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

HammerHeart Brewing Opens

Hammer Heart BrewingThe long wait is finally over. It seems like it was forever ago that we first heard of HammerHeart Brewing. In reality, the guys behind the brewery have made their dreams a reality in only a short time frame. Maybe it just seems like it has taken a while because they are bit behind schedule. Who can blame them for taking the time to make sure things are done correctly?

HammerHeart made their debut at All Pints North earlier in the month to rave reviews. The guys brought their A-game to the fest and brought brewing buddy Andreas Riis (whom head brewer Austin Lundr interned under), formerly the head brewer at Haand Bryggerriet in Norway.

The beers will mostly be handcrafted “extreme” ales. They’ll tend to be higher in ABV with large flavor profiles, many focusing the use of smoked grains. I haven’t had a chance to try all of the HammerHeart beers, but I’ve really enjoyed the ones I’ve had. Surtr’s Flame (a smoked IPA) was one of my 5 to try at All Pints, and I think I made the right call. There was nothing else like it at the fest, and there no local breweries filling that niche’. If local beer lovers can get over our rather tame “Minnesota palate,” HammerHeart Brewing Co. will successfully fill a nice sized hole in the Minnesota craft beer market.

HammerHeart Brewing opens Friday, August 2nd, at 4pm. When entering the taproom you can expect to be surrounded by wood and ornate Nordic carvings. These guys take their Viking heritage and history seriously. During a tour I asked if they were considering making drinking horns part their marketing, or drink-ware for sale or use in the tap room. I may have insulted the guys, I had no idea that drinking horns are really more about ceremony and special occasions. Also, I have a sneaking suspicion that if you are a fan of metal (not the building material, the music) you might be right at home in the HammerHeart taproom. Pretty much every update to their facebook page has included a metal song. In any case, be it the beer or the music, prepare for a taproom that rocks.

HammerHeart Brewing Company
7785 Lake Dr. Lino Lakes, MN 55014


HammerHeart Brewing Co. on Facebook
HammerHeart Brewing Co. Website

Northbound Smokehouse and Brewpub raffles Beer4Life membership for charity

Northbound Smokehouse, in South Minneapolis, has plans to donate a Beer4Life membership, worth $2,500, to raise money for two yet to be named charities. The public gets vote for their favorite nonprofit by texting BEER4GOOD to 75309 (Msg. & data rates may apply) and entering the charity name by August 9th at midnight. All nominated organizations must be a 501c3 nonprofit and based in the 55406, 55407 and 55417 zip codes.

Northbound Smokehouse and Brewpub Amy and Jamie
Amy Johnson and Jamie Robinson of Northbound Smokehouse & Brewpub

Nearly a year ago, the restaurant owners publically offered Beer4Life memberships for $1,000 to successfully raise startup capital for the brewpub. The program allows members, of which there are currently 80, to drink any of Northbound’s house beer for free for the rest of their life, or the life of the restaurant.

“The bankers thought we were crazy when we offered the membership,” said Jamie Robinson, the head brewer and co-founder of Northbound. “Our first year has been amazing. We’re thankful for our community that supported us. This is our way of supporting the charities that support our community.”

“Several of my friends considered purchasing a membership initially, but ultimately didn’t” said Beer4Life member Zach Zins. “In hindsight, they wish they had. I’d bet my own money they’ll now be foaming at the mouth for another chance to put free foam in their mouth. And what a great idea by Northbound to give back a bit to the community that’s been supporting them.”

The top two charities nominated will set up raffles that will be sold at the brewpub and other locations in the area. The winner will be picked at random at a special event on Sunday, September 22nd at Northbound.

“We expect that once word spreads, there will be a lot of nonprofits pressing their supporters to vote,” said Amy Johnson, co-founder of Northbound. “They’re welcome to. We’ll be covering the raffle costs for the two charities to ensure that 100% of the funds raised go to them.”

Tuned Beer

Tuned Beer LogoWe all know that music and beer go hand in hand. From traditional German biergartens with oompah bands, to punk rock shows with PBR, there is just something natural about music and beer. Maybe it is the social lubricant aspect of beer that makes it perfect for concerts and the like. Perhaps music and beer are just both key parts immersing yourself in an enjoyable experience. Whatever the answer is, Tuned Beer is combining music and beer in a way never seen before.

