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Good Beer Hunting

Good Beer Huntingwww.goodbeerhunting.com
Award-winning interviews with a wide spectrum of people working in, and around, the beer industry. We balance the culture of craft beer with the businesses it supports, and examine the tenacity of its ideals.
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Episodes

Tek Cyear uh de Root — Part 3

You're listening to a special-edition, three-part podcast series about Charleston's Schützenfest, a mid-19th-century German gun and beer festival that initially was a diverse and welcoming environment, but which gradually evolved into a site of white supremacy. In our first two episodes, we delved deeper into both the history of the fest itself and the kinds of beer you might see around Charleston in the 19th century. Now we'll take a more contemporary view by talking to people living in, advoca...

Jul 12, 20211 hr 25 min

Tek Cyear uh de Root — Part 2

You're listening to a special-edition, three-part podcast series about Charleston's Schützenfest, a German gun and beer festival that initially was a diverse and welcoming environment in the mid 19th century, but which gradually evolved into a site of white supremacy. In our first podcast, we spent a lot of time exploring how African-Americans were excluded from the Schützenfest and later the craft beer industry. Now we explore a simple question: "What were they drinking at the Schützenfest, and...

Jul 11, 202145 min

Tek Cyear uh de Root — Part 1

Charleston, South Carolina:, a city with a villainous history and a place I call home. From the palmetto-lined streets to the many saltwater creeks and whiffs of pluff mud, The Holy City is a place of geographic charm with a history rooted in exclusion and racism. It's also the subject of this three-part podcast series, which explores a lesser-known chapter in the city's past. The Charleston Schützenfest, a shooting competition and community festival transplanted from Germany, was held every yea...

Jul 11, 202158 min

EP-308 Amy Todd of Zymology Labs

Through her business—Zymology Labs, based in Essex Junction, Vermont—Amy offers analytical testing, training, and consulting for the fermented beverage industry. And she's working to expand the conversation on beer quality in both producer and consumer circles. Although Amy spends much of her time in her own lab space, she's no stranger to brewery environments. She was a keen homebrewer in college, and the "What's Brewing?" and food science courses she took during her chemistry degree led to her...

Jul 06, 202154 min

CL-079 David Nilsen Builds a Bridge Between Beer and Chocolate

Intangible, hard-to-define terms like "local," "craft," and even "ethical" remain debatable within beer spheres, but they're far from limited to one industry. Longtime beer writer and more recent bean-to-bar chocolate expert David Nilsen touches on these topics and more in his newest piece for Good Beer Hunting, titled " Cacao, Brewing, and the Price of Nostalgia — Toward a Better Future for Chocolate Beer, " which was published on June 8, 2021. In this episode, David and I discuss the preconcei...

Jul 01, 202134 min

EP-307 Keyatta Mincey-Parker of A Sip of Paradise Garden

I first heard about Keyatta Mincey-Parker from Donnie, a wine buyer at my local bottle shop. As Donnie rang up my purchases, she told me how Keyatta had created a community garden for bartenders during the summer of 2020, aptly named A Sip of Paradise Garden. The garden's mission is to provide a healthy and safe space for bartenders to recharge, and during the height of the pandemic, the space quickly became popular. My interest was piqued, and I found myself diving into Keyatta's story. I learn...

Jun 23, 20211 hr 12 min

CL-078 Michael Stein Goes to the Dark Side

Over the past couple of decades, brewers and beer historians have recreated a growing number of formerly lost beer styles, like Grodziskie, Merseburger, Horner Bier, and others. Many of those styles come from the traditional brewing regions in Europe. But almost any country with any brewing history at all has its own lost beer styles. Sometimes, those recipes are completely indigenous. Sometimes they were imported from other places and subsequently modified in the new country, becoming their own...

Jun 16, 202147 min

CL-077 Beth and Kate are Processing

If you follow news in the beer world, May 2021 became synonymous with the word "reckoning" as a wave of stories about sexual harassment, assault, and inappropriate behavior toward women were shared from across the country and world. Massachusetts brewer Brienne Allan was the catalyst for this, first sharing her own experiences on Instagram, then asking other women for their own stories, and amplifying their voices. This started on social media, but quickly became national news for industry publi...

Jun 11, 202143 min

EP-306 Tom Cook + Sam Pecoraro of Von Ebert Brewing

What does it take to succeed in one of the country's most competitive markets for craft beer? That's at the core of this conversation with Sam Pecoraro and Tom Cook of Portland, Oregon's Von Ebert Brewing. As founder of the brewery, Tom has become acutely aware of changes necessary for his business, which has included a rush to get beer into cans, and then get those cans into grocery stores as more drinkers have shifted purchase behavior to chain retail due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Sam, head br...

Jun 06, 202153 min

SM-001 Lager Beer, Governing Bodies Part 1: Overruled

Today, lager beers represent the comfort zone for most American beer drinkers…and a stereotyped monolith for many craft breweries to rebel against. But 170 years ago, lagers were both the outsider and the trendsetter. Their arrival caused ongoing debates over what beer was, what it should be, and the role alcohol ought to play in American social life, to take a sharp turn. This debate was anchored in beliefs about beer and public health that were simultaneously centuries old, and ever-evolving. ...

