Craft Beer booms in Nashville
Transcription
Craft Beer booms in Nashville
8E ■ cover story x SUNDAY, JULY 14, 2013 THE TENNESSEAN CRAFT BEER BOOMS IN NASHVILLE local breweries BLACKSTONE BREWPUB & BREWERY 1918 West End Ave., Nashville 615-327-9969, www.blackstone brewery.com BOSCOS 1805 21st Ave. S., Nashville 615-385-0050, www.boscosbeer.com New breweries, festivals proliferate while existing operations enjoy opportunity to branch out COVER PHOTO BY SANFORD MYERS / THE TENNESSEAN “ We will tell anybody anything if it helps them make better beer.” KENT TAYLOR Blackstone Brewery a Kent Taylor began brewing craft beer at Blackstone 17 years ago, long before the trend took off in this region. JAE S. LEE / THE TENNESSEAN CZANN’S BREWING COMPANY 505 Lea Ave., Nashville http://czanns.com FAT BOTTOM BREWERY 900 Main St., Nashville www.fatbottombrewing.com GRANITE CITY BREWERY 1864 W. McEwen Drive, Franklin 615-435-1949, www.gcfb.net Beer goes through the bottling line at Blackstone Brewing Company. JAE S. LEE / THE TENNESSEAN Jackalope Brewing Company reached 100 percent capacity in October and can barely keep up with demand. “We’d literally be kegging a beer and sending it right to our distributors,” said co-owner Steve Wright. SANFORD MYERS / THE TENNESSEAN canned beer doesn’t allow light to enter and “It’s exciting. There are tons of new brewhas less oxygen than bottles. And it’s easier eries coming in … it’s booming,” said Virball. to recycle, has less overall packaging and Matt Leff, who organizes beer festivals costs less to ship, just to name a few beneand events in town through Rhizome Producfits. Buying a canning line can be a big captions, said having breweries significantly ital expense, but contracting with mobile adds to the culture. Picking up a six-pack canning companies helps offset that cost. doesn’t make the same impact as visiting the “But if (you) had done it three or four place where beers are made and speaking years ago, you would have been too soon. with the people who make them. Nashville wasn’t ready for it,” said JackaPlus, the collaborative spirit of Nashville lope co-owner Robyn Virball. and the craft beer culture as a whole help After 17 years in business, Blackstone keep the competition healthy. opened a new brewing facility and bottling “I think there’s room for everybody,” operation two years ago. “We’re just doing Wingo said. what’s been done 100 years ago,” Taylor said. Taylor noted that craft beer drinkers are “If it makes better beer, we’ll do it,” he said. not brand-loyal, after all. They’re categoryOtherwise, the company keeps loyal. the bells and whistles at its “They’ll try everything on the facility at a minimum. market,” said Blackstone coFour main Meanwhile, Neil McCormick founder Stephanie Weins. ingredients in said Yazoo has kept its focus Taylor said he considers their beer brewing local rather than expanding, job to mean getting people into even regionally. the craft beer bucket — more so “We want to make everybody than the Blackstone brand’s here as proud as possible to bucket. work with us,” he said. The information between brewers also flows freely. A creative explosion “We will tell anybody anyBeyond the growth at current thing if it helps them make betbreweries and new ones on the ter beer,” Taylor said. horizon, David Wingo, a craft Other brewery operators say beer aficionado (who calls himthe same. In 2011, a group of self “just a lowly beer drinklocal breweries created the Tener”), adds that breweries are nessee Craft Brewers Guild. bringing interesting beer opTheir first meeting took place at tions to the table. Blackstone with Jackalope’s “There’s gonna be a lot of Spaulding (who has a law dediversity in the Nashville beer gree) writing bylaws and Yazoo’s scene that we didn’t have befounder, Linus Hall, as president. fore,” he said. They work together on legislaLittle Harpeth Brewing, for tive issues such as coming to a example, plans to specialize in recent compromise for a flat German-style lagers. tax on beer rather than one “I’ve been (home) brewing tied to the cost of the beer. German lager pretty much “This past year … one of exclusively for about 12 years now,” said