True Beer: Inside the Small, Neighborhood Nanobreweries Changing the World of Craft Beer
By (Author) Timothy Sprinkle
Skyhorse Publishing
Skyhorse Publishing
2nd August 2016
United States
General
Non Fiction
Food and beverage technology
Manufacturing industries
663.420973
Paperback
216
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 18mm
315g
In the 1970s and 80s, the brewing industry shifted was from large corporate suppliers to smaller, independent microbrewers, typified by producers such as the Boston Beer Company and Sierra Nevada Brewing Company. Today, the market is going even smallerwith tiny, independent brewers setting up shop in neighborhood brew houses nationwide, focusing on crafting unique, flavorful brews specifically for their extremely local clientele.
The reality is that beer is in the midst of a renaissance in this country, driven by a new class of these dedicated craft nanobrewers and growing communities of drinkers looking for something more from their daily brewsomething higher-quality, more unique, more local.
These microbrewers rent out small spaces or buy industrial equipment to install in their garages. Theyre accountants, middle-school teachers, and plumbers who are passionate about beer and who dedicate their free time to producing three or so barrels of their own brew at a time. They sell their bottles to close friends and gift it to family members for birthdays and holidays. They enjoy what they do and theyre proud of their product.
Whats it like inside these small-time brewing operations What happens behind the scenes What goes into making high-end craft beer on a small scale True Beer takes an on-the-ground look at the ultra-small side of the craft brewing movement from the inside out by profiling a number of independent American breweries in detail and using that as a jumping-off point to examine the art and science of brewing, the local farmers and providers behind the scenes, the market itself as well as national trends in nanobrewing, and modern craft beer production.
Timothy Sprinkle has more than fifteen years of writing and editing experience and his work has appeared in a wide variety of print and online publicationsincluding Wired, Entrepreneur, Outside, and many more. Sprinkle is also the author of Screw the Valley: A Coast-to-Coast Tour of America's New Startup Culture. He resides in Denver, Colorado.