3 Georgia breweries medaled at 2014's Great American Beer Festival! Gold for @MondayNight, Bronze for @creaturebeer & @CEBC_Sav. From Creative Loafing Atlanta:
Each year since 1982, beer geeks have made their annual pilgrimage to Denver, piling into the Colorado Convention Center by the thousands for the Great American Beer Festival. There, they spend three days sampling beers from all over the country...
* Savannah's Coastal Empire Beer Co. won bronze in the Herb and Spice Beer category for its Dawn Patrol Breakfast Stout.
* Athens' Creature Comforts Brewing Co. won bronze in the American Style Brett Beer category for its Curiosity No. 2.
* Atlanta's Monday Night Brewing won gold in the Wood and Barrel-Aged Beer category for its Bourbon Barrel Drafty Kilt.
All three breweries are first-time GABF winners. Three is the most medals Georgia's won at GABF, and that's happened five times now: 2014, 2011, 2009, 2002, and 2000. This year marks the first GABF since 2007 where SweetWater or Terrapin didn't bring home a medal.
Congrats to all three, and here's to Georgia winning a few more next year!
@CL_Atlanta & @austinlouisray recently provided at great run-down of up & coming Georgia craft breweries.
Georgia Brewery Watch 14 new breweries to look forward to in 2014 One year ago almost to the day, Creative Loafing devoted its cover to the many in-progress craft breweries and brewpubs cropping up in and around Atlanta. Of the eight forthcoming beer makers highlighted in that piece, four — Jekyll, Three Taverns, Eventide, and Reformation — have opened. By CL's count, at least 14 are currently in the works this year. Will they all introduce beer to the market in 2014? Not likely. But the crowded pack represents a continuing upward trend that shows no signs of slowing down anytime soon.
The article includes a nice overview of some great additions to metro ATL's embarrassment of brewing riches, including the previously profiled Southern Brewing Company, and some intriguing ideas like Geer Beer and Slice & Pint. With regard to the latter, pizza and beer sound good to me. Any chance they would want to open a second one in the CSRA?
It looks like I may have to convince the wife to take some more side trips to the ATL....
Of course there is a cluster in the Atlanta region, as one might expect. But what about Georgia's second biggest city, Augusta? Well....Augusta sits smack dab in the middle of a "No Brew Zone".
While the aforementioned Aiken Brewing Company and brewpub is about an hour away in South Carolina. But on the Georgia side of the border Augusta residents have to travel at least 90 minutes (and not in a direct route) just to find the closest craft brewery. And the plethora of locations around Atlanta can be up to 3 hours away, making any visit a long day trip, or an overnight venture.
In pursuit of my goal of seeing good local craft beer take hold here in Augusta, I wanted to look at the question of what would it take for someone to start a craft brewing operation from the ground up. So it is my intent to talk with some of the newly arrived regional craft brewers, and see how they got (or are getting) their dreams off the ground. First out of the chute is Southern Brewing Company of Athens, GA.
Founded by Brian Roth and Rick Goddard, after many years of dreaming and planning SBC is on the verge of production, and well on their way to opening their own facility in Athens. Below is a Q&A I had with Brian about where SBC came from, and where it is going...
-Tell us a little
about yourselves. Your website
says you have a good deal of experience in both industry and homebrewing. What are your backgrounds, and how has
that helped you make the jump to commercial brewing?
Rick Goddard and Brian Roth
I have worked
in beer distribution for 22 years and started homebrewing in 1993. The first craft beer that I had
any experience with from a sales standpoint was RedHook back in 1997. They had signed a distribution
agreement with A-B and had started expanding their territory. I also worked with Red Brick out of
Atlanta around that time. In
2003 I started lobbying for the beer wholesaler side of the beer
industry in Washington DC. The
NBWA goes to DC once a year to talk to the house and senate about
pertinent issues. This is where I
met Rick Goddard. Rick was the lobbyist
for the Beer Institute and lobbied on behalf of 95% of the brewers in America. He lived in DC and spent over 7
years working on issues for the production side of the industry. Rick is friends with a large number of
craft brewers and at the time I was working on bringing more craft beer into
distribution in the state of Georgia.
