Florida Breweries book available for pre-ordering

florida breweries bookA long road has been traversed that involved thousands of miles, dozens of beers and visits to every brewery in Florida from Key West to Pensacola for conversations with brewers, owners and managers.

My book has been written.

I just sent the final chapters of “Florida Breweries,” one of the Stackpole Books Breweries Series, to my editor.

Scheduled for release on April 1, 2014, (no fooling!), the travel guide includes chapters on 66 breweries and brewpubs, along with a lot of what I hope are interesting tidbits about Florida’s beer history, culture and community.

I don’t expect to get rich from this venture, but it was a blast to “research” and to write. There are some great stories out there, and I feel honored to be able to tell some of them. The book is now available on Amazon for pre-ordering – at a discount – if you want to be one of the first to get a copy.

Any breweries, bars, book stores, food trucks, shoe shops or convenience stores who would like to pre-order in bulk for resale can contact Sarah Wolf at swolf@stackpolebooks.com.

As the release date gets nearer, I would be glad to schedule book signings. If you’re interested, please contact me directly at gerard@beerinflorida.com.

Oh, and now that this project is near completion, you can expect to see a lot more action on this blog.

Cheers!

Others in the Breweries Series.
New York Breweries: 2nd Edition
Colorado Breweries
California Breweries North
Massachusetts Breweries
Ohio Breweries
Indiana Breweries
Pennsylvania Breweries: 4th Edition
New Jersey Breweries
Michigan Breweries
Virginia, Maryland & Delaware Breweries

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Florida breweries gain respect at Great American Beer Festival

IMG_2689The 2013 Great American Beer Festival is in the books, and I survived it relatively unscathed.

I have several stories coming out of it that will be published either here or on my RoadTripsforBeer.com site (or if I can swing it, a publication that pays me), but I wanted to share an overview of how Florida fared.

IMG_2688If you’ve been keeping up, you know that only one Florida brewery brought back a medal from the competition: Cigar City Brewing with local homebrewer Jeff Gladish got the gold in the Pro-Am Competition for their Poblano Wit collaboration.

Florida was well-represented on the festival floor, with seven breweries from the state pouring samples for attendees: 7venth Sun, Cigar City, Darwin’s Brewing Company, Due South Brewing, Florida Beer Company, Funky Buddha, and Swamp Head.

The reputations of two Florida breweries preceded them; two of the longest lines at the festival were at the Cigar City and Funky Buddha booths.

Though medals are coveted, it’s a tough competition. But even without awards to show for it, some of our state’s brewers did not come home without other recognition.

  • Even before the festival started, Heather Vandenengel of The Denver Post named 7venth Sun and Cigar City two of the must-visit GABF breweries from the Southeast U.S.
  • IMG_2654On the Saturday of the festival, Draft Magazine gave a shout-out to Darwin’s Charapa Spiced Porter as one of four GABF beers (out of thousands!) that their writers recommended should be on everyone’s tasting list.
  • Darwin’s Charapa garnered another mention from Elizabeth Miller of Boulder Weekly in a wrap-up of the staff’s favorite GABF finds.
  • Sean M. Buchan of seriouseats.com said Funky Buddha’s Maple Bacon Coffee Porter was one of six GABF13 brews that blew his mind.
  • Dunedin Brewery did not represent at the festival, but a group from the brewery was on hand for the release of a collaboration brew at Black Shirt Brewing Co. in Denver.  BTW, if the Dunedin gang brings home some of the Sangre de la Carretea – Blood of the Road back to town, get some. It’s fantastic.
  • IMG_2628Announced at an event outside the festival, Russ Brunner of Tamarac was named one of the Samuel Adams Longshot American Homebrew finalists. His American Stout will be available in the Longshot variety packs on store shelves soon.
  • The Florida Brewers Guild had its own booth at the festival, grouped with other state guilds, to let the world know more about our thriving craft scene.

So though our breweries didn’t snag the hardware to decorate their walls, I’d have to say that for Florida craft beer, it was still a good show.

If you’re curious, you can click here for a list of the GABF medal winners. And for more photos of Florida folks at the fest, click here.

UPDATE: And then there’s this, via Brewbound.com.

 

Florida Brewery Map

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By land or by sea, Cigar City Brewing pushes new boundaries

HIGH_SEAS_SALESI just received a fascinating email from Cigar City Brewing that announces a new beer it has released in cans and kegs. But CCB Brewmaster Wayne Wambles brewed it in Puerto Rico, and employed a novel method of dry hopping it … well, read it for yourself.

