About the art, culture, economics and business of beer and brewing with hosts Jeff Alworth (The Beer Bible, The Secrets of Master Brewers) and Oregon State University economics professor Patrick Emerson.
Jeff Alworth & Patrick Emerson
beer podcast, good beer, brewing, portland, weather, sound quality, conversational, casual, educational, intelligent, hosts, knowledge, topics, world, great, better, favorite, talk.
Listeners of Beervana Podcast that love the show mention: jeff and patrick, beer hunting,The Beervana Podcast is a delightful and educational podcast that delves into the world of beer. Hosted by Jeff Alworth and Patrick Emerson, this podcast offers a perfect blend of knowledge, humor, and engaging conversation. Whether you're a beer enthusiast or an industry professional, there's something for everyone in this podcast.
One of the best aspects of The Beervana Podcast is the expertise and chemistry between Jeff and Patrick. Jeff's deep knowledge of beer and brewing shines through as he shares his insights and experiences. His book, The Beer Bible, is a testament to his expertise in the field. Patrick brings a unique perspective with his background as an economist, offering economic analysis and insights into the world of beer. Together, they create an informative and entertaining dynamic that keeps listeners engaged.
Another great aspect of this podcast is its variety of topics. Rather than focusing solely on brewing processes or interviews with brewers, The Beervana Podcast covers a wide range of subjects related to beer. From deep dives into specific beer styles to discussions about the economics of the industry, each episode offers something new and interesting for listeners.
While it's hard to find any major flaws in this podcast, one minor drawback may be occasional tangents or side discussions that veer away from the main topic. While these diversions can be entertaining, they may detract from the overall focus at times.
In conclusion, The Beervana Podcast is a must-listen for any beer lover or industry professional. With its combination of expertise, engaging conversation, and diverse topics, it provides a fantastic listening experience that educates and entertains. Whether you're looking to expand your knowledge of different beer styles or gain insights into the economics behind the industry, this podcast has you covered. Cheers to Jeff and Patrick for their outstanding work!
Nine years ago, almost to the day, we recorded our first episode of the Beervana Podcast. All things must end, and it is with deep gratitude and appreciation that we announce this is our last show. If you'd like to read a bit more of a formal obit, we have one here. https://www.beervanablog.com/beervana/2024/5/2/old-podcasts-dont-die Thanks for everything, you wonderful listeners!
At this year's Central European Brewers Festival, Polish brewer Marek Kamiński gave a presentation on the briefly extinct style of Grodziskie that has been making a comeback in its homeland. Jeff and Marek later sat down to discuss this fascinating style, its history, and how it's doing today. We have that interview, along with the news and mailbag and a Croatian beer tasting.
Today we're going to go to Prague and Budapest, where Jeff recently spent ten days. He was there to speak at the Central European Brewers Conference, and had a chance to get caught up on the beer scenes in the region. The countries there have very diverse brewing backgrounds, from the Czechia, with local intact traditions dating back centuries, to countries like Croatia, where craft brewing dates back only a decade. He's going to tell us what he found. Beer Tastings: Varionica Pale, Zmajska Pils, and Maktoob IPA
Not long ago, we received a very interesting email in the mailbag. It came from Pete Hoppins of Portland's British-influenced brewery, Away Days. It was the length of a short article and came with a color-coded graph. The essence of the email boiled down to a pithy question he posed about the viability of small breweries today. Pete asked: “Do you think we could ever see another brewery as successful as say Breakside or 10 Barrel (in Portland area)?” The email was far to detailed and meaty for a simple mailbag item, so we're bumping it up to the main topic of this pod. PHOTO: 10 Barrel Brewing Beer tasting: Rogue Dead Guy IPA, Hetty Alice Belgian IPA (BIPA)
Audioblog: Singha Beer, Don't Ask No Questions by Jeff Alworth & Patrick Emerson
In September, Dublin's Guinness Brewery opened its second American site, this time in Chicago. Jeff went to the Windy City to check it out and while he was there, sat down with Ryan Wagner, who helped see the project over the finish line, and brewer Megan Schwarz.
When we think of different beers, our minds almost immediately frame them in terms of “style.” IPAs and witbiers and Czech dark lagers: this is how we've come to understand beer. Today we get philosophical and ask the question: what if styles aren't the only way to think about beer? What if, rather than illuminating something essential about beer, styles actually deceive us?
