Showing posts with label Beer Blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beer Blogging. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Ten years of serving at The Brew Lounge - Thanks for the Beers and Cheers - Parts 7-15


Should I apologize in advance? I was told no one reads anymore. Or, at least no one has time to read. Or has attention span to read or .....Nah, no apologies. So on that note, grab a beer and here we go.

September 2015 brought the 10th anniversary of my writing here at The Brew Lounge. Back in the early weeks of 2015, I began a series of postings meant to commemorate and bring some sort of retrospective to the myriad ways in which I've covered the brewing industry from Philadelphia to San Francisco and beyond. From running to beer events to homebrewing and much much more.

My Part 1 posting, even re-reading it now, I believe to be a pretty darn good encapsulation of how I've reflected upon these last ten years.

Then this little 416-page book of mine hit the streets in June. I did Part 6 of this series in July and was due to finish it all by the anniversary in September. Ha, to think!

Since June and the book release, I've done 48 book signing events and will have 51 under my belt by year's end. Truly, if I never did before (which isn't at all true), I now appreciate all the more and without a doubt the difficult work that brewery and distributor reps undertake in order to bring great beer to us all at interesting and engaging events.

With that as background, I'm going for the lightning round here to close out the content that I had planned for Parts 7-15. I truly have enjoyed the last ten years of pulling together the people, places, and beers. It's been exhausting much of the time, but I wouldn't trade it for the experiences I've had, people I've met, places I've seen and the travels to find them, and beers I've drunk.

What will 2016 bring? A return to a more well-rounded, independent, unbiased flow of information here at The Brew Lounge. I contend without wavering that I've never ceased being independent and unbiased. But, in the past couple years, this site has become less well-rounded (as my waistline has become more so). The only thing that I've continued with absolute consistency is the weekly and monthly calendar of events. That will, no doubt, persist as they continue to be well-trafficked postings. But, you can be sure to see more establishment reviews, beer reviews, and interesting insights into the industry that I'd become known for over the years.

So, let's put a bow on the last ten years by grabbing a beer and going down memory lane to remember....

Construction Updates
  To say there's been explosive growth in the last five to ten years would be an understatement. No possible way to keep up when even the Brewers Association can barely.

  But I attempted to. With a full index that you can see here at this link, Beginning in 2005, I attempted to capture each significant brewery-related endeavor in the Philadelphia region, and then some.

  The one closest to my house, McKenzie Brew House in Frazer/Malvern, was one of the first I covered and it generated quite a bit of interest and interestingly still today gathers a fair number of page views each week.

  Honestly, this is some of the grunt work that I'm most proud of.

Beer Running
  You probably, like many out there, laughed back in the days when I would write about the splendors of mixing my two passions — running and beer.

  I believed in it so much that long before there were much more than a few weirdo brewery 5-Ks in this country, I began a series of Philly Beer Week-based "beer (fun) runs".

  Cut to the chase, these became so popular that in working with Dock Street, we created a 5-K race around the home turf of the brewery. Closed streets. Police presence. Bib numbers. Official timing, real prizes, and an after party. A real bona fide race. During Philly Beer Week. The amount of scoffing would not deter me. And most giggles and sneering eventually turned to disbelief when we hit our maximum registration of 400. This was in 2012.

  Further proof of how much running and beer mean to me? I can recall instantly my finish time in all nine marathons I've run, exactly which friends and family came to cheer me on during the race and join for a post-race meal and where they stood during the race, but also my first post-race beer. Don't believe me? New York City #1 (Brooklyn Pennant); Marine Corps in DC (Sierra Nevada Pale Ale); Philly #1 (Tied House/General Lafayette Escape); Pittsburgh #1 (Church Brew Works Pious Monk Dunkel); Philly #2 (Dogfish Head 60 Minute); Pittsburgh #2 (Duvel); Harrisburg (Tröegs Sunshine Pils); Pittsburgh #3 (waited 'til Monday); New York City #2 (Brooklyn Brown).

"Social" Media
  It's more important than ever to be social. Or is it? Or how do you do that? The more time that goes by, I'm not sure if I really know. It doesn't help that in the exploding industry, the communication dynamic has become more complicated.