May 29, 202139 min

CL-076 Jonny Garrett shines a light in the dark

In times of crisis, people tend to turn to the comfort of familiarity, whether it be revisiting the family recipes they enjoyed as a kid or just attempting to relive some idealized version of the good old days. Over the past year, between quarantines, lockdowns, and political strife, nostalgia has made a big comeback, in everything from the music we're listening to, to the very beers we drink. I'd be lying if I said I haven't been reaching for more of my tried-and-true favorites during the pande...

May 27, 202132 min

EP-305 Tiffanie Barriere of the Drinking Coach

Tiffanie Barriere is the epitome of southern hospitality—warm, kind, and welcoming. She's just the person you'd want as your drinking coach, which is fitting: The Drinking Coach is a moniker given to her by a friend, and it eventually became the name of the Instagram account where she shares stories of uncelebrated Black people throughout history, with a cocktail alongside. Tiffanie is more than an incredible bartender—she's a teacher, a mentor, and a historian, using her platform to shed light ...

May 22, 202159 min

CL-075 Bailey Berg Drinks Beer In The Last Frontier

How does one survive in a place where temperatures regularly hit negative 30 degrees Fahrenheit, if not below that? A toasty Barleywine might hit the spot, but in the 49th state of the Union, residents are just as likely to pick up a classic IPA or Vienna Lager as they are an Imperial Stout. How, why, and when did Alaska, of all places, become a beer destination? In Bailey Berg's first piece for Good Beer Hunting, titled "Way Up North — Exploring the Growing Beer Scene in Fairbanks, Alaska," whi...

May 19, 202128 min

EP-304 Mary MacDonald and Rob Fullmer, Association of Brewers Guild Professionals

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, there have been countless stories of how individual people and businesses have adjusted, learned new things, and survived. At Good Beer Hunting we've had a collection of audio and written stories specifically asking what these transitions meant for state brewers guilds, the organizations that act as advocates and lobbyists for craft breweries across the country. In May 2020, we had a podcast that looked at survival for these groups in the moment, and in this epi...

May 15, 20211 hr 1 min

CL-074 Maurizio Maestrelli is Drinking in Italy's Garden

Italy is definitely not what anyone would consider part of Europe's traditional brewing heartland: In terms of beverages, the Southern European country is mostly known for its amazing wines, which complement its world-class cuisine. But since the mid-90s, Italy has developed a relatively small but dynamic brewing scene, which originally started in the country's north, before spreading throughout the Italian peninsula. Brewers like Agostino Arioli at Birrificio Italiano—not far from Lake Como, no...

May 12, 202153 min

EP-303 Jules Gray of Hop Hideout

Jules Gray describes herself as "someone that likes to keep busy." Not only is she the founder of Hop Hideout—one of the U.K.'s first drink-in bottle shops, which opened in Sheffield, northern England, back in 2013—she's also the organizer of Sheffield Beer Week; the Indie Beer Feast beer festival; and Indie Beer Shop Day, a new initiative she launched during the pandemic to celebrate independent beer retailers across the country. Initially a standalone retailer in the back of an antiques center...

May 08, 20211 hr 18 min

CL-073 Michael Kiser believes in you

Working in media today feels weirdly similar to trying to navigate the Fire Swamp in the classic 1987 film The Princess Bride. Success is possible, but the path is surrounded by quicksand, Rodents of Unusual Size, and numerous other obstacles along the way. It's tenuous at the best of times, and damn near impossible under trying circumstances—like during a pandemic, for example. It requires ingenuity, a propensity for risk, and a bit of gut feeling. Good Beer Hunting operates a little differentl...

May 05, 202138 min

SL-028 U.S. Goes All-In on RTDs, is the U.K. SOL?

You may have read or heard industry pros or journalists like me throw around these acronyms lately—FMBs and RTDs. They stand for flavored malt beverages—that's the FMB—and ready-to-drink cocktails—the RTD. In layman terms, they're the industry stand-in for what we all see on store shelves as hard seltzer, alcoholic tea, or canned cocktails from the likes of Cutwater Spirits or Fling Craft Cocktails. And most important, whether we're talking about FMBs or RTDs, both categories are wildly successf...

May 03, 202142 min

EP-302 AJ Cox, Brewer and Anthropologist

In beer, even the heaviest intellectual conversations around topics like racism or worker exploitation tend to hit a natural barrier after a couple of pints. That slow fizzle doesn't happen when you speak to A.J. Cox. In fact, her obvious passion for human rights only increases the longer the conversation goes on. Cox is a brewer and pro-union academic with an affinity for Marxism and social justice. She's worked in beer both in the United States as well as Ireland, where her tenure at Heaney Br...

Apr 27, 20211 hr 2 min

CL-072 Katie Mather and The Dream Turned Reality

Have you ever dreamed a dream so perfect, so grand, so utopian that it seems impossible to turn into reality? Katie Mather has—but unlike most people, she transformed her vision into something tangible. The pastoral landscape of Clitheroe, a village in northwestern England, provided an ideal backdrop for Mather's dream to crystallize. Despite the copious amounts of lemons the pandemic dealt out, Mather and her husband, Tom, decided to make lemonade in the form of a Lilliputian shop and bar-in-pr...

