issue 13 - may / june 2005
Transcription
issue 13 - may / june 2005
New York City’s Free Independent Beer Magazine The Gotham IMBIBER Issue 13 May – June 2005 Tom and Peggy of Heavyweight Brewery at the excellent Brewtopia Festival. Photo: Alex Hall In This Issue: Beer Calendar The Ultimate Pub Crawl? City Beer Happenings Beer Writer Turns Fest Coordinator Beerman & Firkin Brewtopia Gallery Le Bier Circus Write a Caption 3 4 6 8 9 10 12 14 ______________________________________________ The Gotham Imbiber Is published every two months at the beginning of January, March, May, July, September, and November. Editor/Publisher: Alex Hall The Gotham Imbiber 43 St. Marks Avenue Brooklyn NY11217-2403 U.S.A. Tel. +1 917 957 7623 Email: (NOTE NEW ADDRESS) Mission: The aim of The Gotham Imbiber is to promote awareness of microbrewed beers and where to obtain them in and around New York City, especially cask-conditioned ales which are sadly only available in a handful of outlets citywide. The Gotham Imbiber magazine originated as a sister publication to the U.K. beer magazine ‘The Independent Imbiber’. Be aware that English spellings may crop up within these pages! This is a magazine, unlike others, where lovers of microbrewed beers can submit articles for publication. Intending writers please note that this magazine is about commercially-available beers, the microbreweries that produce them, and even the people who drink them. It is not intended to promote home-brewing in articles on these pages (sorry!), as that would be 'preaching to the converted' as such - and would reduce the space available for microbrewery-related material. Disclaimer: Although accuracy is checked as far as possible, no responsibility can be taken by The Gotham Imbiber for false, misleading, or inaccurate information. This magazine is entirely independent, and is not associated in any way with any organisation, brewery, or bar. All opinions expressed are those of the individual contributor concerned, and not those of The Gotham Imbiber. Any resemblance between real life characters and those appearing in fictional stories or cartoons in this magazine are purely coincidental. Deadline for issue 14 is Monday 20th June 2005 for publication in July 2005. Acknowledgements: Thanks to Felice Wechsler, Chuck Cook, and all who contributed. Beer Calendar Recommended microbrew events over the next two months… LOCAL EVENTS IN NEW YORK CITY th Friday 6 – Sunday 8th May 2005: 6th Tri-Annual ‘Cask Head’ Real Ale Festival. The Brazen Head, 228 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn. Full details: 1 718 488 0430 or see http://www.brazenheadbrooklyn.com. Wednesday 11th May 2005, 4pm: Beer and Oyster Festival. Featuring 9 Rogue beers to pair with oysters. Scheduled to carry on the following day while stocks last. The Blind Tiger Ale House, 518 Hudson Street, Manhattan. Details: 1 212 675 3848; http://www.blindtiger.citysearch.com. Wednesday 11th May 2005, 7.30pm: Malted Barley Appreciation Society of NYC. Monthly meeting, Mugs Ale House, 125 Bedford Avenue, Williamsburg, Brooklyn. The guest speaker is to be announced. Details: http://hbd.org/mbas. Wednesday 8th June 2005, 7.30pm: Malted Barley Appreciation Society of NYC. Monthly meeting, Mugs Ale House, 125 Bedford Avenue, Williamsburg, Brooklyn. http://hbd.org/mbas. EVERY TUESDAY, 7pm: Bierkraft, 191 Fifth Avenue, Park Slope, Brooklyn (at Union Street). Weekly beer tasting and cheese pairing, sometimes featuring a guest speaker from the trade. Details: 1 718 230 7600; http://www.bierkraft.com. th EVENTS OUTSIDE NEW YORK CITY Saturday 7 May 2005, 1pm: Heavyweight Brewing Company’s Open House. 1701 Valley Road, Ocean Township, NJ. Details from Tom and Peggy: 1 732 493 5009 or http://www.heavyweight-brewing.com. Friday 13th May 2005, 2pm: Friday the Firkinteenth. The Grey Lodge, 6235 Frankford Avenue, Philadelphia, PA. About 16 cask-conditioned ales! Details: 1 215 624 2969. Friday 3rd – Sunday 5th June 2005: Glastonwick 2005. Shoreham Airport, Shoreham-bySea, West Sussex, England (near Brighton). About 50 rare cask-conditioned beers (arranged by your editor) and quality entertainment. Frequent trains run to Shoreham-bySea from London & Gatwick Airport. Full details: http://www.cask-ale.co.uk/beerfestival.html. Saturday 18th June 2005, 1pm & 6pm: BeerAdvocate.com’s American Beer Fest. The Cyclorama, Boston Center for the Arts, 539 Tremont Street, Boston, MA. $22.50 in advance, $30 on the door (if available). Some