  I took to Facebook in the '08-ish timeframe. And, even though I had a Twitter account, it took me a few more years to warm to it. Throughout, I'd post videos to YouTube, even including interviews. Never did anything real with Pinterest and only just finally got on the Instagram bandwagon in the past few months. It's all become a complex web of a mess and all important in some way shape or form, but certainly does consume a bunch of time that I still wonder how it all pays off.

  So, yeah, I continue to chip away at a social media presence. It works to a certain degree unless, in Facebook's case, you experiment with paying for ad placement and later stop. Then they disown you and drive your penetration down. But I won't concern you with that.

Beer Reviews
  I want to get back to doing some sort of beer reviews to share with you. I still believe that they are instructive exercises for both me and you. I just need to figure what the best template is for sharing.

  My reviews will continue to live here, so please don't bother asking if I'll put them on any of the rating websites or that beer-check-in service. Not my cup of tea whatsoever.

  Here's a full rundown of beers sampled and discussed at The Brew Lounge in the past. Some oldies and goodies on this list as you'll see.

Beer Events
  As I'd mentioned, one thing has stood out loud and clear to me as a fan-favorite around here: the beer events calendar. It has always been at no-cost and with no judgement. Fact is, there has not been a beer events calendar like it in the ten years I've been doing it. There is no pay-to-list and anything I become aware of from simple free tastings to expensive dinners and mega festivals will get listed.

  Not only has my aim been to arm you with information you need to know to plan your own personal calendar, it has also been to provide feedback from those events that I personally attend. Sure, my attendance is occasionally comp'ed, but when it is, that has never — repeat, never — tainted my always independent and always unbiased reaction in covering the event.

  Pictures, as well as video, are always very important in this aspect of The Brew Lounge and you'll find them scattered throughout the event highlights both here and linked typically at Picasa and/or Facebook. The Brewer's Plate has been an annual event that has never escaped my radar as one of Philly's best. For a full rundown of all beer event highlights that I've covered, check this out.

A Note of Thanks
  No matter how big little ol' craft beer gets, the underpinnings of the segment will always be rooted in a supportive environment of successful entrepreneurs happy to help out those that are deserving along the way.

  This could not have been more evident to me than throughout the last couple years of research, writing, and promoting my book. Sure, the business of beer is more cut throat at every level than it ever has been. Being naive is no longer an option on the pathway to success. On the other hand, it would be easy to turn a jaded eye on the industry and say "it's only business". But, it's not that simple in this industry that has just a little something extra special that can still be seen if you look closely for long enough.

  For me, it was finding the unwavering support (and sometimes surprising out-of-the-woodwork support) for my book efforts. I truly believe that for my professional representation of the industry over the past ten years, the people representing the establishments in my book that gave me whatever I needed throughout my research and writing and then, even more importantly, gave me what I needed to effectively promote the book (event time and space; media plugs; etc.) will be the ones that I long remember and can never thank enough. Those that didn't? Well, it won't steer me clear of them in covering them in the future, but on a personal level I now have a different perspective.

  The brewers and bar owners are way too numerous to mention by name and I collectively thank you all. On the media side, the likes of Lew Bryson, Jack Curtin, Arthur Etchells, Mat Falco, Danya Henninger, Mid-Atlantic Brewing News, Tara Nurin, Origlio Beverage/Draught Lines, Philly Beer Week, Philly Tap Finder, Profile PR, Don Russell, and Carolyn Smagalski make a well-rounded list, yet small enough that I'm sure I inadvertently and unfortunately left someone out, of folks that have had my back and supported me through the years and during my book project. And, of course, there's an obligatory tip of the glass to the consummate beer writer, Michael Jackson, for whom I was honored to give a memorial toast in 2007 at The Drafting Room in Exton, Pa.

That's it in a nutshell. I almost feel like burying a dirty little tidbit in here to either prove or disprove that any of you are still interested in reading anything of significant length. Or maybe a piece of "embargoed information" of which I seem to get many but yet never get the right to "break the news". No bother, that's never been my game anyway.

You might be thankful that this was all concluded in one massive posting. Each of the sections above was originally intended to be their own distinct and much-longer postings spaced a few weeks apart. Hopefully, at a minimum, you skimmed through this and had some interesting bits and pieces of takeaway. It's a longer form of writing, but that's what I'm most comfortable with and what I'll more/less be returning to in 2016. I'll save a spot for you at the bar.




Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Ten years of serving at The Brew Lounge, Part 6 - The People



It always tweaks me just a bit the wrong way when I hear, "it's just beer". Fine, making beer is not curing cancer. However, to dismiss any argument away with the scapegoat of "it's just beer" is to minimize the impact - the much growing impact - that the beer world is having on individual lives through the jobs it creates. Let's not get bogged down in the flat-line-ish trend of overall beer sales; we all know that we're talking about the non-macro side of the fence here. The non-macro segment continues to grow like gangbusters, creating jobs both direct and indirect along the way. Jobs that provide income to those involved.

So with that, along with the topic of "place" that I last discussed in this ten-year-retrospective, I find the topic of "people" to be of equal importance when discussing the wide world of great beer. Whenever possible, I've focused on the people and the places that are central to the brewing establishments cranking out the great beer and the beer bars and restaurants that serve it well.

The examples are way too numerous to list out here. However, I might point you to some memorable projects that made their way out in various bits and bytes throughout the years.

Perhaps oddly enough, the year-end obituaries that I post are some of the best examples I can think of. At each year-end, I like to bring attention to those in the industry that passed away during the past year after leaving a long-lasting mark on the industry. It's something that I've rarely seen done in other beer forums and find that it's my small way of bringing some lasting attention to the good work that individuals have contributed to the betterment of the beer world. Check out the yearly wrap-ups that I'm referring to.

While I haven't dipped into full-blown brewer and brewery profiles in quite some time, that may change soon. Though you could argue my just-released book was exactly that. Check out one of the profiles I assembled in advance of Philly Beer Week 2008 to help bring awareness of those brewing establishment participants. I did one for each local brewery and I guess, yes, could have been seen as a precursor of the book to come 7 years later.

There've been other profile, interviews, etc. through the years. I seem to reminisce back to a couple a bit more than others. One was with Ric Hoffman of Stewart's in Delaware (timely with their 20th anniversary party this coming weekend.) And another was with Sean McGettigan during his anniversary of opening Station Taproom in Downingtown, Pa. Plus, it's video and how exciting is that?!

There have also been interesting interviews (if I do say so myself) of folks like an epic one put together with both Jose Garces and Garrett Oliver on the eve of their beer dinner at Chifa.

Got to be a people person in this business. Beer and people keep this might engine humming and I've been honored to meet some fine conductors along the way.





Tuesday, July 07, 2015

Ten years of serving at The Brew Lounge, Part 5 - What's On Tap?


I'm back again with another installment for looking back on my sudsy journey through the last ten years of my work here at The Brew Lounge. The more I get into these retrospective postings, the less hesitant I've become shining a spotlight on where ten years of writing about beer has taken me — and you as the reader of these pages.

Ah, those bright-eyed early days of The Brew Lounge. I had so many crazy ideas of how to document, how to inform, and how spread interest around the craft brewing segment of the industry. One way was via What's On Tap, an extremely labor-intensive process of capturing draft lists, making sense of draft beer diversity, and communicating to consumers the availability of their favorite beers at some of the area's better watering holes.

It was in the pre-smartphone era and while the beer geeks were no less thirsty for information, I was a bit ahead of my time.

I can recall talking with bar owners and distributors about rfid tags, scales, etc. to help automate the information about keg inventory and beer levels. An improved information source for registered brands was an area of interest for me as well. All in efforts to better inform consumers about their draft beer choices when they hit the town. But hardly anyone was convinced that the investment was worthwhile - that consumers really didn't need, or want, that much information.

So I began with the best local draft selections closest to my house: The Flying Pig, The Drafting Room, Teresa's Next Door, and TJ's. I grabbed a few occasional lists from South Philly Tap Room, Dock Street, General Lafayette, and The Tiedhouse from time to time.

With my frequent travel and beer hunting through airports, I contributed mightily to the BeerMe.com website and its airport beer bar section. Ballpark beer lists also became a fixation for me. The piece I did back in 2006 about AT&T Park in San Francisco was referenced by an NBC affiliate and still remains one of The Brew Lounge's most viewed pages.

In both 2007 and 2008, I did a one-time analysis of roughly 20 bars and their available tap lists on one particular day which caught a lot of interest and attention from internet eyeballs.

For me, myself, and I, it was probably the most interesting thing I did with all these tap lists. First in 2007, there was this shot at capturing a one-day tap list.

