Ron Raike eager to ‘start with a great team’ at Cask & Larder in Winter Park

Ron Raike stands at the beginning of another chapter in his life as he takes the helm of the Cask & Larder, the new brewpub being developed by the award-winning Winter Park gastropub The Ravenous Pig.

Ron Raike at Rodenbach in Roesalare, Belgium.

“I hate to sound like Tim Tebow’s recent move to the Jets,” he said, “but I’m really excited about the move to start with a great team.”

Though reluctant to couch his transition in those terms, to those of us on the outside, Raike’s leaving the Shipyard Brew Pub up the street came as an even bigger surprise than the trade of the Denver Broncos starting quarterback.

Raike started with Portland, Maine’s Shipyard Brewing about 20 years ago, after his homebrewing hobby morphed into a passion. He put behind him his engineering studies at the University of Central Florida and stepped into the role of head brewer at Shipyard’s newly opened brewpub in Orlando International Airport. After five years, Raike said, the airport declined to renew the brewery’s lease. He stayed on with Shipyard to work in distribution and marketing, then when the brewer decided to open the Shipyard Emporium (now called the Shipyard Brew Pub) in Winter Park, he became the head brewer there, working with its nano-sized 28-gallon system.

He said he doesn’t want to delve too deeply into his reasons for leaving Shipyard.

“It was a long-debated personal decision,” he said. “Shipyard was a great employer, and I had the opportunity to experience all aspects of the beer business. I’ll just say it was my time to move on.”

Raike will be working with a five-barrel, Premier Stainless brewing system with four fermentation tanks, four serving tanks, two staging tanks and a cold liquor tank. The pub also is building a custom nano system for pilot brewing, he said, along with some other possible custom equipment.

James and Julie Petrakis

He said he’s looking forward working with the food from the chefs, some of whom will move over from The Ravenous Pig, and creating beers to complement the cuisine, though he diplomatically did not name a favorite dish.

“Just the idea of pairing up the freshest, most interesting dimensional type stuff, where there isn’t just a plate of food and a beer in front of you,” Raike said. “There are other layers that come in as the beer warms up and as you work your way around the plate. To me, that’s the most interesting thing.”

Raike is working closely with Ravenous Pig owners/chefs James and Julie Petrakis on developing the beer styles and menu, with a lot of latitude and collaboration involved.

“As long as it works with the food, works with the chef, works with the restaurant, they’ve given me free rein on what I want to do there,” he said. “I’m looking to do anything and everything. With this equipment, I’ll be able to do lagers …  I plan on doing some aging of different stouts and sours. I plan on doing everything under the sun.”

With the menu still in flux, it’s difficult to say exactly what types of beer and food will be on the menu at any given time. Some ideas in play are having a “brewer’s table,” where patrons can reserve spots for beer-food pairing events; one-off dessert-type beers to complement the pastries conceived by Julie Petrakis; and “full-animal” dinners prepared by James Petrakis and paired with Raike’s brews.

A smoker left over from a barbecue restaurant that occupied the space will see a lot of use, Raike said, because the menu will likely focus on Southern cooking.

The brewing equipment is being built right now, Raike said, and tanks are expected to start arriving in  mid-June.

As far as the opening date, “they’re projecting August, but we’re still too far out,” he said. “I’m hoping to have things set up by the beginning  of July and hopefully brewing toward the middle and end of July.”

“If you know anything about construction,” he added, “that’s not really set in stone.”

Because of licensing issues, the Cask & Larder will not be able to sell growlers or beer for outside sales, at least not for a while. The pub plans to feature guest taps from other breweries.

“Currently my goal is to eventually be able to have 100 percent house beers on with occasional guest taps,” Raike said.

There was a little bit of reaction in the Florida craft beer community to one statement attributed to Raike in the press release announcing his hiring: “He recently toured Belgium to gain more experience in the Belgium style of brewing, which no one is doing in the Southeast.”

A few commenters took exception to that, pointing out that Bob Sylvester at Saint Somewhere Brewing in Tarpon Springs has brewed Belgian-style farmhouse ales and saisons for some time.

“I think this was taken out of context just a little,” Raike said.

He explained that two weeks before the release, he had spent two weeks in Belgium touring breweries at a rate of two breweries per day, including back of the house tours of four of the six Trappist breweries, and brewed at Cantillon Brewery in Brussels with Jean Van Roy and family.

“I was just excited about the trip, and had many production ideas spinning in my head,” he said.

