Beyond Beer
Brewers across the country are embracing an ever-broadening portfolio, going beyond beer into mocktails, cocktails, kombucha, THC products, hop teas, and other offerings.
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Brewing beer is a combination of both art and science, but there are many best practices to help keep your brewery running smoothly, make better quality beer, and maintain a healthy business. Learn best practices for brewing and serving different beer styles, building and maintaining a brewery that is safe and efficient, and keeping records that will protect your brewery and help you grow your business.
Brewers across the country are embracing an ever-broadening portfolio, going beyond beer into mocktails, cocktails, kombucha, THC products, hop teas, and other offerings.
Pumpkin beers can often still be found in tasting rooms, brewpubs, and liquor stores well into the new year, endeavoring to stretch the Halloween and Thanksgiving seasons.
Some breweries are bucking the trend of always having something popular and familiar on tap, instead looking back at history for beer style inspiration.
Despite a wealth of internationally sourced raw materials, one crossover brew seems to be glaringly absent from the modern IPA lineup: a German- or Bavarian-style IPA.
The five primary aroma buckets that best describe “dank” include woody, herbal, floral, stinky, and fruity. Every strain of cannabis has these aromas in varying amounts.
Many Italian brewers fell in love with the idea of brewing a dry-hopped Pilsner—thirst-quenching and drinkable yet defined by a decisive flavor and personality.
This dark, “double” rye brew is ideally suited for the cooler seasons, from autumn to springtime, when it can indeed serve as a satisfying glass of “liquid pumpernickel.”
Adding CBD to beers can provide a more flavorful experience due to flavor-active hemp terpenes, providing an aroma of cannabis to complement the flavors and aromas of the beer.
Consumers are increasingly looking for healthier, lower calorie options and are usually surprised to find that alcohol content is a major source of calories in beer.
Better, innovative products constitute one reason why non-alcohol beer sales are surging. These long-neglected brews are also appealing to new markets.