Founder’s vision still brings focus to Starr Hill

Sometimes being a visionary doesn’t look so good.

Like when you walk into a bureaucrat’s office to get a license to distribute beer from your fledgling brewery, your wife is nine months pregnant and she’s the one who’s going to be making the deliveries.

Mark Thompson recalls the moment with a grin.

Mark Thompson

“So the guy says, ‘Let me get this straight. You’re going to make beer — in a bathtub, basically — and you’re going to sell it to her. And she’s going to get in a van. And she’s going to drive it around town and sell this beer.’ And we said, ‘Yessir.’ And you could just see him laughing off his chair. He signed her document, shoved it to us and more or less said, ‘Good luck — it will never work.’ ”

Well, of course, it has worked. Starr Hill Brewery, the company Thompson co-founded, is now Virginia’s largest craft brewery, making a little more than 22,000 barrels a year of nearly 20 varieties distributed across a swath from New Jersey to Georgia (but not by his wife, Kristin Dolan, anymore).

Thompson’s vision and stature recently led his peers to elect him chairman of the Virginia Craft Brewers Guild. There are nearly 70 craft breweries in the state, and a lot has changed since Starr Hill’s launch 15 years ago on Main Street in downtown Charlottesville.

Thompson cracks another joke, this one about their first beer. “I used to say, ‘You can have any flavor of Starr Hill you want, as long as it’s amber.’ ”

Now, when you walk through the narrow hallway into the brewery in Crozet, you’ll see 19 framed medals and awards. In the tasting area, soon to be expanded, a chatty bartender offers samples of Starr Hill Saison, a fruity Belgian-style farmhouse ale; Northern Lights, the brewery’s flagship IPA; Taste of Honey, a super-smooth Belgian-style dubbel; and more. T-shirts and silvery stars hang from the ceilings, and nearby you might hear the rattle of bottles soldiering along the filling line.

More than maybe, you will hear music, all kinds of music that’s an essential part of Starr Hill’s choreography. Grateful Pale Ale (think Deadhead). Dark Starr Stout (think Stephen Stills, not Darth Vader). Whiter Shade of Pale Belgian-style IPA (don’t think – “just call out for another drink and let the waiter bring the tray”).

As Thompson takes me through the sprawling facility — a 32,000-square-foot former frozen food plant with a beer “library,” a sophisticated grain mill, a row of 100-barrel fermenters, a “hop cannon” used for dry-hopping and a lab for quality control — we reminisce and trade exclamations about how much has changed since those Main Street days.

“I think the explosion in the number of breweries is what has surprised me most,” Thompson said. “The pace at which the number of breweries is opening is something I would not have suspected.”

That pace creates synergy, he said, and helps bring attention to craft brewers’ role in boosting the economy. The small businesses create jobs, enhance tourism, manufacture popular products and contribute to the community.

“In many ways, our industry is the poster child for what every politician wants to see,” Thompson said.

The role of the Virginia Craft Brewers Guild is to facilitate the jobs-tourism-economy connections and address legislative priorities. For example, a bill before this year’s General Assembly defines farm breweries, a benefit for Lickinghole Creek Craft Brewery in Goochland County and others.

“It’s hard to generate good-paying jobs in agricultural areas,” Thompson said, adding that Virginia’s boutique wineries provide a model. “In many ways, our chemistry is very similar. … The wine guys have a proven track record of success in that field.”

Thompson’s success with Starr Hill also propels his leadership role. Not that he could have foreseen it when he and Kristin moved to Portland, Ore., after he got a biology degree from James Madison University. He was pursuing a master’s degree until a part-time job at a craft brewery led to a career change.

Now Starr Hill is well-positioned as a leading regional brewery in a burgeoning market. Opportunities in the Southeast also have drawn the likes of New Belgium, Sierra Nevada, Oskar Blues and Green Flash. Other regional breweries, such as SweetWater of Atlanta, are expanding distribution — brewery officials gathered recently to celebrate their launch in Richmond.

Growth means some elbow bumping. Lawsuits over similar beer names have popped up more frequently. Space in tap houses and retail outlets has become more dear. But Thompson stresses that competition is less among craft brewers than it is for greater overall market share.

“The share of local craft has a lot of opportunity to grow,” he said.

And these days, nobody is saying, “Good luck — it will never work.”

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Getting a laugh out of lager

During an afternoon of research for my upcoming book,”Richmond Beer,” I almost laughed myself into a coma reading some of the outrageous tales of misadventures concerning lager.

beer dude

All are taken from Richmond papers printed in 1859, a year when lager, introduced by a wave of German immigrants, was a curiosity to much of the population in this area.