That made us a great fit for hanging out and talking shop. Rick was an incredible resource and I
enjoyed meeting everyone in his network.
- What got you started in homebrewing?
We had a gentleman
working with us at the distributor named Kenny Havener. He was one of the greatest draft
beer guys I have ever met. He was
in charge of building, fixing, selling and working with all things related to
draft beer for the distributor. I
was twenty-four and my wife was pregnant with our son. At the time I was a sign
painter for the distributor and I did banners and murals etc. Kenny had me design his labels
and let me help him brew. I
was the guy that helped sterilize bottles and clean. Kenny was like a wizard to me back
then. I was amazed at the whole
process and how effortless he made it look. He lived on Nantahala St in Athens, GA so he affectionately
named his operation after that street.
Oddly enough there is a commercial brewery by that name now up near
Hickory, NC. Kenny let me help him
out but eventually moved to North Carolina. That left me with a passion for brewing and zero equipment. It also made me realize that Kenny was
the composer and director. I could
do anything he told me to do but I couldn’t solo at that point. So I spent a few years drinking great
craft beer and reading everything I could get my hands on. Kenny’s operation was a partial grain
stovetop setup and I wanted to go all grain. Back then that felt like jumping out of an airplane without
a chute. I didn’t own a single
piece of equipment at the time and that added to the complexity.
- What has been your favorite style to brew?
Lambics. We've been doing lambics for a few
years now and to do it properly takes a ridiculous amount of time and patience. You have to ferment for an entire year
before you bottle and then you have to wait for another year for that to mature. The complexity will change in the
bottle for up to four more years.
It's frustratingly slow but to watch that beer change that slowly has
taught us a lot. Mainly, it
taught us that great beer takes patience.
Conversely we love brewing everything. In the summer we love a Kolsch. That beer ferments quickly and is so clean and
fresh. Kolsch doesn't age well so
we never feel guilty about making that style disappear fast. We became famous for brewing in a giant
pumpkin every year. We actually
plumb a pumpkin and use it as a mash tun.
This year we had two Giant Pumpkins running side by side. We turn it into an all day event
and invite a ton of folks to come over to help. So from an entertainment perspective that's our
favorite.
- Before you started the process, had you been dreaming of going
commercial for a while, or did you have an epiphany one day while stirring the
mash?
Rick came up with the
idea. I was constantly picking his
brain and using his network to convince people to distribute in Georgia. He asked me why I didn't just open a
brewery. That was 7-8 years
ago. I laughed at first and then
he got serious. He said, "No
really, why don't we open a brewery together?” Rick and I are both Air-Force
Brats. His dad had retired in
Warner Robins and my dad's last duty station my senior year had been Warner
Robins. I had never lived anywhere
longer than a few years and after I graduated in 1989 I followed my high school
sweet heart to UGA and we planted roots.
I love the south and Rick was looking to come back to Georgia. Brooklyn had just rolled out in
the state and Rick is good friends with Steve Hindy the owner of Brooklyn. Rick suggested that Brooklyn would
struggle in Georgia in the beginning because a New York brand wouldn't generate
a lot of interest (he was right, they had a hard time those first few years). Southerners like the south. So Gary Fish, the owner of Deschutes
suggested that if that were the case Rick should open a brewery and call it
Southern Brewing. That was seven
years ago and stemmed from a quick conversation that Rick had at a bar
with those guys. I had started
partial grain brewing solo about nine years ago and jumped into all-grain eight
years ago with an igloo cooler. I
had been saving up a chunk of money to restore a 1973 VW Bug for my son and
took all of that and started building an all grain system at the house with a
proper RIMS system and a yeast lab.