“So no offense to Bob Sylvester at Saint Somewhere or anyone else that makes Belgian-style beers (saisons) in Florida, but for a straightforward Belgian-style wit or trippel or sours or lambics, nobody is continually making these styles – true to style – that comes to mind. Not that I plan on solely making these styles at Cask & Larder, but I am up for the challenge of making them once in a while.”

Folks attending the Taste of Winter Park festival tomorrow (Wednesday, April 18) will be able to score an advance taste of Raike’s new brewing endeavors as there will be Ravenous Ruby Ale being poured. Described as “Brewed with local ruby red grapefruit & Hamlin oranges with Indian coriander to make a malt forward red ale base with citrusy character,:” the beer is a collaboration with Jacksonville’s Green Room Brewing.

And if you’ve never tasted Raike’s beer and you wonder about his skills, it might be noted that his Palm Ridge Wee Heavy won Best of Show at the recent Best Florida Beer Championships.

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Florida beer festival scene continues its hot streak

As the weather continues to heat up in our inevitable march to a blistering summer, so does the Florida beer festival scene.

Hot!

Here’s a quick look at what’s coming up in the Sunshine State through the rest of the spring and into the early summer.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Hogtown Craft Beer Festival, 2 to 6 p.m., Gainesville.  The festival will take place at Kanapaha Botanical Gardens, and will include beer samples from local, regional and national breweries, educational beer seminars and homebrewing demonstrations. A portion of ticket sales will go directly to nonprofit partners Alachua Conservation Trust and Saint Johns Riverkeepers.  General admission is $35; VIP $75. More information.

Craft Beer Fest, 3 to 7 p.m., Pensacola.  Festival at Bamboo Willie’s Beachside Bar will feature a firkin of Pensacola Bay Brewery Sawgrass Wheat. Cost is $15 for 15 tasting tickets. More information.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Old School Beer Fest, 4 to 8 p.m., Delray Beach. Live music, more than 50 beers to sample, and gourmet food trucks.  Proceeds benefit the Free Friday Concerts at The Pavilion. General admission is $30; VIP $75. More information.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Cajun Cafe on the Bayou’s Spring Craft Beer Festival, 2 to 6 p.m., Pinellas Park. About 200 different beers to taste, including home brews, imported European beers, and great American craft beers. Admission includes a heaping plate of Cajun cuisine, and a raffle of beer and beer-related items benefits Dunedin Doggie Rescue. Tickets are $45 in advance online; $55 at the door. More information.

Downtown Sarasota Beer & Food Truck Festival, 3 to 7 p.m., Sarasota. Craft beer and food samples, live music. Tickets are $30 at local venues and online; $10 ticket available for three food truck samples only. More information.

New Times third annual Brew at the Zoo, 7 to 11 p.m., Miami. Sample beer and spirits at Zoo Miami while enjoying the live music of Alien Ant Farm with opening acts The Spazmatics and King Louie and The Bushmen. General admission is $30 advance, $40 at the door and $70 for VIP. More information.

Inaugural Brew on the Bay, 1 to 5 p.m., Key Largo. More than 50 local, regional and national beers to sample at Rowell’s  Marina in Key Largo (Mile Marker 104.5). Live music from local musicians, and food for purchase. Tickets are $30 online in advance, $40 at the gate and $60 VIP. Sponsored by the Rotary Club of Key Largo. More information.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Second annual Brews with Attitude, 6 to 10 p.m. Tampa. The event, sponsored by Pepin Distributing at its T. Pepin Hospitality Center, will  feature samples of more 80 craft beers, a live art competition, and a home-brewing competition and home-brewing demonstrations, and live music . General admission is $40; VIP $70. More information.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Fourth annual Jacksonville Craft and Import Beer Festival, 7 to 10 p.m., Jacksonville. More than 35 breweries pouring more than 200 beers to sample and food sample. Live music, DJs, and a silent auction and giveaways to benefit the Southside Businessmen’s Club Charities, the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce, the Jacksonville USO and other nonprofits TBA. General admission is $30; VIP $45. More information.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Florida International Beer Festival, 4 to 8 p.m., Orlando. Admission includes unlimited beer samples, free food samples from area restaurants, free soft drinks and bottled water, and live entertainment. Cost is $25 in advance at local venues, $30 in advance online and $35 at the gate. Instant-in tickets are $40 online, and VIP admission is $50 online. More information.

American Craft Beer Week Festival, downtown St. Petersburg. Details TBA.