Unless otherwise noted, what follows are direct, full accounts, word for word, from the news accounts (I could neither make this up nor improve on the florid journalistic style of the day).

A CATASTROPHE. — A jolly friend, who loves his lager and his fun, came nigh making a watery trip to Davy Jones’ locker on Thursday afternoon last, whilst taking a bit of a frolic with a few fast ones, near the pump-house. — After indulging a leetle in malt liquids, “Uncle Sam,” for such we may be permitted to call him, gathered two kegs of lager, one under each arm, and attempted to cross the canal on a narrow board, but he had not gone more than half way, when the weight began to tell on him, and reeling to one side, he was instantly floundering about in the water like a blind kitten in a wash-tub. Sam’s companions immediately began to devise means for saving him, though he was then out of sight, and ran to the bank to give him aid, but he was nowhere to be seen. In a second, however, up popped one of the lager kegs, then the other, and between them arose Sam’s profile, blowing off water like a whale at play, and singing out at the top of his voice, “Save me and the lager, boys, and I’ll stand treats.” Of course he was saved, and the lager rescued, but a pipe of this favorite beverage will never induce Uncle Sam to venture so near deep water again.

Next entry, also from 1859, reprinted from the March 8 St. Louis Democrat (I love the “moderately hallucinated” line):

SIPPING THE GOBLET.– The stalwart proprietor of the “People’s Exchange” saloon, corner of Chambers street and Broadway, yesterday distinguished himself by drinking one hundred and fifty glasses of lager beer! The feat was the result of a wager of $25 and the price of the beer. The quantity was to be quaffed between 8 a.m. and 12 p.m., or the money to be forfeited by “mine host.” By 4 p.m. he had swallowed one hundred and twenty glasses, and still stood serenely and proudly on his feet — moderately hallucinated. The remaining thirty glasses he concluded to imbibe at his leisure. To give eclat to so monstrous a performance, a band of music was hired, and was placed, together with a barrel of lager and the hero of the hour with his glass, in a vehicle, which then proceeded–an imposing and sublime as well as mellifluous pageant–to New Bremen and back again.

 

All for now. There are several others, though, which will be shared at some point. lg

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Thoughts while running on a brisk Thanksgiving Day

I normally keep my spiritual thoughts close to my vest. Today this blossomed in my mind on a lovely run, and I felt compelled to share. I hope you enjoy.

I am thankful for my life, but I do not fear death.

I am thankful for today’s feast, though I do not fear hunger.

I am thankful for good health, though I know my body ultimately will fail.

I am thankful for the love of friends and family, for I know that many live alone and feel forgotten.

I am thankful for those who forgive my transgressions, for I work hard to be forgiving.

I am thankful for compassion, for I know too well the suffering caused by spite, anger and resentment in myself and others.

I am thankful for my faith that all acts — whether after thousands of years or thousands of lifetimes — ultimately can work toward good, despite the evil in this world. That is the only possibility if one accepts a patient God of pure, transcendent, unconditional love. And for that I am most thankful.

 

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Devils Backbone repeats as Virginia breweries make strong showing at Great American Beer Festival

For the second year in a row, Devils Backbone Brewing Co. in Nelson County won top honors in its category at the Great American Beer Festival.

The brewery’s Basecamp operation was named Small Brewing Company of the Year, and head brewer Jason Oliver was again named Small Brewing Company Brewer of the Year. (Devils Backbone also has an “outpost” brewery in Lexington.)

In judging results announced Saturday at the festival in Denver, Devils Backbone led the way in a record showing among Virginia breweries with six medals, including two golds — for Old Virginia Dark (an American-style dark lager) and Azreal (in the Belgian- and French-style ale category). Breweries in the Old Dominion brought home 14 medals, with Lost Rhino in Ashburn and Port City in Alexandria each winning gold.

Another moment in the spotlight came to Richmond’s Mekong Restaurant, voted America’s top beer bar for the second year in online voting. An Bui, the restaurant’s chief beer officer, was on hand to accept the award.

The 14 medals tops last year’s showing of 12 in 2012 and shows steady increase over the eight medals won in 2011 and seven in 2010. In addition to Devils Backbone, Lost Rhino and Port City, breweries that medaled include Three Brothers in Harrisonburg, Smartmouth in Norfolk and Great American Restaurants in Northern Virginia.

The Great American Beer Festival represents the nation’s most vigorous beer event and most prestigious competition. More than 4,800 beers from 745 breweries in 49 states, plus Washington, D.C., were judged in 84 style categories. The number submitted for judging represents a 12 percent increase over 2012.

