c-2019-01-10

Page 29

CHOW Sierra Nevada Brewing  Co.’s Hazy Little Thing. Photo by Miyagi Pocock

SAVES YOU MONEY! 60% OFF

$

Naked Lounge $5 Value

ge Naked Loun

hico.com kedloungec Gift certificates do d Street | naby all California Civil Codes and regulations. for , but cannot be used abide 118 West 2n to offers ed and nts requir

You pay $2

A look at where craft beer is heading in 2019

discou as store credit. News & Review is be used with other unity Publishing dba purchase will be given This certificate may ration, Chico Comm e remaining from ns 1749.45-1749.6. gratuity. Any chang As a California corpo nia Civil Code Sectio dance with Califor not expire in accor

Gift Ce75% rOFFtificate

Dream Catcher Trading Post

10

$

$10 Value

cash. Can

50%

15th Street Cafe $10 Value

You pay $5

OFF

You pay $3.50

/b for c lackk hou urrent loettlech rs o ic c 530.3 f operaation & o tion 54.1 This is 013 a Califo gift certificate

65% OFF

CNRSWEETDEALS.NEWSREVIEW.COM

Buy online anytime with a credit card or in person with cash, check or credit card M-F 9am – 5pm at 353 E. Second Street, Downtown Chico. January 10, 2019

the new year as an opportunity to recalibrate, examine what has by recently happened Alastair Bland and speculate on what may come. So, as 2019 begins, what’s brewing? IPAs, of course, continue to dominate the industry, and we have seen a few sub-styles emerge. Last year, the brut IPA was the big story. It appeared first in San Francisco as Social Kitchen and Brewery’s Kim Sturdavant innovated a technique of fermenting beer to full dryness. In most beers, about 25 percent of sugar remains unfermented, creating beer’s signature sweetness. But Sturdavant utilized a particular enzyme (amyloglucosidase) that breaks down stubborn sugars and makes 100 percent of the malt accessible to the yeast, which converts carbohydrates into ethanol. The result is an essentially sugarless IPA that many brewers around the country have since emulated and which many have referred to as the “champagne of beer” (apologies to Miller High Life). What else is happening? Hazy IPAs have gone from a hot new trend back in 2016 to a staple style.

10

Gift Cert ifiCa te rnia an for cash Civil Code Se d does not cti ex . be used Can be used ons 1749.45-17 pire according with for gratu to 49 ity. Chan other discoun .6. Not redeem ts ge will be given and offers. Ca able as store nnot credit.

CN&R

CA 959 61

GIFT CERTIFICATE

expire according to California This is a gift certificate and does not Change will be given as store credit. offers. Cannot be used for gratuity. Can be used with other discounts and

$10 Value

ton Cit y,

be used with s not expire according to California other discoun Civil Code Sec ts and offe rs. Cannot be used for tions 1749.45-1749.6. gratuity. Cha Not redeem nge will be able for given as stor e credit.

15TH STREET CAFE 120 | 530.809.1087 1414 PARK AVE SUITE Not redeemable for cash. Civil Code Sections 1749.45-1749.6.

The Black Kettle

CI, like many writers, like to take

Dream raft beer culture is constantly Catche 580 Ca r Trad nal St H This is a gift in g Post certificate evolving and developing, and amil and doe

You pay $2.50

30

5Still hazy?

10

The beers, such as Sierra Nevada’s popular Hazy Little Thing (No. 1 on VinePair’s 50 Best Beers list for 2018), are brewed with an unconventional means of adding hops, with most of the fragrant bittering blossoms added to the beer late in the brew cycle. For a variety of reasons, this results in a beer with more fruity aromas, less bitterness and a thick haze suspended in the unfiltered liquid. According to some reports, hazy IPAs—because they are often less bitter than conventional ones—have lured beer drinkers previously leery of overly bitter IPAs into the category as newfound IPA fans. Last year, California Craft Brewers Association Executive Director Tom McCormick provided me with an industry forecast for 2018. He predicted, among other things, that IPAs would continue to grow as a style (did he have a crystal ball?!), and that there would be more mergers between smaller and larger breweries. “That might have been the one prediction where I was off,” he says now. While numerous craft breweries have been purchased in recent years by larger companies, 2018 saw less of this activity. “There were a lot of breweries for sale, but the buyers were largely on the sidelines,” he says. The uptick in breweries for sale

is a result of intense competition, he says, and the fact that “a lot of brewers have found it challenging to find that easy money pot they were hoping for” and are trying to make an exit from the business. McCormick says consumers are losing some interest in double and triple IPAs compared to several years ago, when supersize bitter beers seemed all the rage. They are still popular, “but sales have flattened” for strong beers in general, McCormick says. He also believes 2019 will see a continued preference for session beers—that is, lower-alcohol beers that still provide concentrated and appealing flavors. McCormick’s most interesting prediction is that the industry will put out more nonalcoholic products. Brewers, he says, are developing methods of making beers with negligible alcohol levels but lots of flavor, and he says that many consumers seem to want that. “I’m going out on a limb here, but my general sense is that the next generation [of legal drinking age] is a group of very healthconscious consumers, and part of that is drinking less alcohol,” he says. A year from now, we’ll check in and see how the forecasts have played out. Ω


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
c-2019-01-10 by News & Review - Issuu