suggested last Monday that there would be no post today. In fact, there are (almost) no links. However, Sunday Boak & Bailey posted their Golden Pints, and on Bluesky Alan McLeod “firmly suggested” that others should as well. Although I’ve already done something similar for Craft Beer & Brewing, I value staying in McLeod’s good graces. (Another) although B&B and McLeod offer templates I’ve chosen to follow my own path, with a minimum of words and a maximum of images (stick around for the tap handles).

Best live music in a brewhouse

Chris Cuzme (the guy with the sax) leads a Wednesday evening jam at Fifth Hammer Brewing in Long Island City.

Regular Wednesday “Brewside Lounge” jam at Fifth Hammer Brewing in Long Island City, N.Y.

Best pub

Foxy John's, a bar and hardware store in Dingle, Ireland

Foxy John’s in Dingle, Ireland, a bar and a hardware store, which is on my Best in 2024 list

Best brewery taproom bathroom trash bin

Bathroom at Dageraad Brewing in Burnaby, BC

The taproom bathroom at Dageraad Brewing in Burnaby, British Columbia

Best afterparty

National Black Brewers Association GABF afterparty at Spangalang Brewery Denver

National Black Brewers Association shindig at Spangalang Brewery in Denver after the Great American Beer Festival Thursday session

Best beer festival

Colorado Collab Fest glass

Colorado Collab Fest (and not only because of the great glassware)

Most modest beer name

“Silver Medal Worthy” from Launch Pad Brewery in Aurora, Colorado, which won Gold at the Great American Beer Festival

Best brewery shadow

A shadow, as seen at Pinthouse Brewing in Austin, Texas

Pinthouse Brewing in Austin, Texas

Best brewhouse entry

Atlantucky Brewing, Atlanta, Georgia

Atlantucky Brewing, Atlanta, Georgia

Best ‘I’ll be home after I stop at the library’ brewpub

Little Library at Colorado Boy in Montrose, Colorado

Little Library at Colorado Boy Pizzeria and Brewing in Montrose, Colorado

Best tap handles

Tap handles at Structures Brewing in Bellingham, Washington

Structures Brewing in Bellingham, Washington

Monday beer links: That’s a wrap on 2024

Happy Holidays: Beer label

In their monthly newsletter (available at Substack), Boak & Bailey ask, “Are you feeling Christmassy yet?” I am, and I am also ready to be done with beer-related lists and stories about Guinness and “splitting the G.” At some point, and it has passed, I see no reason to share them. Not today, and not next week. This will be the last collection of links in 2024. See you January 6, 2025.

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NEWSWORTHY

Bart Watson Appointed as President and CEO of the Brewers Association. That’s the news, and this link includes a take on the news.

To this I will add that, by chance, an anecdote from 2015 I chose to include in a story about Watson that seems relevant today. It was part of Beer Advocate magazine’s regular “Will Work for Beer” series, and began . . .

“Bart Watson really does think this way. At 3:59 p.m. on Sept. 10, he tweeted: ‘Flight attendant says flight from SFO to Sacramento is 13 minutes. It’s 37 degrees warmer there. That’s almost +3 degrees per minute.’

“Forty-two minutes later he followed up: ‘The flight took 17m40s – There must have been some serious headwinds.’”

Even then, it seemed as if he was preparing for the challenge accepted last week.

RateBeer will cease operations as of February 1, 2025. Or not. More than a hundred replies follow, so you are to free to choose what you think may happen Feb. 1.

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QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“I will say that for all of the sensory experience, recipe development, and other little skills I’m working on, there are some fundamental pieces – tools in the toolbox – that I still need. Some of that will come with more time, like rebuilding a heat exchanger. What I’m looking for is the bones, the raw physics and chemistry of brewing. It’s like, as a musician I can know chords and scales, and then I can learn theory that increases my capacity to create what I want. Same thing.”

          — Aaron Brussat

From Q & A with Glen Hay Falconer Foundation 2024 Brewing Scholarship recipient Aaron Brussat

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YOU MIGHT ALSO ENJOY

The Nottinghamshire pubs combating loneliness and encouraging the art of conversation. “Pubs should be and often are the heart of the community. It’s where everyone is welcome. It’s where people who are struggling and are lonely can go and find friendship and companionship.”

Observations from a dive bar. To which I will add two words, “third place.”

Humphrey’s world: how the Samuel Smith beer baron built Britain’s strangest pub chain. A very long and very strange story impossible to summarize in a few words. But the part about villages that are left without a single pub is pretty sad.

London – A Small Cask Snapshot. Might as well throw in a visit to a Samuel Smith pub.

Texas brewery sells out of $300 bottles of beer. First, a question: How many bottles did they sell? Second, an observation: the bottles are 6-liters, so that works out to $25 for a half liter. Not cheap, but after reading this story I visited a store down the road that had more than a dozen 500 ml bottles selling for more. Third, this story oozes with the gushiness (“a rich and delightful barrel-aged masterpiece’) I think Alan McLeod would enjoy.

The Colour of Vienna Lager: Somebody Got It Right. Fair warning, this is about style guidelines.

Monday beer links: High hopes and dashed hopes

As seen at Blue Jay Brewing in St. Louis

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“Well, the first shot I got was in a dynamite truck
The driver kept me telling me his bad luck
As we swerved around the curves I began to shout
I said, hey-ey mister would you let me out?
I had my hopes up high, I never thought that I
Would ever wonder why I ever said good bye
I had my hopes up high

– Joe Ely, “I Had My Hopes Up High” (click to listen)

Another week of beer news and conjecture. Another week of high hopes and dashed hopes.

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QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“Even if you have really incredible beer and an incredible space and an incredible community, it’s still very challenging to operate during this time.”

          — Massachusetts Brewers Guild executive director Katie Stinchon
From Why so many Mass. breweries are closing (and what you can do about it)

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LEDE OF THE WEEK

One Christmas Eve in the late 19th century, the family on the Hovland farm in Hardanger, Norway, was sitting down for a festive dinner. The food was on the table, the candles were lit, and the big wooden mug was full of beer.

Then, suddenly, enormous hands appeared between the logs from which their house was built, tilting one side of the house into the air. In the gap between the logs, they could see giant eyes staring at them, glittering in the candlelight.

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