Today we are joined by hop grower Max Coleman for a special edition of Beeronomics. Hops are a very unusual crop, sold only to a single industry for one purpose. How does this business relationship work? We're going to ask Max how he knows which hops to grow and how many, and how the market for hops works. Photo: Max enveloped by a field of Mosaic hops.
Several years ago, beer experienced its “tulip mania” moment in the form of a pumpkin ale bubble. Many of those were bad—but that was the breweries' fault, not the style's. These should function like fun autumnal rituals. The new crop may bring you back.
Today we are pulling out our green eyeshades and squinting at some data—it's another episode of Beeronomics. Our intrepid economist is going to walk us through some numbers. Inflation, draft numbers, taprooms—we're digging deep so you don't have to. Cover photo: Midjourney (prompt: beer economics) Beer Tasting: Buoy Festbier
For the second year in a row, we have decamped to Loyal Legion, a local pub that reliably has one of the best selections of fresh hop beers in town. As we sit here and turn our tongues green, we're going to discuss the hop harvest. Patrick and Jeff went down to Coleman Farms a few weeks back to witness it, and we're going to walk you through the process that takes 20-foot tall bines sunning themselves in the field and turns them into the T-90 pellets breweries use to make beer.
After screwing around on the margins for a while, this week I really plunged into the fresh hop marketplace. What I've discovered has been both unusual and enlightening. Here's an early-season report.
We're not dead and neither is the podcast. Bear with us, kind and forgiving listeners.
As everyone knows, the three great lager-brewing regions are Bavaria, Bohemia, and Austria. Wait, Austria? Sure it was famous in the last century for Vienna lager, but what has it done lately? We have Franz Hofer on the show today to answer this very question. Franz splits his year between Oklahoma and Vienna and writes about the lager-lands on his website, Tempest in a Tankard. Austria is, no kidding, a truly special place where one of the world's major styles whets the whistles of a nation—while somehow staying hidden from the rest of the world. Find Franz at his website: https://tempestinatankard.com/ Music: Herbert von Karajan, "Austria: Land der Berge, Land am Strome"
In their latest Fireside Chat, Breakside Brewery's Ben Edmunds and Beervana's Jeff Alworth speak with three brewers whose breweries do not make hoppy ales. We wanted to hear why they chose this path, and what it entails. Because IPAs are overwhelmingly popular among craft beer drinkers, these breweries have had to create interest in other types of beer. How did they do that? And how does the future look for these breweries? Guests in this show: • Bill Arnott, Founder and Brewer of Seattle's Machine House Brewing. • Dan Carey, Co-founder and Brewer of Wisconsin's New Glarus Brewing. • Alex Ganum, Founder and Brewer at Portland's Upright Brewing.
We have an unusual transcontinental edition of the Beervana Show for you today. We thought it would be fun to compare and contrast our summer vacation destinations. I've been in Maine for a couple weeks and Jeff took a trip to Oklahoma. We both visited breweries, drank some beer, and we will give our full report.
Both Jeff and I are about to go on excursions out of the state and away from our microphones, so today we're doing the one, time-sensitive task left to us: addressing your mailbag comments and questions. Illustration courtesy Midjourney. Prompt: drinking beer on holiday in the sunshine
Nearly a quarter century ago, veteran brewer Vinnie Cilurzo brewed a one-off double IPA at Russian River Brewing for a local festival. It would become a regular, bearing the somewhat obscure name of a Roman naturalist—Pliny the Elder. Pliny pretty soon became a cult phenomenon and ultimately the brewery's calling card. But what makes it special—what makes it a classic—is how Vinnie anticipated the future of hoppy American ales and brewed the first truly modern IPA all those years ago. PHOTO: Russian River Brewing
In 1976, a blind tasting of Chardonnays known as the Judgment of Paris changed the wine world forever. Today, in this podcast, we offer you no less an earth-shattering blind tasting, the Judgment of Lents. That's right, it's part two of our mass market lager blind tasting, held in a luxurious conference room at Zoiglhaus in the Lents neighborhood of SE Portland. Together, Zoiglhaus's brewmaster Alan Taylor, Jeff, and Patrick sat down to taste the final six lagers and determine which deserved the title of world's best.