of the beers will be real cask. There’s also a VIP session the evening before – see the website. Details: http://beeradvocate.com/fests/. www.cask - a l e . c o . u k The Gotham Imbiber (including all back issues); New York City Cask Ale & Good Beer Bar Guides; The National U.S.A. & Canadian Cask Outlet Databases; and much more! Fuller’s – a clarification There has been much activity recently on several online beer forums concerning the use of fake handpumps and dispense of depressurised brewery-conditioned (keg) beer by methods that could be misleading. The Gotham Imbiber supports the use of only appropriate dispense equipment for each type of cooperage. For whatever reason, Fuller’s beers have been appearing on types of dispense that The Gotham Imbiber considers to be inappropriate and open to misinterpretation of certain traditional aspects of brewing and cellaring processes. For the record, The Gotham Imbiber supports Fuller’s as a historic, traditional independent British brewery which brews high quality products; we would never criticise Fuller’s range of beers. And we are not saying don’t support them (as some people interpreted), quite the opposite in fact as this publication is out to promote quailty beer. We have simply been clarifying the confusing position we are in now with both real cask beer engines and visually similar dispense equipment (which could cause people to presume they are getting served cask) appearing in the same localities, therefore incorrect assumptions of exactly what is what have been rife. Respect to Fuller’s beer. The Ultimate Pub Crawl? th by Alex Hall Tuesday 26 April saw BeerAdvocate.com’s Todd and Jason Alström (pictured below) hit Brooklyn for a tour of eight of the best beer bars in the borough. I joined them late lunchtime at their second stop, The Brazen Head (228 Atlantic Avenue); their first stop was The Waterfront Ale House (155 Atlantic Avenue). I was cursing not being early enough to make it there as I discovered that the cask ale available was one of my all-time favourites – Dark Star ‘Hophead’. One consolation was the delicious cask Southampton ‘Burton Ale’ at the Brazen Head, which both myself and the Alström brothers chose initially. Running a bit later than intended, we got a lift from a fellow Beer Advocate (thanks Steve) up to Mugs Ale House (125 Bedford Avenue); an accident ahead of us on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway caused us to lose further ‘VDT’ (Valuable Drinking Time). Mugs is great value for money and has an excellent range, the Lagunitas ‘Sirius’ cask ale was most tasty and very uncommon. Next stop was The Mark Bar (1025 Manhattan Avenue), a friendly community beer bar that is also excellent value with a great range on tap and in bottle. Halfway through the tour by early evening, the 5th stop was Bar Matchless (557 Manhattan Avenue). This amiable corner bar with a vintage motorcycling theme now features ‘Taco Tuesdays’ where you get two free tacos with every beer while supplies last. I enjoyed a Brooklyn Weisse and an Avery IPA while here; several other local Beer Advocate devotees had joined us by that point. A ten minute walk to stop number 6 followed, and a pleasant surprise for most of the entourage was had on entering Barcade (388 Union Avenue). Less that 24 hours prior to our visit, I had installed a cask beer engine and cooling unit there – so the sight of a handpump dispensing cask Blue Point Imperial Stout on top of their range of 24 microbrews on tap was naturally greeted with much enthusiasm. Even more people associated with BeerAdvocate.com joined us here, including ‘Salty Dog’ Bill Coleman and his trusty canine sidekicks Ludwig and Mabel. Next was the ever-popular Spuyten Duyvil (359 Metropolitan Avenue), recently placed at a very worthy no.2 on the chart of America’s best beer bars as voted by reviewers on BeerAdvocate.com. Spuyten Duyvil is like Sing Sing - once you’re inside it’s very hard to leave. Nevertheless, after a selection of tasty microbrews were sampled, we were off down the road to a very new beer bar which I had recommended. The Levee (212 Berry Street, on the corner of North 3rd Street) is a tworoomed community bar, quite cosy and friendly; it is ably run by two former employees of Manhattan’s Ginger Man, Susan and Howard. Needless to say, beer quality is high and includes plenty of craft beer – especially in bottles. Copious amounts of Stone IPA on tap were flowing, and the Alströms ventured