This 60 IBU Caribbean-inspired India Pale Ale started with a unique opportunity. Since our inception in 2009, we have had challenges meeting demand. A good problem to have but a problem nonetheless. So when the ownership group of Cervezas del Sur in Ponce, Puerto Rico approached us with the opportunity to brew beer in their recently shuttered brewery we knew we needed to explore the opportunity.

Cervezas del Sur is a large brewery, much larger than our brewery in Tampa and the different equipment specs presented some technical challenges we needed to address. None of us had ever brewed on equipment of this size. Cervezas del Sur features a 240-barrel brewhouse and the smallest fermentor is a robust 960 barrels! A trip to Ponce was in order to see exactly what we would be working with.

Arriving onsite at the brewery, the first thing we noticed was the row of fermentors, each one about eight times as large as the biggest fermentor we use in Tampa. The second thing we noticed was the abundance of mango trees growing on the property. After a quick snack of sun-ripened mango, we explored the brewery grounds noting not only the similar water profile to our home state, but also the large reverse osmosis system which would allow us to recreate any water profile in the world. We were intrigued.

But what to brew? The German-built brewhouse at Cervezas del Sur could produce large batches of beer but the gravity-pushing brews we love to make at our original brewery in Tampa had never been attempted on this equipment. Could this brew house handle the CCB approach to beer making?

After much consideration, a concept of a 7% ABV IPA that prominently featured Simcoe hops developed, and the idea really kicked into another gear when we decided we wanted to package the beer in Tampa so that we could put it into cans. So we decided to dry-hop the beer in the shipping container on the way to its eventual home in Tampa, Florida.

After formulating a plan of attack Wayne Wambles and production manager Madison Roane went back to Ponce to brew the inaugural batch. They pushed the brewhouse to the very edge of its limits and then a bit beyond, but at the end of the day they hit their gravity number and the wort was transferred for fermentation, marking the single largest batch of CCB wort ever created. Once fermentation was complete, the beer was racked into a refrigerated, insulated and pressurized vessel to make its way via ship to Tampa where its creators eagerly awaited its arrival.

Just prior to transfer to the shipping vessel, we added our dry-hops; a lot of them. 165 lbs of Simcoe hops in fact, making this beer truly dry-hopped on the high seas. The result was everything we had hoped for and then some. Luscious tropical fruit aromas and flavors are the highlight followed by a clean bitter finish and a light complementary malt profile. While we are pleased with our experiment, the ultimate arbiters of our success will, as always, be our customers.

Cheers!

I can’t wait to get my hands – and my mouth – on a six-pack of this new brew with an amazing back story.

By the way, if they plan to keep brewing at this plant in Puerto Rico, that may be why owner Joey Redner said last night on the Seacoast Beverage Lab podcast that CCB will be returning to some of the out-of-state markets that it had pulled out of because it couldn’t meet their demand.

SONY DSC

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The Six-Pack Project: Florida

Bryan Roth, the mastermind behind the cleverly named blog “This Is Why I’m Drunk,” 6pack logoapproached me about being a part of a project he was undertaking.

Here is Bryan’s explanation and the rules:

In May 2013, I started an effort to collaborate with beer bloggers from around the country with the Six-Pack Project.

It’s a simple concept: bring together writers from all over the country (and maybe world) to highlight a six-pack of our home’s native brews that best represent what our beer culture has to offer. If someone is coming to visit, what bottles or cans would we want to share?

Here are the rules:

Pick a six-pack of beers that best represents your state and/or state’s beer culture.

Beer must be made in your state, but “gypsy” brewers are acceptable, so long as that beer is brewed with an in-state brewery and sold in your state.

Any size bottle or can is acceptable to include.

Current seasonal offerings are fine, but try to keep selections to year-round brews as much as possible. No out-of-season brews preferred.

My assignment:  Florida, of course. As I pondered which great brews I would include, it occurred to me that there are so many that I could basically make a list of beers distributed by Florida craft breweries and throw six darts at it, and it would be legit enough.

But take the easy way out? That’s not my style. (OK, it is, but for the sake of argument, let’s say it isn’t).