A Breakside-Beervana Fireside Chat. How did the American IPA tradition start? Are West Coast beers just about the bitter? Did hazies change everything? What did West Coast breweries take from the east—and how much did East Coast breweries crib from the west? Are there actually two different traditions? Just one? Dozens? American brewers, in reinventing IPAs, have changed the way the world makes beer. But how accurately do we understand our own story? We will get to the bottom of this once and for all. Guests: Noah Bissell, Co-founder of Bissell Brothers Brewing (Portland, ME) Vinnie Cilurzo, Co-founder and Brewmaster, Russian River Brewing (Santa Rosa, CA) Mitch Steele, Co-owner and Brewmaster of New Realm (Atlanta), former Brewmaster of Stone Brewing (Alexandra Nowell, sadly, was sick and couldn't join)
Today we have a very special show, along with a special guest. In Show 180, we kick off a two-part taste off of … are you ready? … mass market lagers! While connoisseurs eschew these beers because they have slight and occasionally objectionable flavor profiles, they constitute the vast majority of beers sold in the world. We have an international line-up, and to help us taste them, we invited friend-of-the-pod Alan Taylor to join us. Alan is the German-trained master brewer at Zoiglhaus, and he has a trained and nuanced palate. We invited him to help us all understand what we're tasting in these beers. Beers Tasted: Round 1 1. Budweiser 2. Kokanee 3. Hamm's 4. Busch 5. Heineken 6. Foster's 7. Rolling Rock 8. Coors 9. Beck's Round 2 1. Singha 2. Modelo Especial 3. Miller High Life 4. Kirin 5. Rainier 6. Stella Artois 7. Michelob Ultra 8. Pabst 9. Narragansett
In our last show, we delved into the strange, wonderful tale of Belgian witbier. But that story was really just the first chapter in a wave of Belgian-inspired beers and breweries that got going thanks to witbier's success. For more than a decade and a half, Belgian beer seemed to be growing in popularity, but then it cratered. Now it's very difficult to find a Belgian style on a taplist—even witbier. We thought we'd try to figure out what happened. Tasting: Block 15, Garden Path
We're less than a month away from the summer, and that means shifting down from big, boozy beers to lighter thirst-quenchers. We thought it would be a great opportunity to do one of our studies in style and look at that perfect Belgian summer ale, the witbier. If you think that sounds like a tame topic, stay tuned, because we're going to get into the deep history of the style and describe a beer that bears no resemblance to Blue Moon. Tasting: Hoegaarden, Breakside Belgian White
[Note: Dodgy audio! Our field mic may be on the fritz! Apologies!] It's been a minute since our last show. In the weeks since we last spoke, various events have transpired. Patrick has been to London and back. Jeff has been to Tillamook. The King of England was fêted by BrewDog—and then unfêted. The Belgians expressed displeasure with the Champagne of Beers. Portland lost an icon. Lots of stuff to talk about, so for this show, we thought we'd head to a pub and do a proper catch-up over beers.
A couple of weeks back, Portland enjoyed the return of one of its most unusual events—the 8th edition of SheBrew. As the name suggests, the event celebrates women, and includes two components: a national female-only homebrew competition, and a one-day festival of beer made by women at professional breweries. We're going to learn about SheBrew from one of the organizers, Jenn McPoland, and hear how it has accelerated the integration of women into brewing. PHOTO: SheBrew
In Show 175, we are delighted to be joined by pFriem's Campbell Morrissy. Campbell is currently the Head Brewer at pFriem, and recently crafted the recipe and formulation for a collaboration pFriem is doing with Jeff. In designing the beer, a pub-strength pilsner, Campbell used a California-grown floor malt. It seemed like a perfect opportunity to have him on the show and dig into malting. It's a subject that can get technical pretty fast, but it's critically important in making beer taste the way it does. In this show, Campbell walks us through malt's secrets.
In part two of our conversation, we talk to Ben Love and Van Havig about some of the challenges facing breweries as the year nears its end.
Today we join you from the industrial tract in Southeast Portland that Ben Love and Van Havig selected ten years ago when they founded Gigantic Brewing. At the time, they expected it would blend in with its surroundings, and they devoted little attention to the tiny taproom space they called the Champagne Lounge. To their surprise, it has become a success, encouraging them to open a second taproom during Covid and, last month, a third. In today's pod, we're going to ask them about the new place, their tenth anniversary, and how things have changed since 2012.