Tuned Beer American Brown
Image courtesy of Jeff North

The Tuned Beer brand is the brainchild of mobile canning guru Nate Smith. Smith operates Lagersmith, a mobile bottling business that brings bottling hardware to breweries that don’t want to invest time and space into a bottling line of their own. The Tuned brand is nomadic. So, like Smith himself, the beer will move from brewery to brewery. This is exactly the way is supposed to be. The brand will travel to a new brewery each season, creating a new recipe each time it moves.

So, what is this about music? Each new limited release brew is “paired” with a local band or musician. After you purchase of a bottle of Tuned Beer you scrape the wax off your bottle to reveal code that entitles you to a free song download of the featured artist.

The first Tuned Beer is an American Brown Ale from Stillwater’s Lift Bridge Brewery. To compliment the beer (or does the beer compliment the music?) it is paired with Reckless Ones, a Minneapolis based Rockabilly band. The beer / music combo is a nice fit. Reckless Ones are good, playing songs that sound a little like a Reverend Horton Heat and Green Day decided to get together and merge their sounds. The beer is exactly what you would expect from an American Brown, a hop forward ale with rich toasted malt flavor and hint of nuttiness.

The inaugural release is on store shelves now. To celebrate the launch Lift Bridge is hosting a special Reckless Ones concert at the brewery Friday and pouring the rockabilly inspired beer.

Tuned Beer
The Reckless Ones
Lift Bridge Brewery

Rocky Coast Brewing to open in Silver Bay

Rocky Coast BrewingMinnesota is about to see another brewery open it’s doors in the near future.

Rocky Coast Brewing is set to open during the Spring of next year in Silver Bay, Minnesota. According to the company’s website, the head brewer, Johnathan Klinkenberg, intends to close on a property by the fall of 2013, permitting that financing goes through without delay. Production and distribution would start over the winter season with a Grand Opening of the facility in the Spring of 2014.

Mr. Klinkenberg wants to make Rocky Coast Brewing a destination brewery. The brewery itself will feature a taproom, food service, live music & art booths featuring local artists and campfire rings for visitors and campers.

Rocky Coast Brewing will join the ranks of Borealis Fermentary and Castle Danger Brewing as breweries situated along Minnesota’s Scenic North Shore.

To find out more information about Investment Options & Opportunities, you can find out more by visiting their Brew Crew Membership Page

You can visit their Facebook Page at Facebook.com/RockyCoastBrewing
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You can visit their website at www.rockycoastbrewing.com

Town Hall Lanes Opens

town hall lanesLike beer? Of course you do. Like Bowling? Who doesn’t? The minds behind Minneapolis’ famed Town Hall Brewery are bringing you the best of both worlds.

Town Hall Lanes will join the likes of Town Hall Brewery and Town Hall Tap bringing the total of Town Hall establishments to three. The bowling alley will feature 10 bowling lanes, a full functioning restaurant kitchen, and beer from Mike Hoops at Town Hall Brewery.

Bowling on brand new lanes with great food and locally brewed craft beer, where can I sign up for a league?

Town Hall Lanes
5019 34th Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55417

Town Hall Lanes on Facebook


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How to Appeal to [Female] Beer Enthusiasts

How to Appeal to [Female] Beer Enthusiasts

Once, on Twitter, I brought up the fact that many beer labels feature scantily clad women in sexually suggestive positions, complaining that such labels alienate female customers. (There are many more examples out there—these are just a few.) To my shock, a male beer enthusiast suggested that women like me are not the target market, so I should just grin and bear it.

Aside from my immediate problems with that comment, I get it—those labels are probably designed to appeal to the prurient interests of male beer drinkers. I also know, however, that I’m also not the target for beer that features a little black dress and pearls, and comes in a six-pack designed to look like a purse, either. What is it about appealing to women beer drinkers that trips breweries up so much? What is the focus on gender-appealing labeling about?

Thank goodness for up-and-coming female-owned brewery Urban Growler Brewing, which attempts to appeal to women the way every other brewery appeals to men: delicious, time-tested beer recipes, comfortable taproom atmosphere, and no other emphasis on gender hinted anywhere in the label design, beer, or rhetoric.