the main things other than the tax was Steve Scoville, head brewer at Little Harlaying down guidelines for festivals,” peth. Along with founder Michael Kwas, McCormick added. he’ll also offer options such as Chicken The guidelines help protect brewers Scratch, an American Pilsner made from from feeling pressured to participate malted barley, locally grown corn and Amer- in every one of the growing number of ica’s only native hop variety. “That’s another festivals and to focus instead on the way we try to tie our brand and deliver prod- ones that help sustain the industry. ucts that are really related to the history of Leff, who says he focuses on qualMiddle Tennessee,” Scoville said. ity, not quantity, at his festival, startMeanwhile, Black Abbey will focus on ed the East Nashville Beer Festival Belgian-style beers, and Tennessee Brew three years ago. He caps attendance Works will offer a variety. at 2,000, but has sold out the festival And even though Yazoo isn’t new, the every year. In March, for instance, brewery continues to challenge beer drinkthe festival sold out in 15 minutes. ers by bringing in new programs such as its Leff leads brewery and beer bar “Embrace the Funk” series, a collaboration tours through Gray Line, and he with local home-brewing expert Brandon added the 12 South Winter Warmer, Jones. The crew has been developing sours, a December festival coming up on wild ales and lambics with yeasts that could its third year, as well as the Brew “shut down (a) brewery,” McCormick said, if at the Zoo, which just completed its they aren’t contained and isolated properly. second year. Leff heads up Nashville Craft Some of these “funky” beers also sit in Beer Week, too, which offers a variety of white wine, red wine, whiskey barrels and events such as dinners culminating with the 30-year-old estate rum barrels from Jamaica East Nashville Beer Festival. that the brewery has acquired, adding tart “Part of my mission is to build Nashville complexity that you wouldn’t get from tradi- Craft Beer Week to reach all demographics,” tional beers. he said. “When there’s visibility of craft beer “Very few breweries in the United States and local breweries, people are at least goare approaching sours and wild ales like we ing to give it a try.” are, because the program takes a year or The interest in all things local also has three or four years to get running at any size played a natural role in the popularity of volume,” McCormick said. “People that encraft beer. joy these types of beers understand that “More and more people are coming into there’s only going to be so much of it. It’s the bars and asking for what’s local,” Spauldsmall-batch.” ing said. “That used to never really be a thing.” A collaborative community And as the local restaurant scene grows, When it comes to the interest in craft brewso does the local craft beer scene. ing, operating brewers look to the new brew“The three years that I’ve been here, this eries and beer bars as examples of the grow- city has drastically moved forward,” Leff ing popularity. said, “and it’s not stopping.” WATER Reach Jennifer Justus at 615259-8072 or jjustus@ tennessean.com. COOL SPRINGS BREWERY 600A Frazier Drive, Franklin 615-503-9626, www.coolsprings brewery.com MAYDAY BREWERY 521 Old Salem Highway, Murfreesboro http://maydaybrewery.com JACKALOPE BREWING COMPANY 701 Eighth Ave. S., Nashville 615-873-4313, www.jackalope brew.com WATCH THE PROCESS To see a video of the beer-making and bottling process at Blackstone Brewery, scan the code or visit Tennessean.com/Taste. ROCK BOTTOM RESTAURANT & BREWERY 111 Broadway, Nashville 615-251-4677, www.rockbottom.com TURTLE ANARCHY BREWING COMPANY 216 Noah Drive, Franklin 615-595-8855, www.turtleanarchy. com YAZOO BREWING COMPANY 910 Division St., Nashville 615-891-4649, www.yazoobrew.com Beer barrels lined up at Yazoo, which had its highest volume in sales last month. JUBILEE CRAFT BEER COMPANY 615-686-9397 www.jubileebeer.com JAE S. LEE / THE TENNESSEAN coming up The following breweries are in various stages of development: YEAST CONTACT sk Kent Taylor about changes in the craft beer scene in Nashville, and he’ll take you back