The cold weather seems to come fast. Through October, crisp mornings often give way to sunny afternoons. After Halloween, however, the days grow short and the sun disappears behind gray clouds. Once we fall back after daylight savings end, darkness starts arriving at the end of the workday and the sun makes a slow, sleepy return. Winter is coming, and bringing the cold and wet with it. On today's show we offer a tonic that's at least a thousand years old—the winter warmer, a beer to heat body and soul. Tastings: Ninkasi Sleigh'r, Anchor Christmas Ale, Deschutes Jubelale, Double Mountain Fa La La La La
A few weeks back, Jeff's editor at Craft Beer & Brewing wrote to explain that the magazine was shifting to its original quarterly format. The reason wasn't declining revenues, but efficiencies—it's less expensive and simpler to put out four issues a year than six. That got us thinking: how do magazines work? How has Craft Beer & Brewing survived when so many other magazines folded? How do the internet, social media, and newer delivery systems like podcasting impact print media--should we be thinking in terms of media companies rather than magazines? In today's show, we have Jamie Bogner, Craft Beer & Brewing's publisher, on to give us the low down about how they do it.
For most of the 20th century, if you wanted to point to an actual American style of beer, you had to face San Francisco. Steam beer, a frontier concoction brewed fast for thirsty gold miners, became a signature of the city. Many breweries made it in the latter half of the 19th century, but they all died out, save one: the Anchor Brewery, which was rescued from bankruptcy in 1965 and helped jump-start craft brewing in America.
We join you from the best place on the planet for Show 169—a pub, smack dab in the middle of fresh-hop season. We recorded this show on-site at Portland's Loyal Legion, which is reliably stocked with these little gems throughout the season. While we sipped on them, we discussed hops, the harvest, and the seasonal, regional delight that are fresh hop ales.
[Warning: raw audio of spotty quality] In this Pod Extra, Jeff interviews legendary London brewer Derek Prentice, beer historian Ron Pattinson, and Goose Island Innovation Brewer Mike Siegel. They teamed up on a special project to recreate a 1960s barley wine made by London's now-defunct Truman brewery--where Derek started brewing in 1968, Double Eagle combines a wood-aged barley wine inoculated with wild yeast (Brett C), blended with fresh barley wine. In the interview, Jeff learns about the history of the beer, Derek's career, and many other lovely tidbits along the way. It is the raw audio, so there's no intro or outro.
It's hard out there for a brewer. Heat, drought, supply-chain issues, metal shortages, war, and inflation—all these things seem to be conspiring against them. On today's show we'll have a look at these headwinds, assess how bad they are, and how soon brewers might see some relief.
Though many Americans may not realize it, Scotland is one of the world's great old brewing countries. Even if you have heard of 80 shilling ales and wee heavies, however, you may not be familiar with the vat-aging tradition Gareth Young mines at Epochal Ales in Glasgow. Drawing on archival records, Young is bringing attention to beers like stock ale and Glasgow porter. In Show 167, we get on the horn with Glasgow and have a fascinating chat with Gareth.
When Stone Brewing launched in the mid-90s, its aggro “you're not worthy!” vibe captured the counter-culture zeitgeist of craft brewing. It was able to build a brand on the rising popularity of IPAs—one that took it to Virginia and ultimately Berlin. Yet all that reversed itself in recent years and Stone found itself flailing in a new world that didn't admire aggro anymore. It got us thinking about how breweries go through a familiar life cycle, one that would make a worthy topic. Beers tasted: Fort George 3-Way, Sierra Nevada Hazy Little Thing Photo: Sierra Nevada's first brewery (photo: Sierra Nevada)
If a Portland brewery wants to drive a keg of beer across the river to Vancouver, WA and they have filed the proper paperwork with the state, they're allowed to. The State of Oregon, however, forbids Washington breweries from doing the same. This rankled Justin Leigh, owner of Dwinell Country Ales in Goldendale, WA. He's a lawyer, and he was pretty sure that didn't pass legal muster. A few weeks ago, three breweries sued Oregon for the right to self-distribute South of the Columbia. Today we have Justin on the line, and we'll talk to him about the lawsuit and the way protectionism hampers breweries' access to markets.
It has been a while since we did a classic style dissection, but thanks to a listener request, we have a lovely, overlooked tradition to present today: bière de garde, France's signature style. It has a history dating back to the 19th century, but the current examples look a lot different. In today's show, we'll discuss that transformation, what caused it, and what you can expect from this elegant, unexpected style. Note: We had trouble with Zencastr again--and this will be the last time we use it. Sorry for the poor audio. Tasting: Thiriez Ambrée
Portland has many breweries. Old breweries, new breweries, big breweries, small breweries. But which, among this dense thicket, are the best? For visitors to Portland, that's an important question, and we're here to help! This past week, Jeff posted his annual Best Portland Breweries list, and we go through it and discuss the breweries he chose—and whether his choices are correct.