Crazy, I know.

I had the opportunity to sit down with Deb Loch recently and discuss her background and plans for the brewery. Deb, a Wisconsin native, got her start brewing after she left her biomedical engineering job of eight and a half years to pursue her passion in beer. A winding path that included apprenticeships at breweries, the Master Brewers program at UC Davis, and experimenting with her own all-grain brewing system led her to St. Paul, where she realized the brewery taproom fad hadn’t really hit that side of the metro yet.
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Now, with more accommodating zoning laws available in St. Paul, Deb is set to make her mark. The plan for Urban Growler came to her through many separate passions—cooking, brewing, local farms, and environmentalism. Urban Growler is set to reflect those passions, with a Plow-to-Pint plan that will change the beer menu based on what ingredients are available, and feature biographies of the farmers whose ingredients went into the beer. Deb also plans to include consumers in the process—those contributing rhubarb of their own to Urban Growler’s Rhubarb Wit beer, for example. Local farmers will also contribute to a food menu.
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Deb’s plan to connect St. Paul drinkers back to local farmers and growers is just one way she sees Urban Growler as a community builder. Aside from that, Urban Growler fans will also be able to purchase founding memberships to give themselves a real stake in the process. In addition, Urban Growler is one of a few breweries sprouting up in St. Paul, and with Surly’s new brewery planned for the Prospect Park area, Twin Cities beer enthusiasts will find plenty of reasons to start to love the community.

So how does Urban Growler plan to appeal more to women without excluding men? Simple. The plan has nothing to do with what Deb called “Pinking Up” her beer, but instead making the whole atmosphere more female-friendly. The planned label design, which can be found on the Urban Growler website, has a simple logo and bright colors, none of which are pink. The taproom will offer the option of smaller pours and a few lower-ABV beers (in the 5-6% range), so Urban Growler drinkers will be able to enjoy a few glasses and still be able to drive home. In addition, Urban Growler’s taproom will have lower tables and chairs (for those of us who, regardless of gender, hate having our feet dangling off of those giant bar-stools). Quieter music completes the picture, so guests will not have to shout to be heard.

As someone who goes to taprooms frequently to enjoy a few (and then a few more…) beers with friends, this makes a lot of sense: Urban Growler will be the kind of place you can sit comfortably, taste more than two kinds of beer, and not have to call a cab at the end of the night.
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And all of that appeals to me without having anything to do with gender! I cannot speak for everyone, but I know many female drinkers who are not asking for lighter flavors, overly sweet beers, or pink labels. Maybe women don’t even want quiet music or low tables, but as long as it isn’t a ridiculous pink chair or a Carly Rae Jepson CD, I’m eager for a different style of taproom.

One final thing about Urban Growler that will definitely appeal to the masses: Deb’s amazing lineup of beers. I asked what she had planned, or what she sees being served at the brewery. Here are just a few of the beers she rattled off:
urban-growler_bottles
Grafitti Rye IPA (The Blue Ribbon winner at last year’s State Fair)

Rhubarb Wit

Blueberry Wheat

Pumpkin Saison

Imperial Smoked Chipotle Porter

Bourbon Barrel Porter

Although the opening wasn’t officially set when I spoke to Deb, she foresees a winter 2013 date. Can’t wait? No worries! There is an open house this weekend where you can sample the beer and check out the space. Details follow below for non-Facebookers.
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Urban Growler Brewing Co. Open House
2325 Endicott Street, St. Paul
Thursday, July 18th and Friday, July 19th
5:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.

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Why Do We Love Beer?

Very few people wake up one morning and decide they love India Pale Ales or Imperial Stouts much less young first time drinkers. Craft beer is in many cases similar to single malt scotch because most people have to make a concerted effort to truly appreciate it. Bitterness may be one of the main reasons because the taste is originally a sign of toxicity in plants. For that reason typically the palette must be trained in order to appreciate bitterness in plants like broccoli, or more importantly hops. So why do many of us put in this kind of effort to become beer lovers? For that matter why do perfectly rational normal seeming people decide to sort through piles of city, state, and federal regulations, put themselves into massive amounts of debt, and fight giant multinational corporations for the chance to become moderately wealthy at best? Other people will choose to become politically active in a way they have never been before in order to defend their right to drink beer. Not to mention the ever expanding amount of alternatives practically thrown our way. So why has beer persevered in the face of these challenges?

