All posts by Andrew Schmitt

Andrew is just a guy that likes beer. You can usually find him on the twitters or spending time with his family.

Lift Bridge Brewing Expands

Lift BridgeStillwater’s Lift Bridge Brewery has just added some new tanks to their ever expanding facility. They welcomed 3 new fermenters and 1 new bright tank to their new home yesterday.Newlands

The additional tanks will increase the brewery capacity about 35%, raising the annual output to around 5,000 barrels.

The tanks were manufactured by Newlands Systems Inc., a Canadian brewing equipment supplier.

There is still a bunch of work to do like cleaning and passivating the stainless steel. However, it shouldn’t be long before the new vessels are full of Hop Dish IPA. Mmmm, Hop Dish…..

 

Minneapolis Craft Beer Pioneer Supports Sunday Liquor Sales

To whom it may concern,

My name is Al McCarty, and I have been an avid follower of the craft beer scene nationwide for over 20 years, and a bar industry professional for nearly twenty years. I have been the bar manager of the Blue Nile restaurant in the Seward neighborhood of Minneapolis for almost fifteen of those years, and in that role I have been a pioneer in promoting craft beer at this establishment, long before the current boom of local breweries and beer bars began.

In both of these aspects of my life, I have seen that the lack of Sunday sales of off-premise liquor and beer sales only serves to make Minnesota appear to be a backwards community. Currently, Minnesota counts among only a dozen states in the union that prohibit Sunday liquor sales. We feel proud to consider ourselves culturally, socially and politically progressive, yet we are in the same company as states such as Alabama, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Utah, Texas, and Montana. Many of these communities are our opposites when compared to politics, cultural life, and literacy. Minneapolis was recently named the #3 most literate city in the nation, behind Washington, D.C., and Seattle, Washington. And yet a literate, educated, sophisticated beer drinker in Minneapolis cannot visit a store and buy a well-crafted, sophisticated ale on a Sunday.

The local beer scene has exploded in recent years, with breweries and brewpubs popping up everywhere and striving, positively affecting the economy and the community, Yet, by law, we are still far behind. I was once visited at the Blue Nile by a man from Kansas who drove hundreds of miles for a taste of Surly Darkness Russian Imperial Stout. And yet, he reminded me, he could not walk into a store and buy a bottle in Minnesota on a Sunday, although in Kansas, he could. “What’s wrong with Kansas?” some ask? Not this.

When I point out to some people that we can’t do what some can in Kansas, I hear an astonishingly absurd reply. “Do we want to be like them?” In this case, yes, we do. We want to be like them, because we look backwards, primitive and un-progressive in comparison. In North Dakota, in Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Idaho, Nebraska, and all across the United States of America, sophisticated, educated consumers have the liberty to walk into a store on a Sunday and purchase a bottle, a 6-pack or a growler for their own private consumption at home, but in educated, sophisticated, progressive Minnesota, we are denied that liberty.

We are ahead of Kansas in beer, but in this one small matter whose opposition is antiquated and absurd. Blue laws have not place in the 21st Century. This is a diverse, cosmopolitan, worldly community of many cultures, who should no longer be constrained to the rule of a conservative religious culture. The arguments against allowing Sunday sales are flimsy and baseless. “You can always plan ahead and buy on Saturday,” I hear. That’s not logic and it’s not a sound argument. Why should we have to force this upon ourselves, as consumers? Some of us do not have the luxury in our work schedule to visit a liquor store to provide for our Sunday drinking plans by checking in on Saturday. These arbitrary limitations on our liberties as consumers do not hold water. Arguments against Sunday liquor sales by those in the packaged beverage world seem to only be based on an effort to do have to go to work on a Sunday, or to not have to compete with anyone else who is willing to do so. There is simply no other industry or craft who is limited by these laws, outside of car salesmen, and none of them have any problem with opening or not opening on a Sunday.

Al McCarty, craft beer legend and bar manager.
Al McCarty, craft beer advocate and bar manager.

So, ladies and gentlemen, esteemed legislators, I would hope you would consider how current laws affect the economy, as well as our communities standing among or against others in light of these same laws. Do we want to stand in the same circle as Alabama, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Utah, or Texas, despite how we appear in so many other regards, or do we want to allow for this most simple thing, the freedom to enter a store on a Sunday and buy a bottle of beer or wine for home consumption?

Yours, sincerely,
Al McCarty,
Minneapolis,
Minnesota

Stores Supporting Sunday Sales

These are stores that have communicated in some form or another that they support Sunday alcohol sales in Minnesota.
Ask your store if they support Sunday sales, and let us know!
We highly encourage you to support these stores!

Chicago Lake Liquors – Minneapolis
Dinkytown Wine and Spirits – Minneapolis
Four Firkins – St Louis Park
Liquor Boy – St Louis Park
Petschen’s Southview Liquor
Hansen’s Liquor – Stillwater
Merwin Liquors – Minneapolis
Merwin Liquors – Maplewood
Merwin Liquors  – Falcon Heights
Stinson Wine, Beer, and Spirits – Minneapolis
Princess Liquor & Tobacco – Saint Paul
Maddie’s Liquor – Maplewood
Southbridge Liquor – Shakopee
Booze Mart – West Saint Paul
Pairings Food & Wine
Arbor Pointe Liquors


View Stores that support Sunday liquor sales in a larger map

An Open Letter from Mill City Distilling Company

To whom it may concern,

I am writing today to ask you to support three bills that are part of the Liquor Omnibus Bill currently before the House and Senate. These bills are essentially the Surly bill of 2011 applied to distilled spirits. Passage of these bills and modernization of Minnesota’s laws would enable growth of our new, artisan liquor distilling industry. These three bills (House: HF 940, 941, and 942; Senate: SF 623, 624 and 625) would enable a small distillery to sample their products, sell a bottle of spirit to a consumer and sell a cocktail in a hospitality room.

These bills will enable these small, local businesses to create jobs, pay taxes, support local agriculture and tourism. Without passage of these bills, it will be impossible for a home-grown Minnesota distilling industry to emulate our nation-leading craft breweries. Importantly, numerous other states (WI, OR, WA, NY, OH, IA, IL, MO, KS, GA, AR, PA, CA, etc) have passed similar legislation over the past five years that has enabled distilled spirits growth while maintaining public safety. As a neighboring example, Wisconsin has modernized its laws around distillation of alcohol and now boasts at least 9 distilleries.

A potential concern to modernization of these laws is a breakdown of the 3-tier system put in place following Prohibition in 1933. These laws were intended to protect the public from large, vertically-integrated beer companies that owned numerous saloons selling cheap beer prior to 1920. This is not the case with premium quality craft liquor and thus, is not an actual issue.

mill city bobI ask your support for these bills that will help Minnesota create jobs and tax revenues while strengthening local businesses. Thank you.

Sincerely,
Bob McManus
Mill City Distilling Company

 

 

 

Video: House Tax Committee Hearing on Liquor, Wine, and Beer Tax Increase

Part 1 of the hearing to greatly increase the taxes on licensed beverages.
Part 2 of the House Hearing is scheduled to be heard in Taxes Committee on 3/6/2013

HF 0855: Tax rates increased under the alcoholic beverage excise tax, alcohol health and judicial impact fund established, deposit of revenue provided for, and money appropriated.

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