- Your website also mentioned that you have done extensive research,
visiting well over 200 breweries. What
were the top questions that you “asked over and over again” during your visits.
I added it up the
other day after you asked this again.
My number now is 425 individual breweries. I feel very lucky to have been able to visit these breweries
from a distribution standpoint. Craft
beer guys love to share their knowledge and I had a lot to learn. I was fortunate enough to be friends
with Owen Ogletree who is a huge beer enthusiast and writes for many
beer publications. He runs Classic
City Brewfest in Athens every April and that's one of the longest running
festivals in the south. Owen
taught me a lot and took me on a couple of trips over to Europe. We went all over Bavaria, Scotland
and England. Those beer cultures
blew my mind. I had lived in
Europe as a kid but didn't pay attention as much to how beer was made
back then. So after talking to
Rick I made a list of everything I lacked from a knowledge standpoint and a
network standpoint. If you're
going to jump out of a plane and you have to pack your own chute you
better do a lot of research. Obvious
questions related to the size of systems or what a breweries SOPs were for
various parts of the brewing process.
Those taught me a lot. The
one question that always started a two hour conversation that became a
classroom for me is' "What was your biggest mistake. What would you have done differently?"
I realized it's the one thing that nobody asks but everyone loves to talk
about it. It's hard work getting a
business going and I think we're all proudest of the moments that define us and
shape us. Those stories are
fascinating. I would love to write
a book about those. It would save
a lot of people a lot of headache and frustration. There were some very funny stories and usually ended hours
later at a bar somewhere.
- What was some of the best advice that you got out of that
research? What was the most surprising?
One answer
covers both. Quit trying to
perfect a recipe or style, and to just brew everything and anything. I talked to a lot of really good
brewers and I asked them how they scale recipes up. Sam Calagione gave me one of the greatest answers. He had been brewing on a Sabco system
at his brewpub for a long while and that allowed him to do really small batches
and to throw in a lot of crazy stuff.
That's where he learned to be creative and throw caution to the wind. You learn the most from your mistakes. I love it when we have a life lesson on
a batch. New home brewers that
brew with us get torn out of frame when one of their assumptions get kicked in
the guts. To me, great brewers
know how to adjust. They're like
fighter pilots. Something always
goes wrong on a brewday. It might
be a pump failure or a stuck mash or any number of things. It's experience that keeps that batch
from failing and sometimes it takes guts to make a split second decision. It also takes knowing when a batch just
didn't work and knowing why it didn't work. So many young brewers throw failures down the drain. I bottle them and make people drink
them when they come to brewday. You
have to know what off flavors are and why they happen. Having a living example of a bad batch
helps educate. We bottle
everything and we make sure every batch has a short fill and that one bottle is
clear glass, etc. We want to know
how time, heat, light and age affect our beers and their ingredients. I've known brewers that have great
breweries and they've only brewed three beers. They brewed them a thousand times each but it's all they've
done. They have great breweries
but they struggle from a creative standpoint.
- Was there any one question that everyone answered the same way?
Great question! It
made me snort-chuckle a little.
I've never even gotten two people at the same brewery to answer a
question the same. That's what I
love about this process. It's the
art side. Chef's all have their
own tricks and even though we use the same ingredients it's amazing how
many variables affect the outcome.
- In your leap from avid homebrewers to being fully committed craft
brewers, how difficult was it to “scale up” your recipes and processes?
This is a big
difficulty and we have yet to do it for our system. You have to brew on a system to know it's efficiencies
and the recipe needs to be built around that. We're going to contract brew at Jailhouse in Hampton and
Glenn knows his system inside out.