Then, returning for more in 2008, I took this crack which was even better received. And the little piece of analysis that I did as follow-up got some nice mentions in the (more) popular press as well.

But yet, for all the attention they got, these What's On Tap pages weren't really bought in to circa 2005-2007. I couldn't find the right way to take it to the next level. While consumers, naturally, thought they were "neat" and useful, distributors, bar owners, brewers, and others in the industry, though, couldn't see the application for the information. They couldn't imagine that, while ravenous for different beer, beer geeks would really base their night-out decisions on what was on tap at a given time. After all, wasn't it simply enough to know that a given bar "always stocks a lot of great beer, so the customers are bound to find something appealing to them?"

A few more years go by and now we have PhillyTapFinder, Beer Menus, and numerous other sources to track down and track (and tick) beers. It's all an evolution as access to great beer continues to improve.




Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Ten years of serving at The Brew Lounge, Part 4 - Let's Make a Date of it



After much too time between installments here, I've returned with another in the series that looks back on the ten years of my writing here at The Brew Lounge. So far I've taken a look at my early days and the importance of place in parts 1 through 3. Check 'em out using the little navigation front and back links I put up top and at the bottom here. I've got another 9 scheduled so let's see how that goes! For now....

What's more important in the beer industry than events? Of course I realize that it's not that simple and that events are merely an important part of the equation to winning the game. But, without events, the ability to reach consumers drops in the ever-competitive landscape of beer marketing.

Consumers really are the end game, that probably goes without saying. With consumption typically meant as a fun and social endeavor, it stands to reason that establishments that put their best foot forward with beer events will prosper more than those that do not.

Of course, it's not a golden rule. But it certainly explains the overwhelming popularity of weekly and monthly beer events that I have listed here at The Brew Lounge since late in 2005.

Here's a link to the master view since "the beginning of time".

Once I saw the intense interest from beer lovers wanting to know where to find their favorite beverage, I ramped up my efforts for what resulted in the most comprehensive beer events calendar in the region. So much so that Mid-Atlantic Brewing News took notice and asked me to assist with their Hop Tips, a bi-monthly beer events calendar for PA, NJ, DE, MD, WV, VA, and DC blasted out via e-mail. They, too, were a big hit when I was writing in the Communities section of the Washington Times. Even Philly Beer Week, this year, asked me to lend a hand with the events calendar.

As my "traditional" writing here in the pages of The Brew Lounge as slumped in the last couple of years, I've vowed to always keep the beer event listings going. The stats show that it's been worth my while. As do the occasional beers and shout-outs that I get along the way at bars and festivals. From my perspective, it's crucial to the industry for both consumers as well as producers and proprietors. It really is the key to the world of beer from a consumer's point-of-view.

As a final note, if it wasn't abundantly clear, I don't quibble about what is or what is not an event. And there is no price for listing. If an establishment makes the effort to create a named event - anything from a free sampling to a full-blown festival or dinner - it gets listed. I never hit 100% of all events conducted in the region - that would be nothing but impossible - but plenty of folks help out by sending notes, texts, etc. in order to keep me in the loop.

In turn, I keep you in the loop.




Monday, May 04, 2015

Ten years of serving at The Brew Lounge - Your place or mine? - Part 3



As you can see from my last installment here in the Ten Year Series, "place" has been very important to me in ten years of writing about beer. It's right up there with "people", which you'll see me spotlight in a few weeks.

Before I get into this, allow me to explain the picture above. On the surface it may not scream "place", but as you can tell from my hair line/style it's from quite a few years ago. Still to this day it's one of my favorite beer pictures that captured the people, the place, the beer, and the spirit of the moment.

In addition to beer writer Bob Townsend from Atlanta (far left), there's a longtime college-era friend Kristen and her super-awesome brother-in-law Mike in the picture who since has passed way too soon from this earthly life. The picture was taken at the famed Brick Store Pub in Decatur, GA which remains a top ten personal beer spot for me in the US.

Place. What does it matter? It's all about the beer, right? Nope, not in my book. Good beer — quality beer — is no doubt important to the experience. However, the building, the property, the people, the culture, and the surrounding region all play a role in our experiences as we enjoy our favorite beverage. It can even have the psychological power to change our taste and appreciation for a beer.

