Category Archives: Newsfeed

MN Beer Activists feed of news, events, education, legislation related to beer, wine, and spirits in Minnesota.

Brewers of British Beers Bust Out The Cans

Northeast Minneapolis favorites, NorthGate Brewing are the latest Minnesota brewer to add cans to their beer serving arsenal. Bitter Fool IPA, Maggie’s Leap, Pumpion, and Get Together are all available in the portable and arguably superior vessel. Ok, maybe it’s not an argument really. Cans block out all UV light, are more durable, and little to no air gets in, thereby preventing the decaying effects of oxidation. But I digress. Check out these brews!
northgate-brewing-canned-beers
Bitter Fool IPA: Bitter Fool IPA features a strong biscuit malt base, balanced out with a tropical fruit and herbal profile provided by the one of England’s newest hops, Jester. Bitter Fool IPA brings new world flavor to this British IPA. New hops. New BRITISH hops. Perfect for cheering on your favorite team or drowning your sorrows if they lose. C’mon, this is a Minnesota beer after all.
SRM: 9, ABV: 7.3% IBU: 70, Fl. Oz.: 16

Now on Nitro!

northgate-on-nitroMaggie’s Leap: Maggie’s Leap is NorthGate’s take on a traditional Milk Stout, made unique by exclusively serving it on nitrogen. Coffee roast flavor leads the way, supported by milk chocolate and residual sweetness presented on a soft palate. Did I forget to mention that this is Minnesota’s first nitro stout in a can? Seems as though a certain Irish behemoth may have some competition.
SRM: 38, ABV: 4.9%, IBU: 26 Fl. Oz.: 22

Pumpion: Pumpion – which is the Old English term for “pumpkin” – is our seasonal pumpkin spice beer. The addition of seasonal spices in the kettle combined with real pumpkin and vanilla result in the delicious taste of pumpkin pie with an English Pale Ale base. Sounds like the perfect beer for bonfire season.
SRM: 9, ABV: 6.0%, IBU: 38, Fl. Oz.: 22

Get Together: Get Together has an alcohol by volume (ABV) that could be considered passive, yet features an aggressive hop flavor. Overall, it’s an IPA that’s made for all of Minnesota. While the State Fair is in the rear view mirror, this beer that shares it’s nickname is here to stay.
SRM: 8, ABV: 4.4, IBU: 50, Fl. Oz: 16

These tasty brews are available right at the brewery or at a finer bottle, ahem, can shop near you.

Culinary Veteran Taking The Helm at Grand Rounds Brewing

Grand Rounds Brewing Company & Restaurant, a neighborhood pub in the heart of downtown Rochester, has hired Jennifer Richards as kitchen manager. Richards, who grew up in nearby Plainview, brings an extensive and varied experience to the southern Minnesota favorite.

That experience started inauspiciously, with a burned cookbook. With that minor setback behind her, she began to excel at an early age. She rose through the ranks, graduating from the Culinary Arts Institute and spent time in the kitchens of the News Room Restaurant and Elegant Confections in the Twin Cities and The Broadstreet Cafe, City Cafe, and Sontes in Rochester.

It was at this time that Jennifer decided to strike out on her own. In 2008 she opened the Rainbow Cafe in Pine Island, Minnesota. During her tenure there, the restaurant featured an ever-changing seasonal menu featuring locally sourced ingredients. The menu that she has designed for Grand Rounds combines that approach with the brew pub’s beer friendly feel.

grand rounds brewpub

“I’m really excited to join Grand Rounds. The beer is phenomenal, their staff is strong and our local culinary scene is really booming right now. It’s a great time to love high- quality food and drink in Rochester and I’m so happy to be a part of it!” says Richards.

Richards not only brings substantial knowledge and experience to the position but starting October 3, she will be one of the first women in Rochester to hold a leadership position in a kitchen. Great beer with a creative kitchen to boot? Keep Grand Rounds Brewing Company & Restaurant on your radar.

Fulton Brewing Launches New Brand: Standard Lager

Fulton Brewing Looks to Set Standard With a New Lager

Fulton Brewing is launching a new brand: Standard Lager. Standard Lager is genuine all-malt beer, made from 2-row barley malt, American hops, and Pilsner yeast. We sat down with Ben Flattum, Fulton Brewing’s Twin Cities Market Manager to learn more.

Standard Lager

MN Beer Activists: What is Standard Lager?
Ben Flattum: Standard is our new year-round lager, it’s not just a beer for “beer people”, it’s a beer for PEOPLE. Period.

MNBA: Why a Lager?
Ben: When we looked at making a crushable affordable alternative to a lot of beers out there, a lager made perfect sense. It’s a familiar term for most folks and it leaves the cleanest finish possible. We have so much respect for brewers that can execute a clean lager, something that takes a lot of skill and consistency in a brewery. We’ve been wanting to make one forever, but with our additional tank space we have at our NE Mpls production spot, it finally made sense for us.