For the first nine millennia of beer’s existence there were few reasons not to love beer, it was safe, nutritious and high in much needed calories. Even though safe alternatives in coffee and tea have been available for centuries they were much too expensive and lacked the caloric value to appeal to the general populace.  In an ironic turn it should have been Louis Pasteur’s groundbreaking work Studies on Fermentation, the diseases of Beer in 1876 that sounded the death knell for beer. Although Pasteur’s work greatly improved our understanding of the brewing process it also ended beer’s reign as a staple beverage by showing that water could be made safe simply by boiling it. In Europe, beer was safe due to the cultural memory and importance of it to nations like Germany, the Netherlands, and Britain. In the fledgling United States this development came at just the wrong time; providing prohibitionists with the safe, alternatives they needed to gain ground in the fight against alcohol.

The German-Americans that controlled the majority of the American brewing industry had fought time and time again to show that beer was not a destructive substance. American beer flourished right up to the dawn of Prohibition in spite of many attacks. During the 13 year mistake that was American Prohibition the brewing industry went into rapid decline for obvious reasons. Also, during that era new alternatives to beer popped up in the soft drink industry, and Americans learned to drink liquor because it was much more profitable to smuggle in. When Prohibition came to a close the brewing industry would enter a whole new world where dieting, bland processed food, and sweet soft drinks would come into the mainstream. In order to survive this new reality breweries were forced to move towards light, dry, bland beer, welcome the American adjunct lager and its poster child Miller High Life. In the 40 years that followed Prohibition there seems to have been an all-out attack on the American palette.

Since beer was now a luxury good and no longer a necessary part of the human diet, large breweries could no longer rely on making a quality product with knowledge that everyone drinks beer. For centuries breweries prided themselves on making the best product they could to gain their market share. With so many alternatives and fewer beer drinkers than ever before, especially in the United States, new strategies would have to be devised. This strategy would involve going toe to toe with the liquor industry to be the product that got us drunk, think; “more flavor, less filling” and you will get the idea. Slowly but surely diet beers and other gimmicks began to hit store shelves and bar coolers. Fortunately, some young adults in the 1960’s and 1970’s began to reject the corporate culture of their parents’ generation including their beer.

How did the efforts of a few counter-culture entrepreneurs change American tastes again? What came to be known as the Craft Beer Movement started out very humbly with a few passionate enthusiasts preaching the good word. Now that craft brewing can really be considered to be in full swing, I would like to explore the motivations behind the passion sweeping many of us into it. Good history for me has never been a list of facts, but discovering the context in which they exist. This is why I am not going to list out a year by history of the craft beer movement up till this moment, but provide you with the context of the condition the beer world was in that dawn of the movement. Over the next months to a year I hope to have this discussion and explore what connects each of us to our favorite beverage and find out why we all learn to love beer.

For example, I am pretty sure my love affair with beer began at an early age. I grew up on the small dairy farm in northern Wisconsin that my family has farmed for over a century now. When I was young we lived in a trailer across the yard from my grandparents’ house so my Dad did not have to add a commute to his 16 hour days on the farm.  My Dad has run the farm with my Grandpa since he was in his teens, which meant Grandpa was always around.  Before my grandparents moved up to the lake to retire, which meant they stopped working Sundays, they had a bar in the basement with a kegerator. Like any boy of seven or eight I followed my grandpa everywhere. This included what he called Miller time, ironically since he was never a fan of Miller. As a family of German descent beer was never taboo in our house, although my Dad never drank, something about not enough time in the day.