That will make it easier to dial us in. However, we'll have to re-do everything again when get our
system up and going. That
keeps it exciting. The other
issue is that all brewing ingredients are agricultural. Each season is different from year
to year. Great brewers are always
adjusting their recipes. When I
buy ingredients I taste them first, especially at local homebrew shops. Grains go stale, hops start oxidizing,
and yeast becomes less viable. I
only brew with ingredients that smell fresh and taste fresh. I don't use close dated yeast. I don't go to a homebrew shop with a
recipe in hand. I go with an idea and
build the recipe based on that.
Brewers that are tweaking recipes tend to buy the same ingredients all
the time. They have to. It's their recipe. The problem is that specialty grains
sit for long periods at home brew shops and even get infected by weevils,
mice, etc. The
humidity in Georgia is ridiculous and that really affects efficiencies.
- Have you found that being in Athens and close to Atlanta/Decatur, both
areas with strong craft brewing cultures, a help or a hindrance to getting a
small brewery off the ground?
Yes. I am a lover of craft beer first
and foremost. The fact that I can
drive to some really awesome breweries within an hour of my house is a huge
bonus. I love the Georgia brewing
community. I could write a
separate book on each of those guys and their struggles and triumphs. It’s really a great group of folks. Out of the 400+ breweries I have been
to only two have been uncooperative.
Those two are in the wrong business. Everyone else always helps. This is the only industry that I know of that works
like that. If a brewery needs help
other breweries are right there helping out, especially locally.
- What ware the top 3 (or more) things you need to start a small craft
brewery?
1st - You need to
really love what you're doing. Running
a business is hard work. Brewing
raises that to a ridiculous level.
As a brewery owner you're doing everything and getting paid after your
employees and usually less than them for a long time. You're going to be cleaning toilets, learning to weld,
running tours, brewing, running promotions, selling in the market, cutting the
grass, the accountant, the HR person, The counselor, training everyone,
developing recipes, and the list goes on forever.
2nd - Make sure you
own your brewery. Funding is
really tough. It took us over two
years to put together our team. Don't
give up controlling ownership and make sure there's room to give up more share
later without giving up control. I
have seen a lot of people lose ownership of their dream by being impatient. We had to knock on doors and have
heated discussions with a lot of friends and family. Don't over promise anything and let everyone know that
you're not going to generate revenue, much less profit, for a long time. You need a group of investors
that are happy with little or no return. If you don't have that I wouldn't do it. Use all your resources and ask a
million questions. Use banks to
help learn. Local agencies are
awesome Small Business Development Group, Small Business Administration, etc. Don't over capitalize but don't under
capitalize either. Right now it
takes about two million dollars to set up a proper brewery. You can do it for less but the work to
grow becomes exponential.
3rd- Know the industry. Beer is a regulated industry that is
controlled at the federal, state and local level. Each of those levels is complex and confusing. The three-tiered system mandated by the
21st amendment places control of the system with State and Local agencies. Georgia has a lot of strict enforcement
and laws that, at times, make it unfriendly. When you sign with a GA distributor it's a permanent
relationship. PERMANENT. Make sure you choose the best system
and do your research. Make sure
they have resources and passion for the industry. Make sure they don't have too many breweries or too few
people. Think about growth and 10
years from now. Make sure that it
firs with your business plan.
4th- Write a business
plan. I spent 5 years researching
ours and it took close to another 900 hours to finish it. We worked with the SBDG at UGA to polish
ours up before we submitted it to banks.
Learn how to take criticism.
Realize that you don't have all the information and research all your
choices. Where are you getting
your equipment? Draft, Cans, Bottles? Where are you going to get your supplies?
Yeast lab? Yeast supplier? Employees? Growth model? You better meet all the
other brewers in the state and start making relationships with retailers and
distributors.
- Someday in the future when an avid homebrewer comes to Southern
Brewery’s shiny brewing facility, what is the one piece of advice you would
give them?
Know what you want in
life and figure out how to get it.