on to others such as Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA and Achel in bottles. The Levee has been going in its current incarnation for only a few weeks, the building was previously The Antique Lounge. The Gotham Imbiber welcomes The Levee to the local craft beer scene, and wishes Susan and Howard every success with their new business. With all stops visited, those left standing staggered off to their respective beds at various times. That was one hell of a crawl, cheers to the Alström brothers! CHEAP MACRO BEER = CHEAP MACRO TASTE. DON’T YOU DESERVE BETTER? City Beer Happenings Bar-cask! Compiled by Alex Hall Barcade (388 Union Avenue, Williamsburg) has just purchased a beer engine to serve genuine caskconditioned ale, as mentioned in the previous article. They have also tossed out their Guinness tap and replaced it with Red Hook’s stout. Therefore, they are now 100% domestic. Cheers to Paul and the team at Barcade! One of the first ever pints of cask ale to be served there is depicted above-right being pulled around 8pm on Monday 25th April. New #1 The East Village’s Hop Devil Grill (129 St. Marks Place) is now open and almost in full swing. The back bar was just being finished off at the time of writing, this will concentrate on Belgian microbrews. The main bar and kitchen are open and doing well; there is a beer engine for real cask ale, which is just about to be introduced. New #2 Near Madison Square Garden, Stout (127135 West 33rd Street) opened mid-April. This large, upmarket beer bar has an emphasis on dark ales from the British Isles – their bottle selection is very impressive. There are also over 20 taps and two cask beer engines, however many of the taps are taken up with mainstream stuff – but there are currently three dedicated to Brooklyn Brewery’s products and one each to Blue Point and Fuller’s. One refrigerator in full view is exclusively dedicated to bottled stouts. Very handy for Penn Station and Madison Square Garden, Stout is well worth a visit; check out the L-shaped balcony where you can get a great view of the ground floor. New #3 As noted earlier, The Levee (212 Berry Street, Williamsburg) is open for business with two ex-Ginger Man employees at the helm; they have already expanded their initial range with a number of good microbrews. The Levee opens at 5pm daily – check it out if in Williamsburg. New(-ish) #4/5/6 A small chain of three dimly-lit lounge bars in Manhattan that often go under the radar of beer lovers is well worth a mention here. The Room (144 Sullivan Street), The Other Room (143 Perry Street), and Another Room (249 West Broadway) all feature a number of great microbrews, especially in bottle. Freeminer returns to NYC Following a new distribution deal, beers from England’s Freeminer Brewery will shortly be seen again in the City. Look out for such delights as Waterloo and Trafalgar IPA from this excellent brewery based in the historic Forest of Dean. THINK “WHO AM I FUNDING?” WHEN CHOOSING A BEER… BIG GLOBAL BRAND à POWERFUL ‘FAT CAT’ DIRECTORS & THEIR CAPITALIST SHAREHOLDERS; MANY BIG BREWING CORPORATIONS DONATE TO RIGHTWING POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS OR RUTHLESSLY DESTROY BREWING HERITAGE. LOCAL MICROBREW à LOCAL COMMUNITY, LOCAL ECONOMY, LOCAL WORKFORCE, LOCAL JOBS, LOCAL TASTE… Beer Writer Turns Fest Coordinator by Chuck Cook As a beer writer, I get to attend a fair number of beer festivals and then write articles about them. Merely attending a fest and sampling beers, and having a good time, is a very small part of the story. There is a tremendous amount of work behind the scenes that most attendees never see. While I was a steward on the Professional Panel Blind Tasting at the Great American Beer Festival one year, and also had worked at a number of other fests as a beer server, I had never been in charge before. All that changed when All About Beer Magazine offered me the position of Beer Coordinator for their 9th annual World Beer Festival, held at the historic Durham (NC) Athletic Park – where the movie ‘Bull Durham’ was filmed. Working for overall Festival Director, Natalie Abernethy, I would have to learn quickly. There were new software programs to be learned, databases to update, letters to be written, invitation packets to be sent out, and brewers and importers to call (repeatedly!) Starting in mid-June 2004, I spent 15 to 20 hours a week in the All About Beer offices, calling, emailing and faxing every brewery