A little over a year ago, I set off on what would become just shy of 10,000 miles around Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania finding the best of the beer world at breweries, bars, and restaurants for "Beer Lover's Mid-Atlantic". It's due out (finally) this month, I promise, just in time for Philly Beer Week!

Place has always been extremely important to me. Sometimes more important than the beer itself. Beer has taken me on the road exclusively to find it and drink it in its native habitat. Other times, beer has served as a pleasant distraction or addition to a meal while on a road trip for other non-beer reasons.

Think about how a Maui CoCoNut Porter might taste just a little different HERE instead of THERE. Or how about a Tripel Van de Garre in suburban Philadelphia instead of a down a small walkway in Bruges. A fresh-near-the-source Kolsch in Cologne compared to months spent in transit to somewhere in the States.

Urban vs. rural. Cold linoleum or rich textures. Mountains in the winter compared to the beach in summer. etc.

Over the years, my journeys have found me drinking beers near an active volcano in Costa Rica, on the Rhine River in Germany, poolside at a Hawaiian resort, on a farm in Belgium, in the shadows of NASA in the National Air & Space Museum in DC, and under a windmill in Amsterdam. I've enjoyed the good stuff at taco stands and extravagant dinners and venues and events spanning the wide spectrum in between. As early as 7 in the morning and as late as, well, 7 in the morning.

By rough count, I've tipped back this fine malted barley beverage in 38 states and 15 countries. Beyond that, I don't keep track of which beers or how many I've consumed. To date, my memory has done a pretty sufficient job of that for me. Plus, keeping an exact inventory and showing them off is not really my thing. Like I said, it's more often about the place, the people, and the experience and not always exclusively about the beer. I'm sure that last statement might confound a few of you.

Let's try to organize some of the last 10 years just a bit to better capture some of the places I've been, people I've met, and beers I've drunk. First up...

San Francisco
- My educated guess says that I didn't write about any other area over the last ten years as much as I did the northern California region
- Over at YouTube, my videos of the Lagunitas Skunk Train annual fundraiser have been fairly popular. It's still a personal Top 10 beer event of all time.
- From Santa Cruz to Fort Bragg, I've covered quite a bit. There's been a lot of Russian River, amongst a whole bunch of other northern California goodness.
- And the little Pliny the Younger contest that I ran; that was fun.
- BreastFest that I covered in 2012....and again in 2013.
- and, of course, three visits during SF Beer Week. 2009 was the first official year and here's a link to Part 3 (you can backpedal through parts 1 and 2 from there). 2011 was a very good year. 2013 was an even better year [link to Part 1 and link to Part 2].
- My beer runs that I conducted during SFBW with good beer folk Brian Yaeger and Derrick Peterman

New York City
- NYC took a while to catch up (but my honest-to-goodness-unbiased opinion says that the pub culture still doesn't hold a candle, well maybe a small votive candle)
- Manhattan pub crawl of 2006 [here's a link to part 1]
- NYE pub crawl of 2008-2009 [here's another part 1 link]
- Blind Tiger has seen my mug quite a bit. Randomly spotting Brian O'Reilly there was a fun surprise.

Los Angeles
- I was pretty hard on LA in the beginning, but then again from what I saw they by-and-large deserved it
- They've been catching up and trying to catch on, but so has the rest of the world
- While I still haven't seen as much of the LA beer scene as I should, I see a little more each year and am quite impressed with Far Bar in Little Tokyo and Angel City Brewery and Wurstküche in the Arts District
- I'll maintain until further notice that the best thing about LA is not in LA...it's in Santa Monica. The beachside activities, neighboring Venice Beach, Father's Office, and my habit...Library Ale House. I've shared quite a bit about these over the years in social-land of FB posts and Twittering Tweets.

Atlanta
- Atlanta has a long way to go. It sprawls and definitely a lot of sociological issues to deal with.
- But the dozens of times when in Atlanta over the years, the key has always been to get out of Atlanta, not far. But, to one of the more diverse areas around, Decatur.
- It's always been Brick Store Pub, long before the raters came in and figured out that one of the country's top bars could really, truly be in the south.
- And I caught up with some of the new stuff a few years ago when "Dr. Joel" and the New Holland team was entering Georgia.