On tap in the basement bar was always G. Heileman’s Old Style, until 1991 when the brewery went Bankrupt and Grandpa claimed it never tasted the same. He was pretty sure they stopped krausening it so he switched to Pabst instead, which was incidentally owned by Stroh brewing as well. As a child the part I loved was pouring the beer into the little pilsner glass he had with lunch.  This experience stuck with me as I went to college and decided to bar-tend to fund my education. Being a long-winded history major, I learned that if you could tell stories people tipped you better. I read as much about beer and liquor history as I could. The more I read, the more I appreciated and I began to dabble in craft beers. I dabbled mostly in gateway beers like Lienenkugel’s, Sam Adams, and yes occasionally even an Old Style. Now 13 years later my obsession has progressed to the point that almost every Saturday I give the tours at Lift Bridge Brewing Company. The more I thought about my own story, the more I was curious to find out what other people’s beer love stories. That is why I would like to build a cultural history of the craft beer movement to find out why, in spite of the odds, so many of us love craft beer.

Why do you love beer? Share your story below.

Brewing Comes Full Circle on the North Shore

As most of Minnesota’s craft breweries are packing up for a weekend on the north shore at Duluth’s All Pints North beer festival there is no better time for a quick primer on the region’s beer history.  Currently Duluth and Superior have a rapidly evolving beer scene with comfortable standbys like Fitger’s and new taprooms like Bent Paddle.  Although Duluth and Superior were some of the earliest explored regions in Minnesota and Wisconsin they would not incorporate as cities until the 1850’s.  In the 1800’s there was one key business necessary to the survival of any new city, a brewery.  Duluth as the younger and larger sibling would dominate brewing over the last 156 years.

The north shore has been brewing since 1857 when Sidney Luce allowed a brewery to be built on his property in an attempt to reinvigorate Duluth’s floundering economy.  That first brewery would go through many name changes between 1857 and 1972 but through most of its history it would be known as the Fitger Brewing Company.  Fitger would be joined two other large breweries and the first legitimate competition would come from Duluth Brewing and Malting in 1896, one of very few breweries to do its own malting on site.  The other brewery to open and survive in Duluth was the People’s Brewing Co founded in 1907 by eastern European immigrants with Socialist ideals as the name implies.

Duluth Brewing and Malting Company Duluth Minnesota
Inside the old Duluth Brewing and Malting Company, Duluth, Minnesota
Northeast Minnesota Historical Center – 1961

 All three breweries would survive Andrew Volstead’s attempt to doom America’s brewing industry by establishing Prohibition and in 1933 would among the first to brew beer on April 7th.  The three would survive using different methods though all would produce some form of soft drink.  After Prohibition they would each expand during the brewery boom that followed the repeal and in the 1950’s Duluth would be the only city in Minnesota to claim three breweries.  This was the high point for Duluth brewing in the 20th century but similar the rest of the nation the price wars underway by the national giants like Miller and Busch would doom each brewery in its turn.

 People’s Brewing Co was the first victim of the price wars when it shut its doors in 1957.  Duluth Brewing and Malting would soon follow suit in 1966 when the I-35 expansion needed the property.  Fitger would make it until 1972 when it finally shut its doors after a series of pitfalls surround the I-35 expansion as well.  The Minnesota Historical Society would eventually save much of the complex from demolition. Duluth would be without a brewery for 22 years until the craft beer movement finally reached Minnesota.

In 1994 Bob Dromeshauser started a small home brew shop and brewery called the Lake Superior Brewing Company in the old Fitger complex.  In 1995 the Fitger name would be revived with Fitger’s Brewhouse by Tim Nelson and Rod Raymond who have vacationed in Colorado wanted that same craft beer scene for Duluth.   Fitger’s would become one of the most popular attractions in present day Duluth.  In 1996 Twin Ports brewing would open in Superior and would eventually change hands in 2006 to become Thirsty Pagan.  A little over an hour to the east in Ashland the South Shore Brewery was founded in 1994.

The generation of brewing founded in the 90’s would joined most recently in 2011 with Castle Danger, Dubrue, Borealis Fermentary, Canal Park in 2012, and Bent Paddle in 2013.  Carmody Irish pub also added a 2 ½ barrel brew house in 2011 to join the fray.  So finally a city with a great brewing history has come full circle.  Anyone headed to the north shore this weekend for the 2nd annual All Pints North beer festival featuring 47 breweries or this summer for a great staycation I hope this helps provide you with some context for the great beer you enjoy.