and beer importer that had been at previous fests, and a whole lot of new ones. It could sometimes be a bit frustrating as brewers lead very busy lives and often had little time to talk to me. Getting a confirmation sheet from a brewer or importer was always cause for celebration. In the end, it all worked out. There were 125 breweries represented at the beer festival on Saturday, September 25, 2004. This was twenty more than any previous World Beer Fest. Among the highlights, according to attendees, were three breweries that had driven about 1000 miles from Michigan to be in the festival (Dragonmead Brewery, King Brewery, and Kuhnhenn Brewing Company.) Then there was Magic Hat, all the way from Vermont with a cask of Blind Faith, plus other brews. There were also many brewpubs and microbreweries in attendance from all over the Southeast, Northeast, Northwest, and Colorado. Imported beers from Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, the U.K., Eastern Europe, Russia, Australia, Mexico and South America, and more, were at the fest. Perhaps best of all, to my bosses at All About Beer, certainly, and the charity for the fest, the Carolina Theatre, was the turnout at the festival. The afternoon session sold out, which had never happened before. The evening session sold out the Wednesday before the event, causing a near panic for tickets in those calling the AAB offices. There were more than 7,000 attendees over the two sessions of the festival, more than at any previous World Beer Fest! The toughest part? I was working the whole time. I hardly got to drink. I tasted just a few beers late in the day when everything was going smoothly. A tough job, watching others have so much fun. I know in the future I will certainly more fully appreciate the work and serious efforts behind any beer fest I attend. Cheers! Bass – Beck's – Belle Vue – Boddingtons – Bohemia – Diebels – Dinkel Acker – Franziskaner – Hoegaarden – Labatt – Leffe – Löwenbräu – Mackeson – Rolling Rock – St. Pauli Girl – Skol – Spaten – Staropramen – Stella Artois – Tennent's – Whitbread. When you buy any of the above brands, you are funding the world’s biggest brewing corporation - InBev (formerly Interbrew). The Gotham Imbiber says InBev’s greedy, voracious fat cat directors and investors are fat enough. SUPPORT THE MICROBREWING INDUSTRY INSTEAD! Beerman and Firkin by Felice Wechsler SUPPORT CRAFT BEER, ENJOY CRAFT BEER! Brewtopia Gallery Manhattan’s Excellent Brewtopia World Beer Festival Photos by Alex Hall [Advance notice: the next Brewtopia event is scheduled for 22nd October.] _____________________________________ FOR HIRE: BANK OF 3 GASKELL & CHAMBERS BEER ENGINES, BUILT IN 1938 AND RECENTLY RETIRED FROM A PUB IN CHELTENHAM, GLOUCESTERSHIRE, ENGLAND. IN FULL WORKING ORDER, IDEAL FOR CASK ALE FESTIVALS! ALSO MODERN BEER ENGINES (SINGLE, CLAMP-ON) FOR SALE OR HIRE – CONTACT THE GOTHAM IMBIBER, DETAILS ON PAGE 2. ---11--- Le Bier Circus Chuck Cook visits one of the best bars in Belgium Le Bier Circus is widely acknowledged as one of Brussels’ top beer specialist cafes. I sat down with owner Patrick D’Hane in late 2003 to talk about his excellent beer bar, which is the first he has run. He had worked in the cafe and restaurant business for many years prior to opening Le Bier Circus. Patrick received his early training in operating a beer cafe at a few other Brussels favorites, such as Chez Moeder Lambic. However, it was at Le Jugement Dernier in Schaerbeek that he decided running a beer cafe would be his vocation: “I really enjoyed the job. The cafe had a top-class bar and good service, with 400 beers. It was the best beer cafe in Brussels at that time” Patrick said. Le Jugement Dernier was open for about a dozen years, and closed in the early 1990s. After two years at Jugement Dernier, Patrick was ready to open his own bar. He was able to secure help from Brouwerij Moortgat once he found a suitable location. After spending a long time looking, Patrick found the building (dating from about 1880) at 89, Rue de l’Enseignement, on the same street as the Cirque Royal Concert Hall. The space was not occupied at the time, but many different types of businesses have inhabited the location, possibly including a house of ill-repute... Bier Circus has a front room with a bar and tables, which is tastefully decorated with Belgian breweriana, some of it antique. There are two rooms in the back of the cafe, one of which is non-smoking. Patrick likes all