MNBA: But aren’t all lagers just fizzy yellow water?
Ben: The perception is obviously out there, but given that it’s just a yeast variety there are so many opportunities for more flavor than what the big guys have defined as a “lager” for most people. Given our 100% malt bill, with no adjuncts, and a solid American hop profile, this beer will stand out as flavor filled and drinkable as any beer you can get.

MNBA: A new brand under the Fulton flag? Similar to Sam Adams under Boston Beer Co?
Ben: More of an extension of Fulton than a new brand. We wanted to represent how approachable the beer was, without scaring folks off that are leery of trying Craft Beer. The branding is clean and straightforward, much like the beer itself. Firestone Walker has it figured out with their “805 Beer” brand extension and we are following in their footsteps.

MNBA: Couldn’t you just release Fulton Lager?
Ben: We absolutely could, and the beer is definitely everything Fulton represents. It’s a great representation of the style, clean and balanced. But we want to branch out beyond the current group of amazing Fulton loyalists, and this was a great way to do it.
standard-lager

MNBA: Can we expect more brands from Fulton?
Ben: Maybe something focused on sour or wild beer? — Fun fact, we actually have been working on our Mixed Culture Fermentation project at our downtown location for over a year. There are two different beers, almost ready to go. The other one, Tanager, is a 100% Barrel Fermented Brett IPA. We use some amazing strains of Brett, and it has an insane tropical flavor all around. It’s a year-round beer in our taproom and we hope to build on it some more. Definitely worth the trip.

MNBA: What is the concept behind the “standard” branding?
Ben: We wanted a classic look to a beer meant for everyone. In our mind, this beer is the “Standard” for what an easy drinking lager tastes like, and didn’t want to muddle it with an overly-complicated logo. The simplicity and clean nature of that logo is what makes it stand out, much like the beer itself. The tagline fits it so well, “Extraordinarily Uncomplicated” and the logo flies along that line.

MNBA: When is the beer coming out?
Ben: Draft starting September 9th, Tallboy Cans and 12 Pack Bottles in early October.

To learn more about Standard Lager visit: http://www.standardlager.com/

Fair State Brewing Coop’s Massive Expansion

If you subscribe to the adage of ‘If you’re not growing, you’re dying”, Fair State Brewing Cooperative has been secretly working out and taking steroids. To an excited gathering at a members-only event on September 6, President, CEO and Chief Holder of Fancy Titles Evan Sallee announced the next phase of expansion for the co-op: a production brewery capable of quintupling beer production in the Midway industrial district.

The numbers shared by Sallee would cause any entrepreneur to drool: keg sales have gone up 82%. Taproom sales are up 50% over last year. Liquor store sales since they started canning? Up 388%. Demand for their award-winning beers is off the charts. With peer, industry, local, state and national recognition as one of the best up-and-coming breweries in the country, they’ve released 78 different beers and seen a membership explosion from 125 to over 900 members.

The face of the expansion
East entry exterior view. The patio joins up with a customer reception area and spacious office inside.

“The existing brewery on Central Avenue is going to stay exactly the same,” announced Salle to a cheering and relieved membership. “The existing brewhouse will become Niko’s laboratory to continue to craft, experiment and develop new beers.  This facility is going to help us meet demand for our more popular beers.”

The new brew house will come with 120 BBL cold and hot liquor tanks feeding with a 30 barrel mash tun and kettle, processing via whirlpool and centrifuge before filling 4 x 90 barrel fermenters (with space for more) and 4 horizontal lager tanks.  Barrel aging racks, a keg/cooler space bigger than the entire current brewery footprint, a canning line, a full lab, modern offices and trailer-level docks will all reside in the new space.  While the leased space is 40,000 sq ft, parts are planned to be leased out to another business.  “We should not have to move again,” remarked a smiling Matt Hauck, Director of Operations.

Brew house expansion
Artist’s rendering. The artist has no idea how big 90 BBL fermenters are.  They will reach to the ceiling!  But who am I to judge – this looks much better than what I could do in MS Paint.

“Are you doing the expansion in steps?” I asked Niko Tonks, Head Brewer. “No, we’re going to do it all at once,” he replied. Niko went on to explain that the search for additional brewing space has been going on for over a year. “We looked everywhere, but we kept coming back to this space.”  The building is flanked by two parking lots, which seem to dare the co-op to hold even larger events that the taproom could not.  When asked if they’d be open to sharing space or collaborating with Midway brewing neighbors Lake Monster, Urban Growler, Burning Bros and Bang Brewing, Tonks said anything is possible.

Because Minnesota law does not allow a brewery to have more than 1 taproom, only samples can be offered to tourists and guests at the production brewery.  There will be no on- or off-sale beer here.

Sallee ran through other statistics which caused multiple rounds of applause.  Their charitable “Fair State Cooperates” effort has contributed over 10% of revenues to 12 worthy, non-profit causes in the community chosen by the membership and the board of directors.  Their volunteer group has worked over 3000 hours with these organizations, further helping them to succeed in their mission.

“The goal is to start brewing by 12/31, even if this means we’re boiling some water.” quipped Peter Heidorn, freshly-hired marketing, and communications manager. “There are some advantages to brewing in the same year you buy your equipment. Not sure what’s actually possible or if that’s too ambitious.”