For many, the festival in Denver represents the pinnacle of beer destinations in the United States. About 49,000 people turned out to sample more than 3,100 beers served by 624 breweries in the festival hall.

The record number of medals won by Virginia breweries coincides with robust growth in the state’s craft brewing sector, which now has at least 64 licensed breweries. At the Virginia Craft Brewers Fest in August, Devils Backbone also made a strong showing by capturing Best of Show for its Smokehaus Lager.

Breweries and their award-winning beers include:

Devils Backbone

Gold, Old Virginia Dark, American-style dark lager category

Gold, Azreal, Belgian- and French-style ale

Silver, Gold Leaf Lager, American-style or international-style pilsener

Silver, Berliner Metro Weiss, German-style sour ale

Bronze, Danzig, Baltic-style porter

Bronze, Ale of Fergus, English-style mild ale

Port City

Gold, Optimal Wit, Belgian-style witbier

Silver, Oktoberfest, Vienna-style lager

Bronze, Colossal One, aged beer

Bronze, Colossal Two, smoke beer

Lost Rhino

Gold, Rhinofest, German-Style Marzen

Great American Restaurants

Silver, Octoberfest, German-style Marzen

Smartmouth

Bronze, Notch 9 Double IPA, Imperial India Pale Ale

Three Brothers

Bronze, Rum Barrel Belgian Dubbel-Style Ale, wood- and barrel-aged beer

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Brown ale leads the way for Legend’s longevity

 

Banners hung from the walls of Commercial Taphouse & Grill.

Founder James Talley and his co-workers were all decked out for the affair.

“It was a big event. It was incredibly exciting. We were wearing ties with blue denim shirts — that’s what everybody wore back then,” said Talley, now president of the restaurant.

Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (white shirt) and his wife, Maureen, talk with Tom Martin, founder of Legend Brewing Co., and VP Rick Uhler (far left) during the Sept. 20 kickoff celebrating the brewery's 20th anniversary.

Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (white shirt) and his wife, Maureen, talk with Tom Martin, founder of Legend Brewing Co., and sales VP Rick Uhler (far left) during the Sept. 20 kickoff celebrating the brewery’s 20th anniversary.

The occasion? The tapping of Legend Brewing Co.’s first keg of brown ale in February 1994. “The flavor was so big for that day,” Talley recalled. “It was full, rich and delicious, and this was back when you couldn’t get fresh beer.”

Now, nearly two decades later — when the market is awash in fresh beer, after the rise and fall of many beers and breweries — how fare ye, Legend Brown Ale?

“Legend Brown Ale is a Richmond go-to beer — still,” Talley said.

Read more …

http://www.timesdispatch.com/entertainment-life/food-dining/the-beer-guy-legend-brewing-celebrates-years/article_2c021567-de5a-5169-be3b-fc3589a7745c.html

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Fine dining embracing fine beers

  Normally — about eight days out of seven — I have a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich for lunch. Not just any PB&J. Skippy Extra Crunchy Super Chunk Peanut Butter. Welch’s Concord Grape Jelly. And some good bread — Arnold’s Oatnut, for … Continue reading

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Devils Backbone smokes the competition at brewers’ fest

 

Not many beers make me want to change my lifestyle.

I’m a vegetarian, but I couldn’t help but yearn for a good German wurst when I tasted Devils Backbone Smokehaus Lager. The smoky quality of this rauchbier is silky smooth, a gentle whiff rather than a hot blast, and my mouth watered for something savory.

Devils Backbone owner Steve Crandall (far left), brewmaster Jason Oliver (black shirt, center) and others celebrate the brewery winning the Best of Show award.

Read more ….

 

http://www.timesdispatch.com/entertainment-life/food-dining/the-beer-guy-devils-backbone-take-top-honors-at-virginia/article_51f5c986-daae-541c-a2f0-f9bdbebca6b7.html

 

 

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Two empty beer cans left in a road

  Two empty beer cans left in a road stir emotions half a century later  Note: This Beer Guy column originally appeared in the Richmond Times-Dispatch in 1998. I have not updated some of the references. LG     Two … Continue reading

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Craft brewers celebrate, take stock

I’m back in good ole RVA, but my head is still spinning—and not just from some of the great beers.

The good vibes were so thick at the Craft Brewers Conference in D.C. that there were as many pats on the back as handshakes.

“Let me just say that you have kicked this thing’s ass,” Kim Jordan, founder and CEO of Colorado’s New Belgium Brewing Co., told the crowd of 3,500 during her keynote address. “We’re the best thing that’s happened to this industry since the repeal of Prohibition.”

