Hopped Up wrote:Stone is about the only major micro that isn't available in the city
Hopped Up wrote:Really, you don't think Chicago's a serious beer city?
Hopped Up wrote:Really, you don't think Chicago's a serious beer city? Hopleaf, Map Room and several other excellent beer bars, the Publican and other restos with good beer selections, Goose Island, Half Acre, Metropolitan and now Revolution, and basically being the big city home for Three Floyds. Sure, there's not the local variety of a place like Portland, but in terms of the availability of a variety of beers from across the country I think the city is in the top 5 in the country. Stone is about the only major micro that isn't available in the city and our proximity to the variety of local micros up in Wisconsin (as well as Stone being available there) makes me quite satisfied as a frequent beer drinker in Chicago.
Really? I had heard they weren't interested in Illinois. Did they change their minds? I want me some Arrogant Bastard and Levitation Ale.the wimperoo wrote:Stone will be here in the next month or so.
KSeecs wrote:I stopped in about 9:15 on Friday and was told my wait would be 3 hours.
nr706 wrote:FYI, Ratebeer just named Revolution among the top five new breweries in the world for 2010.
nr706 wrote:FYI, Ratebeer just named Revolution among the top five new breweries in the world for 2010.
Forgive me father, it has been four moons since my last blog post. I have done many sinful things in the meantime, but I've also been working hard brewing some tasty ales and cooking up some nice grub. Cut me some slack. I know the brewpub gets kinda busy sometimes and even you have to wait an hour to get in, but we are making more space upstairs and it will be ready soon. You can even throw a party there with 129 of your closest friends or maybe catch a rock show down the line. Everybody likes to rock out now and then, no? Yes, we did name our latest beer Baphomet Bock for a pagan idol, but you have to admit it is pretty cool looking. I have been keeping up with my Facebook updates, but I know I know, not everyone does that.
And we just signed a lease for a new 35,000 square foot production brewery nearby to spread the Revolution across Chicagoland. Is that a good enough excuse for ignoring this blog for so long? The lease took four months to negotiate, so I figure I deserve a beer for getting through that at least. Where is it? Oh, over by Lee Lumber on Kedzie. It'll have mondo huge beer tanks, a high speed canning line, loads of wooden barrels and a tasting room. No father, it won't be ready to visit anytime soon, but we should have beer to sell and see there in about a year or so. Awwh c'mon that's not too long. Imagine if we were making wine.
Revolution will bottle and can its beers
By Josh Noel
One reason I haven’t been too worried about Anheuser-Busch’s takeover of Goose Island Beer Co. is that even if Goose is ruined – which I don’t necessarily think will happen – there will continue to be no shortage of great craft beer.
The latest evidence: Revolution Brewing, which opened as a brewpub in Logan Square in February 2010, is building a production brewery. By January 2012 – and hopefully well before that, owner Josh Deth says – Revolution beer will be in bars and on Cook County shelves.
Revolution will can its flagship beers year-round – Bottom Up Belgian Wit (a Belgian-style white ale), Anti Hero India Pale Ale and Eugene (a chocolate porter) – and at least a couple of seasonals (October fest and Fistmas, a heavily-hopped brown ale spiced with ginger and orange peel). Its reserve line – a milk stout, a barrel-aged milk stout and a saison – will be put into 22-ounce bottles.
The canning line, Deth says he was told, once belonged to Stroh’s. He’s still weighing whether to package his beer as four 16-ounce cans or six 12-ounce cans (I voted for the latter).
Deth already has two successful ventures behind him – Handlebar restaurant (which he recently sold his stake in to avoid being in violation of the state’s three-tiered system liquor laws) and the Revolution brewpub at 2323 N. Milwaukee Ave. But seeing his beer on shelves will be the culmination of a dream dating to when Deth was a Goose Island brewer in the late 1990s.
Having seen the strain of keeping up with demand of other craft breweries, he will be limiting his beer to Cook County, at least at first.
“We’ve wanted to be Chicago’s next hometown beer even before Anheuser-Busch bought Goose Island,” he said. “Now it gives us even more passion.”
Jim Cibak, head brewer at the brewpub who has previously worked for Goose Island, Three Floyds and Firestone Walker brewing companies, will handle the same responsibilities at the production facility.
The 35,000-square-foot plant, in the 3300 block of North Kedzie Avenue, will also include a 3,000-square-foot tap room and a quality control laboratory.
“We’re following the Goose Island model of growth – I don’t mind saying that,” Deth said. “That was our intention from the beginning.”
Does that mean if someone eventually wants to buy him out for $38.8 million, he’d listen?
“I want to retire someday, too, like (Goose founder) John Hall does,” Deth said with a laugh.