Friday, November 15, 2013

Fresh, Local and Here to Stay


By: Jamie Fulton, Head Brewer

When I operated The Covey Restaurant & Brewery from 2006 to 2010, I often thought that Fort Worth was the final frontier of craft brewing.  I had many die hard, loyal regulars that had their favorite beers and appreciated the variety that came out of my small seven-barrel brewery.  However, there were many more folks that were very suspicious of what was going on behind the glass walls in all those stainless steel tanks. 

“I think those are for making tortillas.” 
“If it was any better than Budweiser they’d be brewing it.” 
“I don’t drink brewed beer.” 
“You never know what these little breweries are putting in this stuff…”

The list goes on and on.  These are pretty hysterical comments, but not when you’ve got bills to pay and people are drinking macro-brewed lager at the restaurant next door.  Macro-brewed lager has ruined so many people’s conceptions of beer over the decades since prohibition, that it’s hard to blame any of these folks, as it is all many people have ever known as beer.

            What many people do not realize is that Texas had a very rich brewing history before Prohibition wiped the slate.  During the mid 19th century, the south-central through north-central regions of Texas had one of the highest concentrations of central European immigrants in North America.  And as in other areas of the United States, seemingly before they even unpacked the wagons, they were brewing beer!  By the turn of the century there were nearly a half million barrels of beer being brewed in Texas.

            There were important breweries all over the state.  Dallas had Dallas Brewing Co. (1887).  Fort Worth had Texas Brewing Co. (1890). Houston had American Brewing and Houston Ice & Brewing Co. (both 1893).  The most important brewing town was San Antonio though, with San Antonio Brewing Co. (1883) and Lone Star Brewing (1884).  The span of all of these large breweries opening is only ten years! 

            It is no stretch to draw a comparison to the explosion of craft breweries opening today.  By my count there are nearly one hundred craft breweries and brewpubs in operation today in Texas and that number is exponentially increasing with many more in planning.

            Is this a fad?  Not a chance.  While I do think Darwin’s theory will take effect before long with some new breweries (hopefully not mine), many are here to stay.  And the great news for craft brewers in Texas and around the country is that the demand is higher than ever before and ever increasing. 

How could we have even thought of having North Texas Beer Week ten years ago?  That would have been a sad week indeed for craft beer lovers.  While there were a few breweries around, there is no comparison to the plethora in the current marketplace.  Just this past weekend, Texas brewers brought home ten medals in the biggest beer competition in the nation and the world!  It was unforgettable to see Texas represented so well, unlike any year past I have been.  The camaraderie is healthy too; nearly all the Texas brewers were sitting together cheering each other’s win.

As a seventh-generation Texan I am already proud of my roots, and now there’s yet another source of pride for me: our ever-strengthening Texas beer culture.  So I propose for North Texas Beer Week, let’s raise our glasses and cheer each other’s win as fellow Texans: having a righteous selection of amazing craft beer brewed right here, fresh and local, and here to stay.  

Cheers!!!!


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