styles of beer, of course, and is particularly happy when beer tourists bring him hoppy American IPAs as gifts: “After tasting many Belgian beers, one of my biggest surprises was tasting an American IPA. I really liked it” Patrick told me. Patrick has visited a few breweries in the U.S. and Drie Fonteinen. There is a special place for Lambic beers at Bier Circus, owing to Patrick¹s early years. His family is from the southwest of Brussels, and often went to Beersel on weekends, to drink the beers of Drie Fonteinen and Oud Beersel. Bier Circus is a very good place to taste the beers of Brasserie Cantillon When first opened in April 1993, there were about 100 beers on the Bier Circus menu. Within two years, the number was at 200, where it remains at present. Patrick said “This a comfortable number of beers to stock.” There is also an aged beer menu with about 50 brews. It is mostly beer tourists who order the aged beers, as most local Belgians prefer fresher beer, Patrick told me. Bier Circus, which offers six beers on tap, is a great place to sample Wallonian specialty brews, many of which are not often seen in Flanders, such as Brasserie Blaugies, Fantome, Ellezelloise, Geants, Rulles, and others. There are also plenty of Flemish beers available here, and the Trappist brews are well-represented. A couple of dozen Christmas beers make for a well rounded beer list. Patrick makes a new beer menu once a year, and sometimes will drop beers that have not sold well, and add new ones. Rule number one here is no InBev (formerly Interbrew) beers. There is no rule number two! While known primarily as a beer cafe, Le Bier Circus has had solid pasta dishes for a number of years; Spaghetti cooked in Chimay beer has always been a good choice. However, in the last few years, Bier Circus has expanded its menu choices and is offering a variety of quality meals, described as “beer based regional cooking”. One dish is Venison cooked in Rochefort 8, which I enjoyed. Patrick has a cook, but he devised the menu choices and suggestions himself. Le Bier Circus is moving from its original home to another building on the same street, at #57, Rue de l’Enseignement, beginning August 1, 2005. Patrick says he will be open at #89 until June 30, and then he and his staff will take off the month of July. Brasserie Cantillon will provide a special barrel of beer for the closing, called ‘La Derniere Cuvee de 89’, meaning roughly ‘The Final Cuvee of 89’. When the ‘new’ Bier Circus opens, there will be a few new entrees and desserts offered, increasing the menu choices. The kitchen will also remain open an hour later, until midnight. More good news for beer lovers traveling to Brussels is that the place will be open in the evenings on Saturdays and Sundays. It is currently open for lunch and dinner only on weekdays. All of the beers and food menu can be viewed at the website, which is www.biercircus.be. Enjoy! CORRUPT EMINENT DOMAIN ABUSE THREATENS BROOKLYN COMMUNITY BAR Freddy’s Bar in Prospect Heights is up against the corrupt and taxpayer-money-wasting schemes of property development juggernaught Forest City Ratner, who want to raze the entire community to build a corporate concrete jungle – a small part of which is planned to be an arena for the New Jersey Nets basketball team. Don’t believe the lies, this scheme is unjust and corrupt – benefitting no-one in the local community! Directions to Freddy’s: 2 or 3 train to Bergen Street station, then walk round the corner to 485 Dean Street to enjoy a fine pint of Harpoon UFO wheat beer (or another of your choice) in friendly surroundings. Links to websites detailing the current situation: http://www.gotard.com/badd/ http://www.fansforfairplay.com http://www.nostadium.homestead.com http://nycbasketball.rivals.com http://www.fairdevelopmentbrooklyn.net Freddy’s own website can be seen at http://www.freddysbackroom.com Write a Caption This issue’s Write a Caption ‘victims’ are NYC Homebrewers’ Guild President Dave Witzel and his good lady Jenny; the bottle is Dogfish Head ‘Burton Baton’. They were snapped in Spuyten Duyvil. Please send in your wittiest quotes of what she could have been saying (no unpublishable quotes please). The winner gets a branded glass from Bierkraft, 191 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn (winner collects). The best entries will be listed in issue 14. Please note that the deadline is 20th June 2005; contact details are on page 2. THE GOTHAM IMBIBER RELIES ON