Opening reception at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum

Opening reception at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum

The numbers bear out her enthusiasm. Paul Gatza, director of the Brewers Association (the trade association that represents small and independent American brewers), laid out these figures: Craft brewing grew by double digits in 2012 for the third straight year. Volume growth was 15 percent; dollar growth, 17 percent; dollar share of the total beer market stands at 10.2 percent.

Two more significant numbers—there are 1,254 breweries in planning stages, and the volume of craft beer exports rose 72 percent, a record. (Canadians in particular love our beer.)

photo

Will all this success go to the heads of the craft brewing community? Well, one thing that impressed me in observing this record-setting assemblage of nearly 7,000 brewers, beer lovers and industry reps, is that there is still the sense of community that has distinguished the movement all along. The lovable, huggable energetic eccentricity of the craft beer image, the emphasis on pursuing passion rather than chasing bucks, seems to be surviving.

Jordan seemed to agree. “The overarching premise … is that we are a collective,” she said. “We own a brand together called craft brewing. … We are proprietors of a subculture that is vibrant, vital and quirky—just the way we like it.”

The trajectory of craft beer has not always been so vertical, and the giddiness of current success was tempered with a healthy dose of looking for potential wrinkles.

“It’s when you don’t hear the bats, that’s when the bats are coming,” said Charlie Papazian, president of BA and an iconic figure in the craft brewing movement.

Seminars on “Why You Should NOT Start a Brewery” and “Craft Continues Its Ascent, But a Few Clouds Form on the Horizon” noted the importance of quality, developing good business plans, tending to government issues and having realistic expectations with distributors.

Most of all, the bar has been raised.

“The benchmark used to be good beer. Now it’s great beer,” said Jim Schembre, national manager for the distributor Monarch/World Class Beer.

So be it. The challenge is there, and American brewers have shown themselves capable not only of meeting those kinds of expectations but surpassing them as well. Small breweries in particular—ones that emphasize being part of their communities, using local resources, giving back to their supporters and pushing the envelope of creativity—represent the strongest growth and the most excitement.

“Small is beautiful,” said one panelist.

The conference had an almost Woodstockian feel to it (I can make that analogy because I was there at Yasgur’s farm—it was a lot muddier). That sense was underlined by comments from Peter Bouckaert, brewmaster for New Belgium Brewing Co. In receiving the Russell Schehrer Award for Innovation in Brewing, he talked about how we live in a great place at the right time in history. In the span of a few decades the U.S. has evolved from being a brewing backwater to becoming the most innovative brewing country in the world.

“Never in history has something like this happened,” he said.

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Craft beer conference takes off

WASHINGTON, D.C.—There was something special about last night’s opening reception of the national Craft Brewers Conference.

It wasn’t just that beers of Virginia and elsewhere in the D.C. region were showcased for thousands of brewers from around the country. It was also: How great is it to be doing this in possibly the coolest museum on the planet?

“This is awesome,” said Mary Wolf, president of Wild Wolf Brewing Co. in Nelson County, as people stood in line at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum for samples of beer brewed by her son, Danny.

photo

“He grew up in Northern Virginia, and his favorite of all the buildings is the Air and Space Museum,” Mary Wolf said. “So for him to be serving his beers here—he’s on cloud nine.”

Virginia brewers in general were beaming. Beers from Legend Brewing Co., Richmond’s veteran craft brewery, were being poured just inside one of the main entrances. Head brewer John Wampler was fully appreciative of the opportunity.

“This is in our own back yard,” he said as a California woman sampled Legend’s Hopfest Ale. Nearby, beers from other area breweries—Richmond’s Hardywood Park, Alexandria’s Port City, D.C.’s DC Brau, Charlottesville’s Champion and Starr Hill, for example—flowed into commemorative glasses as crowds swirled among sleek jets, towering rockets, tiny capsules, beefy prop planes and other aircraft.

The national Brewers Association, the not-for-profit trade group representing small and independent craft brewers, could hardly have picked a more apt venue, in terms of metaphor. Craft brewing is soaring. During 2012, the sector grew 15 percent in volume and 17 percent in dollars, according to a preliminary analysis by the association. The total beer market dollar share stood at 10.2 percent, with retail dollar value estimated at $10.2 billion.

The conference continues this week with trade exhibits, seminars and roundtable discussions. But last night was a special moment to shine for many.

“It’s a great showcase,” said Hunter Smith, head brewer of Champion Brewing Co. “Who wouldn’t want take the opportunity to be a part of this?”

 

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