to 1994, when he co-founded Blackstone Brewing Company. “It was Bud country,” he said. And even when he would serve guests his lightest beer, they would sometimes ask for a “real” beer instead. “We might have been ahead of our time.” Cut to 2013 and you’ll find Blackstone joined by thriving craft breweries like the 10-year-old Yazoo Brewing Company, which had its highest volume in sales last month, and the 2-year-old Jackalope Brewing Company, which reached 100 percent production in October of last year and will add canned beer to its repertoire thanks to a mobile canning unit rolling into town this fall. New breweries have popped up, with several more in the works, including HonkyTonk Brewing Co., Tennessee Brew Works, Black Abbey Brewing Company and Little Harpeth Brewing. Beer bars have opened, too (Craft Brewed and The Filling Station), with others set to open (Hops + Crafts and The Hop Stop). The Tennessee Craft Brewers Guild formed in 2011 and led the charge to update beer tax laws that took effect this month (though we still have the highest beer tax in the country). And it seems anyone wanting to learn more about craft beer won’t have to look far for an opportunity to sip. “We have a beer festival or an event (to take part in) every weekend from midAugust through October,” said Jackalope co-founder Bailey Spaulding. “That’s a lot.” The craft beer movement has been booming across the country, especially in cities like Portland, Ore., and Denver. (Tennessee has about 30 breweries in the state, for example, while Portland has more than 50 in the city alone). But despite a recent Beer Institute study ranking Tennessee low in beer consumption, Blackstone recently topped the list as fastest-growing craft brewery in the country in an interactive map prepared by The New Yorker. Taylor, who also bottles beer for other companies on a contract basis, shrugs it off as just “math” and “a fluke,” preferring instead to keep his head down and moving forward with his goals. It’s a sentiment that seems to be echoed in town as beer makers work hard just to keep up. The folks at Jackalope, for instance, said they’ve spent a solid six months making as much beer as possible to keep up with demand in Nashville. “We’d literally be kegging a beer and sending it right to our distributors,” said co-owner Steve Wright. “Well, this is the freshest beer in Nashville. I feel pretty sure of that,” he remembers saying. “Thankfully, Nashville is still pretty thirsty.” Jackalope installed bigger fermenters this spring to double production over the course of the summer, and plans to add another fermenter in late fall. They’ll also begin to can beer through a mobile canning operation that will start up in Middle Tennessee later this year, following a trend that has taken off in Colorado and Oregon. Popular among craft brewers, BLACK ABBEY BREWING COMPANY GRAINS The Tennessean Nashville www.blackabbeybrewing.com BRIARSCRATCH BREWING Cottontown, Tenn. http://briarscratchbrewing.com HOPS Jennifer Justus CALFKILLER 1839 Blue Springs Road, Sparta, Tenn. www.facebook.com/calfkiller brewingcompany HONKYTONK BREWING CO. 240 Cumberland Bend, Nashville 615-556-8976, www.facebook. com/pages/HonkyTonk-BrewingCo LITTLE HARPETH BREWING 30 Oldham St., Nashville http://littleharpethbrewing.com Jackalope Brewery assistant brewer Will Hadley wheels a freshly filled keg past the company’s new fermentors at the brewery. TENNESSEE BREW WORKS 809 Ewing Ave., Nashville www.tnbrew.com/brewery SANFORD MYERS / THE TENNESSEAN IF YOU GO Nashville supports several beer festivals each year, including the Music City Brewer’s Festival, which hosts breweries from out of town, such as Mississippi’s Lazy Magnolia, as well as a few breweries with locations here, such as Boscos. GETTY AND FILE IMAGES PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY JAE S. LEE / THE TENNESSEAN Special barrels are being used to make sour beers at Yazoo. JAE S. LEE / THE TENNESSEAN What: The 12th annual Music City Brewer’s Festival When: Saturday, July 27 Session A is from noon to 4 p.m. Session B is from 6 to 10 p.m. Cost: Tickets begin at $35 per person Details: http://music citybrewersfest.com