ADVERT REVENUE, OUR STUPIDLY LOW PRICES START AT $45. CONTACT DETAILS ARE ON PAGE 2 (NOTE THE NEW EMAIL ADDRESS). HELP US HELP YOU… _________________________________________________________________________________ REAL CASK ALE – T H E F U L L N Y C L I S T This is The Gotham Imbiber’s free listing of all NYC bars that serve cask-conditioned ale. Barcade, 388 Union Avenue, Brooklyn. [NEW CASK OUTLET!] The Blind Tiger Ale House, 518 Hudson Street, Manhattan. The Brazen Head, 228 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn. David Copperfield’s, 1394 York Avenue, Manhattan. d.b.a., 41 First Avenue, Manhattan. George Keeley, 485 Amsterdam Avenue, Manhattan. The Ginger Man, 11 East 36th Street, Manhattan. Hop Devil Grill, 129 St. Marks Place, Manhattan. [NEW CASK OUTLET!] The Lighthouse Tavern,243 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn (cask available again soon). Mugs Ale House, 125 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn (no casks in summer). The Spotted Pig, 314 West 11th Street, Manhattan. Spuyten Duyvil, 359 Metropolitan Avenue, Brooklyn. Stout, 127-135 West 33rd Street, Manhattan. [NEW CASK OUTLET!] The Waterfront Ale House, 155 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn (no casks in summer). CASK COMING SOON: The Waterfront Ale House, 540 2nd Avenue, Manhattan. WARNING: There are now at least three bars in New York City dispensing keg beer from fake handpumps. If a bar you visit in NYC appears to have working handpumps and is not on the above list, it is either very new to selling cask ale or it is filtered keg beer on a dispense method that has been causing confusion. We suggest taking CAMRA’s initiative to “ask if it’s cask”… Breweries: Heather Ales, Orkney, Moorhouse’s, Daleside, Darwin. Legends’ brands are now available in cases, casks, and kegs in New York City* via S.K.I. Beer Corporation, tel. (718) 821-7200. *All NYC boroughs except The Bronx. NYC stockists of Legends imported craft beers A new feature in The Gotham Imbiber is to list all known permanent outlets of Legends’ beers. This will be updated every issue, and is a free service to stockists. Note that few outlets carry the entire range, and some only carry one brand from the portfolio. Bars and restaurants are in bold, while shops and wholesalers are in italics (ordinary typeface). Bars which will be taking kegs or casks on a one-off or occasional basis are excluded from this list – sorry, it’s permanent outlets only. Manhattan Swift’s Hibernian Lounge, 34 East 4th Street 10003 Alta Restaurant, 64 West 10th Street 10011 B & E Quality Beverage, 511 West 23rd Street 10011 Peculier Pub, 145 Bleecker Street 10012 Jekyll & Hyde, 91 7th Avenue South 10014 The Other Room, 143 Perry Street 10014 The Slaughtered Lamb, 182 West 4th Street 10014 Hercules Fancy Grocery, 27 Morton Street 10014 Stout, 127-135 West 33rd Street 10016 The Ginger Man, 11 East 36th Street 10016 House of Brews, 363 West 46th Street 10036 St. Andrews, 120 West 44th Street 10036 Brooklyn The Brazen Head, 228 Atlantic Avenue 11201 The Levee, 212 Berry Street 11211 Eagle Provisions, 628 5th Avenue 11215 Total Wine Bar, 74 5th Avenue 11217 Bierkraft, 191 5th Avenue 11217 Slope Food Market, 475 Bergen Street 11217 The Garden, 921 Manhattan Avenue 11222 Rogers Beer Distributors, 1167 Rogers Avenue 11226 Thrifty Beverage Center, 2115 Coyle Street 11229 American Beer Distributors, 256 Court Street 11231 East Coast Beer Company, 316 37th Street 11232 Key Food, 369 Flatbush Avenue 11238 Queens B & B Beverage, 215-45 Northern Boulevard 11361 69th Street Beer Distributors, 5513 69th Street 11378 Home Service Beer Corp., 71-31 73rd Place 11385 YMK Fruit & Veg., 118-18 Liberty Avenue 11419 _________________________________________________________________________________ CAN YOU HELP WITH PROMOTING CRAFT BEER OVER MACRO BEER? PLEASE CONTACT THE GOTHAM IMBIBER IF YOU CAN VOLUNTEER SOME TIME. “IN THE BIG COOKIE OF THE BEER BUSINESS, SMALL BREWERS ARE THE CHOCOLATE CHIPS” Fritz Maytag, Anchor Brewery. AN EMPTY PINT GLASS IS NO USE UNLESS IT IS REFILLED WITH CRAFT BEER. AN EMPTY PAGE THAT SHOULD HAVE CARRIED ADVERTISEMENTS IS NO USE FOR FUNDING THE GOTHAM IMBIBER’S EFFORTS TO PROMOTE CRAFT BEER AND THE PLACES THAT SERVE IT. IF YOU’VE HAD TROUBLE FINDING A PRINTED COPY OF THIS ISSUE, THAT IS THE REASON. THIS SPACE COULD HAVE BEEN YOUR ADVERT AND WOULD HAVE FUNDED 250 COPIES OF THE GOTHAM IMBIBER…
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