Page executed in 0.296 seconds
May 19 is the drop dead date for HB 196 otherwise known as the Gourmet Beer Bill. That is tomorrow. Everybody keep your fingers crossed.
Two things that do not bode well for the bill. One, it appears that the Free the Hops website is either under attack or has been taken down before the vote. Secondly, this article was in yesterdays Montgomery Advertiser. We have been led to believe that Governor Bob Riley would sign this bill if it passes. After reading the article ,it doesn't look good for his signature. As well, bills passed at this point in the session can be pocket vetoed. Another likely outcome....along with the dreaded filibuster.
I am glad I am a brewer. read more »
<!--quoteo-->
More wholesalers dropping exclusivity, WSJ reports.
For years, Anheuser-Busch racked up share gains with a distributor network that was willing to drop imports and crafts to focus exclusively on Budweiser and Bud Light. But now a growing number of distributors are dropping exclusivity to bring in hot imports and crafts -- and A-B could pay a price. So reports Wednesdays Wall Street Journal in a story headlined Beer Distributors Want More than Just One Best Bud. From the story: In the past year, distributors in Texas, Tennessee and elsewhere have decided to eschew Anheuser's incentives and begin selling rival beers such as Yuengling Lager, as well as wine and spirits. Recently, R.H. Barringer Co. became the first Anheuser distributor in North Carolina to start selling other brands, acquiring a rival that sells wine and imported beer. Today, about 60% of Anheuser's sales flow through distributors carrying only its brands, down from about 70% at its peak. The shift might help competing alcohol brands gain market share, as distributors divert some of their attention from Anheuser, which accounts for about 48% of U.S. beer sales. For consumers, it means greater choice at their local bars and liquor stores. Wall Street analysts say the movement signals a weakening of the St. Louis brewer's clout in the marketplace, as small-batch "craft" beers and imports, as well as wine and spirits, wrest market share from mass-market brews like Budweiser. The defection of distributors comes despite A-B offering approved crafts and imports -- including brands from InBevs European portfolio and Goose Island brews -- to its distributors. A-B embarked on the funnel strategy two years ago amid reports that its distributors were looking to pick up non-A-B brands. But for a variety of reasons, the funnel strategy hasnt stopped A-B distributors from picking up outside brands, the Journal reports. The story notes how last fall 11 Tennessee distributors started marketing beers from D.G. Yuengling & Son Inc. The move may be hurting A-B in Tennessee, based on scanner data. And it appears A-B was not happy about its distributors move. From the story: Dave Peacock, Anheuser's vice president of marketing, says Yuengling is having a minimal, if any, effect on its Tennessee sales, noting that other brewers experienced similar declines late last year. Still, Anheuser wasn't happy with the way it learned of the Tennessee distributors' decision. We found out later [in their decision-making process] than we would have liked, says Mr. Peacock. When we don't get early communication, it rubs us wrong. So is a broader jailbreak on the horizon? read more »
From Stroh's to Shiner Bock, from Hamm's to Hudepohl, Salon brings you an incomplete, biased guide to this great piss-beer nation. By Salon staff Aug. 11, 2008 First they came for Olympia, and I said nothing. Then they came for Old Style, and still I said nothing, because I live 1,000 miles away and Old Style sucks anyway. Then they came for Ballantine, and -- ooh, is that a micro-brewed hefeweizen? read more »
Huntsville, Ala., has gone a year without its own beer after a fire destroyed Olde Towne Brewing. That's all about to change.
Owner Dr. Howard Miller and business partner and brewer Don Alan Hankins are about to start brewing again in a new facility. The initial production will be draught only, but Olde Towne expects to start bottling in August.
The microbrewery was the first in Alabama. The fire hit just as Olde Towne was about to sign distribution deals that would have seen its brands sold in Tennessee and Georgia.

One of the best small breweries in America, Foothills Brewing in Winston-Salem, N.C., plans to double its production.
According to the Winston-Salem Journal, Foothills will spend $250,000 to increase production to 6,000 barrels later this year.
The company makes a number of great brews, including Seeing Double IPA and Sexual Chocolate Imperial Stout. read more »