Make sure that it doesn't conflict with other plans. For me, family is my number one
priority. I wasn't going to open a
brewery until my son graduated from high school. I have many friends that own and run breweries with
kids still at the house. They do a
great job balancing both. I knew
that I would put too much time in at the brewery to be the dad that I
wanted to be. I wanted to
coach my son's soccer team and attend all his events. Travel soccer requires a huge commitment and you can't coach
from a bar on Saturday via phone.
He graduated last May.
I can now devote my time to running my brewery the same way. Be committed.
- Tell us about the first recipes you are looking to produce when you start
production. And what time frame are
you shooting for?
A lot of short run
local stuff. We are going to focus
on finishing the brewery out and making that a cool space. We will have a farmers market and we'll
be brewing with local farmers. I
do a lot of growing around the house, Hops and fruit. We use that to make some
really nice short run stuff. We'll
also be working on beers that will work well in the South. Kolsch, Berliner-Weiss, Pale Ales,
Lambics, IPAs and some unique barrel aging. All in due time.
It's hard to be too creative when you're contract brewing. We'll be in a holding pattern
early on and that will depend on seasonality. Our timeline is always flexible. Don't get your heart set on definitive times. So much depends on a myriad of
uncontrollables (i.e. the weather). We're slated to brew on our own system
in mid July. We should start
contract brewing in late January or early February. We're waiting on a handful of
uncontrollables to get pinned down.
-
I see from the proposed brewery plans, that you will have a phased rollout. What will be the size of your initial
system (in bbl) and facility? And what do you envision as the size of a
full (4-phase) operation?
Initial system will be
30 BBLS and we will be able to reach 2,450 barrels before we need to buy more
tanks. It would be hard to imagine
what the final build out would be.
The next brewhouse size would logically be a 50 or 100-barrel system. We will have enough room for either. The market will dictate the growth and
help us decide which system is necessary.
We hope it's 100, but only time will tell.
-
Lastly, and most importantly, will you have a tasting room?
We will definitely
have a tasting room! That's one of the most important pieces. From marketing stand point you can't
beat it. We'll run tour hours
similar to everyone else.
Many thanks to Brian for being my first real foray into beer journalism. For anyone in the Augusta area who dream of opening their own craft brewery (And I know a few of you!), keep your eye on SBC as an example of what it takes.
I hope to get to Athens and watch them work, and perhaps inaugurate their new brewery when it opens.
Terrapin Beer Co (Athens, GA) made a series of announcements at a press meeting last night. One of the bigger announcements was the addition of a can to the brewery’s lineup.
In addition to RecreationALE, Terrapin will be adding a new west-coast style IPA called Hi-5 IPA. The beer, while not officially brewed yet, will be full of Pacific Northwest hops.
I really love that more and more craft brewers are getting into the whole canning thing. I think there are so many benefits to it from a consumer perspective. I guess we will see if the hi-end beer drinking world can overcome a long standing (and mostly deserved) bias against beer in cans. More on this later....
@CigarCityBeer is one of the more prolific craft breweries in the southeast. But you can you find its many different products in Augusta?
If you know where to look, you can find some six-packs of their flagship Jai Alai IPA in some bottle shops (Toast, Beverage Outlet, Woody's). But I have yet to see it on tap anywhere. There has even been a select amount of their Southern Slice (collaboration with Athen's Terrapin Beer), as well as bombers of its Black Ash lager (collaboration with Atlanta's Max Lager's).
One can only hope that this is a sign of things to come. Hunahpu, perhaps???
Here in Augusta, the second Sunday in April usually means one thing. The final round of the Masters. But this year in Athens, it will mean the return of the Classic City Brew Fest for its 19th iteration.
On April 13 from 2:30 to 6:00 PM, enjoy one of the top beer festivals to be found anywhere, which last year featured over 350 different brews, and 21 cask ales. Tickets are $39.99, and all proceeds benefit the Athens-Area Humane Society. As the pictures above suggests, it does sell out, so get your tickets now! Additionally, if you might want to volunteer to work the festival, you can do so here.