Berliner Bash on the Bay, Noon till beer blows, Gulfport. At Peg’s Cantina and Brew Pub, the fest will feature Berliners brewed by Pegs Cantina, Cigar City Brewing, 7th Sun Brewing, Wakefield Brewing, Funky Buddha, and Gravity Brew Bar all making Berliners for this event. Per-pour tickets will be available; price TBD. More information.

Saturday, June 2, 2012.

Fourth annual IPA Festival, 7 to 11 p.m., Dunedin. More than 26 IPAs, Double IPAs, Black IPAs and Experimental IPAs on draft, an assortment of Cask-Conditioned IPAs, and the official release of Dunedin Brewery’s collaboration with Fort George Brewery: Vortex on the Bay IPA. The festival will be in conjunction with the Homebrewers IPA Throwdown 2, and music will be by Saltwater Grass. Expect beers from Dunedin Brewery, Terrapin, Stone, Bells, Seventh Sun, Cigar City, Florida Beer Co., Tampa Bay Brewing Co., Swamphead, Rapp and more, in addition to a full spread of IPAs from the local homebrewers guilds. More information.

Did I miss any? Let us know in the comments below or submit the event to our interactive statewide craft beer events calendar.

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Jax Beer Week celebrates Jacksonville’s craft beer

The craft beer-loving folks in Jacksonville are proud of their locally produced brews, and they should be. The Northeast Florida city’s beer culture has boomed in the past few years, with breweries, craft-beer bars and restaurant beer lists coming into existence at a fast pace.

To celebrate this growth, Jax Beer Week kicked off Monday and will conclude with a grand tasting from 3 to 7 p.m. at the Mellow Mushroom Southside, featuring beers from Intuition Ale Works, Green Room Brewing, Mile Marker Brewing, Bold City Brewery, Swamp Head Brewery and Cowford Ale Sharing Klub.

Events through the week include tap takeovers, tastings featuring craft beer from throughout Florida, beer dinners and a downtown pub crawl. Click here for a full schedule of events, and follow its Twitter and Facebook accounts for last-minute additions.

Jax Beer Week comes after successful beer weeks in South Florida and the Tampa Bay area already this year. These are great ways to promote the Sunshine State’s craft beer culture and attract beer tourists to our state.

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New Belgium to open brewery in Florida?

Dear readers,

As the calendar page has turned, I felt it necessary to identify the following post as an April Fool’s Day spoof. I strove to make it as effective as possible by sprinkling truths and half-truths among outrageous fictions. For instance, New Belgium is seeking a location for an East Coast brewery, and Philly and Asheville are the leading contenders. But the company has never mentioned Florida as a possible location.

There is plenty of space in the Everglades, true. However, though one or two politicians in the state and nation would probably love to sink some wells in the protected national park area, there are no real plans to do so, and it’s certainly not anything that the environmentally aware New Belgium would want any part of.

The part about the weird-tasting tap water? Well, that’s pretty much true.

I felt it necessary to add this prologue, not to point out how clever my writing is  – that’s for you to decide – but because some people did not seem to “get it” even on All Fool’s Day itself. So rather than create confusion among anyone who stumbles across this post in the future, this explanation has been written.

The fact that some people so easily embraced this fantastic yarn as truth does demonstrate that Floridians are extremely eager to see New Belgium beer on their store shelves. Are they listening?

Too bad, Philly.

Tough luck, Asheville.

Photo by http2007 on Flickr

One possible location for New Belgium's Florida brewery.

In an announcement that stunned the craft beer world, New Belgium Brewing, based in Fort Collins, Colorado, squashed rumors this morning that it would open an East Coast brewery in one of those cities, announcing instead that the new facility will open in Florida.

“For the past 15 years, we’ve been telling Floridians that our beer would be available in their state ‘in about two years.’ Face it, we owe those people,” said a spokesperson who asked to remain unnamed because the final contracts have not been signed.

Reportedly, the employee owned, alternatively powered makers of Fat Tire Ale will build the plant in the middle of the Everglades.

“There’s plenty of room, labor’s cheap, and we’ll be able to power our brewery from the natural gas wells that we’ve heard are going to be drilled there,” the spokesperson said.

What really put Florida on New Belgium’s radar, though, was the water available through the municipal water systems.

“We put it through some tasting tests,” the spokesperson said. “One day it tasted like sulfur, the next day it tasted like chlorine and the day after that, it had a funky odor like unwashed socks. The possibilities of working with random factors like that are exciting.”

The brewery is expected to begin operations by April 1, 2014. Beer will be distributed throughout the Sunshine State two years after that.
 

 

FLORIDA BREWERY MAP AND LIST

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