Today's post kicks off Portland Travel Week. To get things started, I'll offer an overview of the Rose City, a bit of beer-centric history, and some of the key features of the local drinking culture. Craft breweries follow a familiar model, and if you just go from one to the next, you might miss some of the character behind all that steel.
On June 11th, Portland's English-themed, pro-cask Away Days Brewery hosts a cask ale festival with several regional breweries. As you know, Jeff and I love cask ale and have been promoting it for over a decade—all to little apparent effect. Something changed in the past few years, though, and now several Portland-area breweries have regular cask offerings (we toured a chunk of them on a podcast extra between Shows 155 and 156). That something may very well be Away Days, which has shown the kind of sustained commitment to cask that has helped raise its profile in the city. In advance of the fest, we wanted to sit down and talk to some folks from the brewery
Old breweries compact time and preserve it. The hands of old brewers are evident in every dent and scuff. Their habits are preserved in the movements of the brewers they trained. When I stepped into Caledonian's brewhouse, wort steaming and foaming in weird bespoke coppers, it might have well been 1869.
On today's show we hear from Kjetil Dale, one of two dozen or so farmhouse brewers practicing an ancient craft in the western Norwegian valley of Voss. Brewing here is knitted into the culture of the region, beginning in the classic eldhus, or "firehouse," common on farms here. As the fire crackles nearby, Kjetil describes this tradition and some of his background. Beer tasting: Kings and Daughters / https://kingsanddaughters.com/
If you've been following us on social media, you've probably seen some photos Jeff posted from his recent visit to Norway. He was invited to participate at the Oslo Craft Beer Festival. We'll hear about that and what he learned of the Norwegian beer scene. Craft beer is only about twenty years old, but the brewing tradition goes back centuries—and perhaps millennia. While he was in Norway, Jeff visited three breweries that melded the old and new traditions. Beer tasting: Juice Jr. from Great Notion / https://greatnotion.com/
On Show 159, we are joined by Tobias Hahn and Nick Greiner, founders of the Rosenstadt Brewery. They tell us about their unusual approach to the business, what it's like to focus on German beer in the American Northwest, and how gemütlichkeit fits into all this.
Way, way back in Pod 16, Jeff and I tackled the Trappist beers of Belgium. In the time since that program aired, four new monastic breweries have opened, and in all a baker's dozen have started in the past decade. We thought it would be fun to revisit monastic brewing, discuss whether abbey ales are more or less a style with their arrivals, and taste a couple of the new ones.
Among living beer styles, rare is the is the case where a single beer accounts for the survival of a whole tradition, but it's mostly true in the case of saison. Well, a single beer, an English writer, and an American importer.
The Labor Department recently reported that inflation was up 7.9% over the past year, sending the stock markets down, and causing the Federal Reserve to begin raising interest rates. This news landed amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine, one of the biggest grain producers in the world. Add to that the rising costs of aluminum, a historically bad year for barley, and high gas prices, and it's clear that the cost of your pint of beer is almost certainly likely to rise. We thought it would be a perfect time to bring in the Beeronomist and walk us through the issues surrounding inflation, including the way it affects buyer behavior. Beers tasted today: Cloudburst Kevin!!! and Reuben's Dream Team
Throughout most of the past ten thousand years, brewing was a farmhouse chore, one of the many ways people preserved their harvest throughout the year. In more recent times it has become a commercial and industrial activity. Yet in a verdant pocket of Loudoun County, Virginia about an hour NW of Washington DC, the husband and wife team of Bonnie and John Branding are conducting an ambitious experiment. They've revived farmhouse brewing, growing their own barley, using wild yeast from the land, and brewing it up in a barn. On today's show, we're going to hear their story and learn how they're making this work in a 21st-century world.
Our Friday: a two-mile, four-pub crawl (with a short tram ride) where we stopped in and had our choice of two cask beers at each location. We encountered three milds along the walk. The crawl happened in Portland, Oregon. Because we're podcast professionals, we recorded our thoughts at each stop. Have a listen and learn about this remarkable development.
Many American breweries make sixty beers a year. Rochefort hasn't offered a single new release in sixty years. Because monks don't do anything without considering the long view, the abbey also built a new brewery to handle the increased production.