Luxe Beat Magazine OCTOBER 2014 | Page 51

10 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About Beer 1. The best beer is not made by hand. After years of domination by big beer brand, beer drinkers sought out smaller batch breweries that eschewed the factory model of the Big 3 (Budweiser, Miller and Coors.) But, like their larger competitors, most of the top craft breweries use highly automated processes to brew their beer as efficiently and consistently as possible. 2. The best beer is not made on automated systems either. This may contradict the first fact on the list, but that’s kind of the point. Good beer means different things to different people, and sometimes it’s the tiny imperfections and inconsistencies from batch to batch that provide the drinker the satisfaction of tasting a true craftsman’s handiwork. 3. Brewing is hard, wet and dirty work. Not only does most brewing involve cleaning tanks, washing kegs and lifting heavy bags of grain, but there's also a lot of mechanical knowhow required to operate a brewery. 4. Not all brewers have beards. There’s a common conception of the modern craft brewer as a white man with a big, bushy beard. Brewers like that certainly exist, but there are also breweries like Jackalope Brewing Company in Nashville, which was founded by two women Robyn Virball and Bailey Spaulding. There are certainly brewers of color as well, as brewing is an international profession practiced all over the world. 5. Brewery owners are not rich. Beer is big business, but not everyone in the industry is making big money. In fact, the opposite is often true for small breweries. At Blue Hills Brewing Company co-founded by Andris Veidis didn’t take home a paycheck for several years. Most brewery owners, at least the good ones, start their companies to make good beer - the money is just a perk. 6. It’s not just about the beer. Brewers are fond of saying that their only concern is making good beer, but the truth is that such a claim is mostly just good marketing. Every succesful brewer understands that the most important thing is to make a quality product, but that the next most important thing to have success, is to be able to market that product. 7. Traditional methods are not necessarily the best methods. There is a romantic attachment to traditional methods, but that doesn't’ mean that those methods work better than newer ones. As important as tradition is to brewing, so too is science and adapting to modern science. Newer techniques and methods have allowed contemporary brewers to get the most out of their ingredients and beers. 8. Beer is a community. Even in small markets, perhaps especially in small markets, most brewers would rather collaborate with their fellow brewers than compete with them. The idea that one brewery’s success means the failure of another is beginning to fade in popularity, and the beer wards between breweries - even the big ones - are increasingly rare. 9. Craft beer drinke '2&R