Apr 21, 202133 min

FF-028 John Gross Knows Your Runtime

Welcome to a Fervent Few episode of the Good Beer hunting Podcast The Fervent Few is our subscriber community - made up of 100s of beer fans, professionals, and curious readers from around the world who directly support our editorial with their monthly contributions and help form a direct connection between our editorial and creative teams. We share stories, meet up for special events, and create fun gear for beer fans. You should join - visit goodbeerhunting.com/ferventfew to learn more and joi...

Apr 15, 202145 min

EP-301 Stacey Ayeh, founder of Rock Leopard Brewing

While Rock Leopard is relatively new to the scene, Ayeh is not. He's worked in the alcohol industry since 2002, when on a trip to Sweden he discovered Kopparberg cider. Seeing its potential he persuaded the company to let him be the UK agent, launching a brand that went on national prominence. Sadly larger distributors saw its potential too, and without an exclusivity agreement Ayeh was forced aside. That was the first of several setbacks that have come to plague Ayeh, but never define him. Afte...

Apr 10, 20211 hr 11 min

EP-300 Briana Brake + Atinuke Akintola Diver of This Belongs to Us

The way we find and tell stories of beer is changing, and in recent years, what was once relegated to magazines, websites, and podcasts is becoming more common in film. As craft beer's trajectory has gone more mainstream, the awareness of the industry and its collection of people and stories has made a longer form, visual format another powerful path to explore the many ways a pint connects to different aspects of our lives and culture. In this episode, we're exploring what that means, and two p...

Apr 04, 20211 hr 2 min

EP-299 Michelle McGrath of the American Cider Association

As a total percentage of the beverage alcohol industry, cider hasn't really changed much in recent years. It amounts to about 1% and has been successfully static. I know a lack of growth doesn't really sound like a success, and 1% doesn't sound like a lot, but trust me on this one. Or, rather, trust Michelle McGrath. She's the executive director of the American Cider Association and while it's certainly her job to speak highly of the category and the success of her members, she's bringing the da...

Mar 28, 202156 min

EP-298 Sara Kazmer of Elsewhere Brewing

Every brewery has a story, and along with the beer they brew, their narrative is what helps to set them apart. A great story can captivate and connect with consumers, and help build brand loyalty—something any business owner would love to have. And when a couple opens a brewery together, there's a good chance their love story will become a foundational part of the business's identity. That was certainly true for Sara and Sam Kazmer, owners of Elsewhere Brewing Co. in Atlanta's Grant Park neighbo...

Mar 20, 20211 hr 37 min

CL-071 Jennifer Jordan Hunts for Hops at the Edge of the Driftless

Beer history has blossomed in recent years, as a new generation of researchers and writers have uncovered fascinating stories from the murky early days of brewing. Some of those discoveries have taken us to exotic locales, while others have illuminated overlooked stories right in our own backyards. And beer history is not just a field for enthusiastic amateurs. Academics and other professionals have been been digging through the archives to tell hitherto unknown tales from the world of beer and ...

Mar 18, 202144 min

EP-297 Ben Self of West Sixth Brewing

Have you heard the phrase "stick to beer"? It's a version of an oft-cited phrase that people tell each other when one is veering away from their subject expertise. If you brew beer or write about the industry, you don't need to share insight about other areas of life … let someone else who's an expert do that. Stick to beer. In this episode, we aren't venturing far away from beer, but Ben Self's background lends itself to it. He's our guest as co-founder of Kentucky's West Sixth Brewing, but wha...

Mar 15, 20211 hr 1 min

CL-070 Beth Demmon is riding a party wave

Lately, the world has felt joyless. Even the weekends, which once offered a reprieve from the obligation of work, feel bland and gray when you're stuck at home all the time. Saturday gives way to Sunday, and time melts into hours of couch-sitting, Instagram-scrolling, beer-drinking, and the occasional debate on what to eat for lunch. I long for a trip away from the mundane cycle my life has become. Against this backdrop, reading Beth Demmon's latest piece on Good Beer Hunting, " Riding the Party...

Mar 10, 202133 min

EP-296 Esthela Davila and Carmen Favela, Mujeres Brew House

Women currently make up less than a quarter of all craft brewery owners in the United States, according to the Brewers Association's survey on demographics within the industry. While conversations around the importance of diversity, inclusion, and equity continue to spark important change within beer, sometimes it can feel like it's just that—talk. But pioneers within the industry who talk the talk and walk the walk do exist, and in San Diego, the women behind Mujeres Brew House are two of those...

Mar 06, 202153 min

SL-027 A full strength look at non-alcoholic beer

We are well beyond the days of "Dry January," but the conversation around the success and long term impact of non-alcoholic beer continues. The month long effort at the start of the year is meant to give people a break from alcohol intake, and non-alcoholic substitutes often play a big role. But what Kate Bernot and I have come to recognize in the past several months is that the narrative of booze-free beer is even bigger. And that's what we're talking about in this episode as part of the conver...

Mar 03, 202152 min
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