Instead, I turned to packaging. Specifically cans. After all, we love our outdoors here in the Sunshine State, when it isn’t raining, especially this time of year when the god-awful blistering heat and humidity of summer begins to ease and the god-awful influx of winter snowbirds clog our roads and make it nearly impossible to find a table at a restaurant, even after the early bird special ends. I mean, have you ever got stuck on a four-lane highway with two Cadillacs driving next to each other at 20 miles below the speed limit?

Where was I? Oh yeah, cans are perfect for toting along on our outdoor adventures where glass bottles are impractical or unlawful: Beaching, boating, kayaking, hiking, nude sunbathing, Ultimate Frisbee, skeet shooting, and other such shenanigans. Cans are lightweight, easy to pack in and pack out, and won’t shatter on the concrete pool deck and slice tiny incisions on your bare feet.

The one problem that presented itself is that there are not a whole lot of breweries in Florida distributing in cans – that will change in just a few more months – but with the help of friends, both Facebook and real, I managed to fill that illustrative six-pack.

Without further ado:

TAP_JAI_ALAICigar City Brewing Jai Alai IPA: The Tampa brewery’s flagship beer was part of the first round of canning that also included Maduro Brown, Florida Cracker and Hotter than Helles. It’s Cigar City’s most popular label – more than 50 percent of its production – but because of that popularity, it’s availability outside of the immediate Tampa Bay area is hit-and-miss.

Tampa-Bay-Brewing-Old-Elephant-Foot labelTampa Bay Brewing Co. Old Elephant Foot IPA – The brewpub in Tampa’s Ybor City neighborhood had been serving this on tap for several years until the owners finally got the go-ahead to distribute elsewhere. It was the first beer they canned on their small line, and is available mostly in the Tampa Bay area, with limited distribution elsewhere. In my opinion, this highly hopped medium-bodied brew stands up against any extreme West Coast IPA.

intuition peoples pale ale imageIntuition Ale Works People’s Pale Ale – In what was an informal race back in early 2012, Intuition Ale Works in Jacksonville became the first Florida craft brewery to put its beer in cans for distribution, just beating Tampa Bay Brewing Company by a few days. It’s a great summer beer, and since summer is about 28 months’ long in Florida each year, it’s a good one to keep in the fridge. It’s found in a lot of Jacksonville-area outlets and a scattering of stores elsewhere in the state.

Bold CIty Dukes Bown Nose labelBold City Brewery Duke’s Cold Nose Brown Ale – A departure from the India/Pale Ale categories, a nice balance of chocolate and caramel flavors gives this well-balanced brown a spot in the six-pack. It’s named after the late Duke, a beloved boxer owned by one of the brewery’s owners. It’s out of Jacksonville, but becoming more widely available in other areas of Florida.

Green Room Pablo Beach canGreen Room Brewing Pablo Beach Pale Ale – The guys at the Jacksonville Beach brewery finally canned it with Pablo Beach Pale Ale, a great brew to wash the salt out of your mouth after a day of surfing the nearby waves. Currently available in the tasting room and at a few stores in the area; it should soon be in more spots.

 

swamp head stump knocker canSwamp Head Stump Knocker Pale Ale – Throw a few of these in the cooler before you start fishing, and maybe the label with the titular species will bring a little luck your way. Even if you don’t catch anything, remember that a bad day on the lake is always better than a good day at the office. And any day drinking beer on the lake is better than either. Unfortunately, the cans are currently available only at the tasting room on certain days, though wider distribution is in the works.

You might have noticed that half of these come from Jacksonville breweries. That’s not my fault.

You may have also noticed that most are IPAs and pale ales. Partially my fault. That’s often one of the first style of beer canned by breweries, and in my opinion, the most refreshing in Florida.

Of course, you are welcome to disagree.

Florida Brewery Map and List

In keeping with the Six-Pack theme, five other beer bloggers contributed to this project along with me. Here are their entries:

  • Alabama by Blake at The Southern Committee – Some awesome beertography to pair with interesting choices, like a monkey astronaut.
  • Alaska by William at Drinking on the Last Frontier – Sure, there’s the famous Alaskan Smoked Porter … but what else will keep you warm up north?
  • Louisiana by Nora of NOLA Beer Blog – Abita makes an obligatory appearance, but I didn’t know the breadth of LA beer options.
  • New Jersey by Vin at Bier Battered – A nice complement to Ryan’s original Six-Pack post to rack up even more NJ beers to try.
  • Tennessee by Charles from Swen’s Brew Blog – Want a crash course in the Tennessee beer scene? Charles goes from intro to advanced knowledge fast.

 

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