Cheers to all and hopes that everyone has a great beer and great company during this holiday season.
Slainte!
-JW
"What event is more awfully important to an English colony than the erection of its first brewhouse?"
-Rev. Sydney Smith
What is Lug Wrench Brewing Co.? It’s a virtual brewery with operations in both New England and Virginia. The ‘company’s’ core beliefs are in hand-crafted brewing, beer exploration, and most importantly, camaraderie. Lug Wrench is a brewery that doesn’t have to worry about profit margins, distribution arrangements, or market share. It gets to focus on the important things: beer and the culture that surrounds it. Lug Wrench Brewing Co. could just be the best brewery you have yet to hear of.
I have been following the development of Modern Times Beer for quite some time now. The brewery, which will be opening in San Diego later this year, is the brain child of Jacob McKean. Jacob was involved in marketing beer for Stone Brewing Company and decided to strike out on his own. I first heard of the venture because he reached out to Michael Tonsmeire to help with recipe development (Lug Wrench readers will recognize Michael's name, as we have exchanged beer with him before and are huge fans of his blog). This collaboration has been featured extensively on the Mad Fermentationist blog, mentioned on the Basic Brewing Radio podcast, interviewed on the BeerSmith's podcast, and others. But, what I have found most amazing about Modern Times recently is their use of Kickstarter.
As of this writing, the Modern Times campaign has been the most successful funding of a brewing yet on Kickstarter. The purpose of the campaign is to raise money to help outfit the Modern Times tasting room, purchase wine and spirit barrels, and buy lab equipment. The brewery set a $40,000 goal for the campaign and it has blown by it. They are currently working on a stretch goal of $65,000, which will fund a solar water heating system for the brewery.
Beer recipes can be inspired from a wide variety of different sources. These can range from brewer memories, such as Fat Tire, brewing practices, such as 90 Minute IPA, regulatory events, like Censored Amber Ale, and many others. These inspirations do not just apply to professional brewers, but are actively found within the homebrewing community as well. I recently had the pleasure of designing a beer recipe for a group brew with adult members of a community acting company my family has long been involved with - Black Box Players.
Third, when making equipment purchases, buy bigger than you need. This maxim is particularly true of vessels that hold volumes of liquid (water, mash, wort, etc). The increased size, to a point, provides increased flexibility, often for only a slightly higher cost. For example, a new brewer could buy a cooler mash tun that is 5 gallons for around $25, while a 10 gallon version costs $45. The 10-gallon cooler's capacity allows the user to make a normal 5-gallon batch, an imperial 5-gallon batch, or a normal strength 10-gallon batch. The 5 gallon cooler only allows the brewer to make a normal 5 gallon batch. The increased flexibility outweighs the increase in cost and the brewer can avoid the mistake I made by purchasing the smaller one, then a year later buying the bigger version. The same sort of logic applies to boil kettles, conical fermenters, hot liquor tanks, etc. As always, use common sense because purchasing a 55-gallon kettle when you would never use that volume is a waste of money.