Memberships and volunteer opportunities are still available at fairstate.coop/shop. Ready to turn your skills into free beer? Check fairstate.coop/events for upcoming volunteer dates or contact Davin at davin@fairstate.coop.

 

Should Saint Paul Allow Liquor Stores and Brewers to Sell Until 10pm?

Some Saint Paul City Council members are exploring the idea of modernizing the city’s liquor code to match surrounding communities and eliminate consumer confusion.

Right now the City of Saint Paul requires off-sale liquor purchases to end at 8:00 p.m. Monday-Thursday and 10:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Nearly every other municipality sharing a border with Saint Paul is consistent with a 10:00 p.m. closing time Monday-Saturday.

Saint Paul City Council Member Chris Tolbert had this to say in a recent Ward 3 update:

One reason to consider changing the ordinance is because Saint Paul has a burgeoning brewery culture. Right now, with the exception of Sundays’, breweries can only sell growlers during legal hours for off-sale. So while most breweries are open until 10:00 p.m. Monday-Thursday they cannot sell take-home brews for the last two hours of business, meaning lost revenue for the breweries and frustration and confusion for customers.

The Saint Paul City Council will take public commentary on the issue through September 1st. Send your thoughts to Libby Kantner at libby.kantner@ci.stpaul.mn.us. The Council will compile all received comments for public review.

Summit Brewing Releases West London-Style Ale

Summit Brewing has been releasing some unique beers in celebration of their 30th Anniversary. They started with a Double IPA and followed that up with Keller Pils. Now, introducing the 30th Anniversary West London-Style Ale.

Summit Brewing's 30th Annivesary: West London-Style Ale
Summit Brewing’s 30th Anniversary: West London-Style Ale

West London-Style Ale is a British-Style Best Bitter concocted by Summit Brewing Head Brewer, Damian McConn. McConn used English classic Marris Otter malt combined with traditional and modern hop varieties to produce a medium-bodied toasty English Ale that weighs in at 4.6 ABV. This is a delicious summer patio beer that you don’t want to pass up.

Summit’s release party will be at Brit’s Pub in downtown Minneapolis on Sunday, Aug 7 from 10am – 4pm. The inaugural keg will be tapped along with live music by Freddie Manton & The Southsiders and Hard Day’s Night Beatles Tribute Band. West London-Stye Ale will be available on tap at your local pub and in cans at retail stores the second week of August.

Summit continues their 30th Anniversary celebration with their annual Backyard Bash. Summit Backyard Bash is happening Saturday, September 10 from Noon-8pm in the back of the brewery at 910 Montreal Circle in St Paul. Tickets are available for $30 in advance and $40 the day of the event.

Cheers, mate!

Lost Falls Distillery is for Sale

Want to buy a distillery?

Lost Falls Distillery is having a fire sale. Lost Falls Distillery Co-founder Nils Collins contacted us to let us know that the whole shebang is up for sale on craigslist.

Nils said Lost Falls wasn’t able to raise enough money without selling part of the business, which the partners never agreed to do. Sadly, their loss can be your gain. Anyone looking to start a distilling operation will need to go through the considerable process of getting federal, state, and local approval. But having the right equipment would be a nice first step.

Check out the listing here: http://minneapolis.craigslist.org/hnp/for/5703713460.html

Lost Falls Distillery on Craigslist
Still standing, for now.

Autumn Brew Review Tickets Are Now On Sale

Tickets for the 16th annual Autumn Brew Review on September 17, went on sale yesterday. Craft beer fans can purchase the $45 tickets online: http://www.tempotickets.com/abr2016. Tickets historically sell out fast for this event.

Get ‘Em While They Last

Autumn Brew Review is held on the grounds of the Historic Grain Belt Brewery and is one of Minnesota’s oldest and largest craft beer festivals. The event is presented and produced by the Minnesota Craft Brewers Guild.

Hayes Public House Autumn Brew Review

This 21+ outdoor event will feature unlimited beer from more than 130+ participating breweries, as well as non-alcoholic samples, a commemorative tasting glass, live music, food vendors, beer educational sessions and an opportunity to vote for the best beer of the festival.

Jace Schells Autumn Brew Review

Autumn Brew Review is the last of the Guild’s series of 2016 craft beer festivals that includes February’s Winterfest in St. Paul and last weekend’s All Pints North in Duluth. The Minnesota Craft Brewers Guild will also bring flights of hundreds of Minnesota craft beers to the Minnesota State Fair at the Land of 10,000 Beers Craft Beer Hall in the Agriculture/Horticulture Building.

WHAT:
16th annual Autumn Brew Review presented by the Minnesota Craft Brewers Guild

WHEN:
1­–5 p.m., Saturday, September 17

WHERE:
Historic Grain Belt Brewery
19 13th Avenue NE, northeast Minneapolis

TICKETS:
On sale at noon, Tuesday, July 26 — $45
Purchase tickets online: http://www.tempotickets.com/abr2016.