Boston
- Haven't seen enough of Boston as I would like, but a pretty good tour back in 2006 that took me back to one of my early beer experiences from the early '90s and a couple other visits that turned up some good stuff. Need to get back soon and explore the new scene that has taken root.

Dallas
- Went through quite a few years of visiting enough to learn about the better spots and see Texas emerge strongly onto the national conscience in terms of better beer.
- Meddlesome Moth sticks out as one of the best. Ginger Man. Central Market. They're all discussed in that link.

Denver/GABF/etc.
- There was an epic-like trip in 2008 that took me to Boulder, Fort Collins, Glenwood Springs, and then this little festival in Denver called GABF.

Madison
- The best thing to losing some Philadelphia friends was that they moved to Madison. At the time seemed bizarre. But visiting a few times, quickly changed our minds.
- They've taken us to Green Bay a couple of times for football and beer. And Madison is where they call home. There's the better known Capital, Great Dane, New Glarus, and others. We found The Old Fashioned and Ale Asylum brewery to be real local gems.
- Would love to run the marathon there one year and then stay longer to explore the still-exploding beer scene. A real special place.

Cooperstown
- Ommegang. BCTC, it's a category unto itself. Been going there since it was a little tiny baby of a festival. A special one for sure, but small.
- Now it's so much bigger, and so much more of much more. Doesn't make it bad. Just very successful and still quite well executed.
- I could re-share any number of links, but use this one to get started. When you hit that link it leads off with one of my favorite pictures from tens of thousands that I've taken here at The Brew Lounge through the years. So many great memories come from this special brewery nestled in a beautiful part of the country that, oh yeah, just so happens to have some pretty darn good beer too.

Pittsburgh
- What a great city. Underrated in many ways. Maybe you say you don't want to live there, but if you're into great beer, you sure as heck want to visit.
- Fat Head's was my first introduction to the beer scene of the 'burgh; now they have a brewery too. Penn Brewery and Piper's Pub too. East End takes a special place high amongst the recommended stops on any well-studied beer travelers itinerary.
- There are lots of bridges, only to be outnumbered by the number of breweries and great bars to drink in.

Marathon Routes
- You probably know I like to run. And I like my beer. So the intersection of the two makes perfect sense for me to explore, right?
- I've run in the Philly, NYC, Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, and Marine Corps Marathons. I also happened to write a Beer Guide for each of them, except Harrisburg.
- For Harrisburg, it's simple. Just head over to Hershey afterward for a great meal and rehydration at Troegs!
- Philadelphia Marathon.
- New York City Marathon.
- Marine Corps Marathon in DC.
- Pittsburgh Marathon.

Where have I come up short and what do I still need to see?
- Portland. Oregon, that is
- more of San Diego
- Asheville
- Chico
- England

And it all comes back at the end of the session to my home Philly turf. Philly Beer Week was launched in 2008 and spawned hundreds of others across the country. But, very few compare.

I'll get more into Philly Beer Week in a future walk down memory lane




Monday, March 09, 2015

Ten years of serving at The Brew Lounge - Let's Get It Started - Part 2



2005.

There was Hurricane Katrina. The second term of Truthiness began in the White House. Pope John Paul II died. Prince Charles married Camilla. Lance Armstrong "won" again, for the seventh time. There was Terri Schaivo. And bird flu. Hitch. Brokeback Mountain. Mr. & Mrs. Smith. Carrie Underwood.

In beer circa 2005, CNN covered RateBeer.com's poll of the top breweries/beers of the world. At that time, AleSmith from San Diego came in at #1, Westvleteren at #4, Dogfish Head #9, and Victory #14. Cantillon was #32, McKenzie Brew House #35, and Triumph #41.

"In fact, about the only region thirsting for good brewers seems to be the Deep South. No company there makes it onto RateBeer's Top 50 list. And in many states in Old Dixie, it's a challenge to find any beer besides the mass-marketed varieties." Times certainly have changed that list, particularly where the South is concerned.

And, The Brew Lounge was born.

It began innocently enough in August/September 2005. Friend, neighbor, and homebrewer Adam Beck asked if I'd be interested in contributing to this blog thing he started. Sounded great to me. I liked beer. I liked writing and communicating. I liked helping inform others about the merits of "different beer".

At the time, it went by the name Beer Bits. Get it? Writing about beer on a computer. Bits. Bytes. About beer. Clever. Not much later it became known as The Brew Lounge.

I didn't have any master plan for how or what I would contribute or what I wanted to accomplish, even short-term, out of this little venture. But I'd just been to a beer dinner with a group of friends at the famed Monk's Cafe in Philly where Dominique Friart came from Belgium to showcase her St. Feuillien beers.

This seemed as good of a way as any to begin. I enjoyed getting into the details of the event, the food, the beer, and the people. With that, a monster was born.

Check it out at this link and, if you'd not seen it before, see what you think of my early days of beer writing. If anyone says it's impressive, I'll probably accuse you of fibbing.

This review concept struck a chord with me and led me to do similar writeups through the few remaining months of 2005 at Firewaters, World Cafe Live (a Hurricane Katrina benefit), Grey Lodge, Beer Yard (a Southampton tasting), The Black Door (anyone remember this short-lived South Street-area bar?), The Foodery (when there was only one in the Philly area), and Independence Brew Pub (today the home of Field House across from the venerable Reading Terminal Market).

Come to think of it, I wonder if the Firewaters article is where my first "What's On Tap" list came from? Probably. I'll talk more about that in a future installment of this Ten-Year Series.

In the remaining months of 2005, I also branched out — as would become a pattern in future years — to Maryland with The Brewer's Art and Dogfish Head Alehouse, to DC with Dave Alexander's RFD (Regional Food & Drink), and a whole lot of NYC.

I've since given up the cataloguing, but I'd kept an index for many years of all the places I'd visited across the country and subsequently written about. It's here at this link and you can use it as a jumping off point to explore any of the many dozens of places I've shared with you over the years.

Lots of miles, beers, and cheers. I wouldn't trade them in for anything.




Monday, February 23, 2015

Ten years of serving at The Brew Lounge - Where has time gone? - Part 1



After twenty-plus years drinking the good stuff and now approaching ten years writing about it, if I had a dollar for every time someone said I should write a book about beer, I would've never had to write a book about beer.

Last winter, after eight years of time served at The Brew Lounge, I was approached to write "Beer Lover's Mid-Atlantic", what has turned out to be a 416-page book about the good beer producers and bars/restaurants of PA, NJ, MD, and DE. It's due to hit the virtual and brick-and-mortar bookstores on May 7.

Long before that there was The Brew Lounge — the blog. Yup, a blog is what started it all. In 2005. I resisted for many years being referred to as a "blogger", with all the baggage and implication that comes along with it. Somewhere along the way, however, I began hearing folks from within the industry introduce me as a "respected blogger". People that I was writing about respected me and vouched for me. That, as they say, was a game changer.

My attempt to take a professional approach to dealing with the people and the subject of beer had paid off. My desired objective of providing independent information that consumers could use was being realized. Through the years on The Brew Lounge, there have been all types of information surfaced in all sorts of ways: Interviews; Tap lists; Weekly news; Beer reviews; Event calendars; Construction updates; Dinner and event reviews; Bar reviews; Obituaries; Travel guides; Plenty of pictures and videos; and on and on. Beer running material and events too; long before it became trendy.

Admittedly, during the last ten years with the dawn and explosion of social media, my long-form writing on The Brew Lounge has taken a back seat to much less frequent full-length reviews and articles often in favor of shorter snippets of information on the likes of Twitter and Facebook. Pictures, in this multimedia world, have become more important than ever as well. It's a strange world attempting to figure out where and how to share information for maximum benefit in a more-dynamic-than-ever beer industry. The book's release and subsequent sales figures will probably add some insight to the topic as well.

Over the next six months, I'm going to take a look back on how I got from 2005 to 2015. I used to track stats but gave up on that years ago when I didn't feel I could trust (or determine to what extent they mattered since I've never derived a significant source of income from these beer-y endeavors) them with all the different avenues springing up for content. Basically, though, ten years have seen more than 3,000 postings to The Brew Lounge come and go and over a million visits. Compared to more established and better linked beer writers, these numbers pale in comparison. But hopefully the quality wins out and, at the end of the day, I've helped to move the needle just a few ticks as the industry continues to plow headstrong into the future.

I hope you enjoy this walk down memory lane and would appreciate hearing your thoughts in the comments section and/or social land over at my Facebook page and Twitter feed. Cheers to more years with great beers!