Used Cars, now Craft Beer

If the 2015 Craft Brewers Conference didn’t have enough beer options in Portland, now they have The Drinking Lot a new Pop Up Bar from the minds of Bailey’s Taproom.

Capture

They will be taking over a used car lot that has sat empty for at least the last two visits I made to Portland and they will be open during the conference. They will feature 12 rotating taps mere blocks from the convention center at the eastside entrance to the Burnside Bridge.

You can file this under how to be creative and business savvy.

The Big Board

One of my must stops during the trip to Portland for the Beer Bloggers Conference was Bailey’s Taproom.

Not necessarily for the beer or ambience (which it has both of!) but for this……

….an up to the minute beer list!

As someone who helps put together a weekly tap list of what’s pouring in Los Angeles (see FoodGPS if you are not already signed up). This is a godsend. Easy to read. It has all the pertinent information, from price to style to glassware and most importantly, the keg level!

To make life even easier, near the cashier is a computerized list of nearby bus lines with the times.

I am no technology apologist but this is something that I wish every bar had on the wall.

Eco Growlers

These look really cool and nobody would know you have great tasting craft beer in your hand! Good at >Bailey’s Taproom in Portland only but if you have seen their beer list then you would not care.

“We have new growlers available for sale. Wait, isn’t that a stainless steel water bottle? Sure, but why can’t it be both? These 40 ounce bottles are perfect for filling up any of your favorite liquids. We’ll fill them up with our standard price beers for $7.50. Take it home and enjoy. Clean it and then fill it up with water and take it to the next beer festival. Come back and we will fill it up with other great beer. These bad boys are selling for $22. It looks like you have some drinking to do.”

5 Questions with Geoff Phillips of Bailey’s Taproom

1. What is your approach to recommending beers to people who ask, “What do you think is good?” or the other variations on the “you choose for me” theme?
That is usually one of the more frustrating questions, because there isn’t one beer that everyone will like (I might think it’s great, you might think it’s great, but they might not think it’s great). I really try to get some feedback from them as to what flavors or styles they like. We try to keep a wide variety of styles, and we have the opportunity to turn people on to these styles they may have never heard of.

2. What did you learn about running a craft beer bar that took you by surprise?
That we were really able to just sell beer and pretty much nothing else. We were going to do sandwiches, and we had chocolate and cheese going for a while too, but the beer sales were going so well that we were able to cut out all food and focus on what we wanted to do, bring in really good beers.

3. What beer style do you think is under appreciated at the moment?
Not sure. I would probably say some kind of German lager. Most breweries seem to skip almost all German styles, especially Lagers. There are definitely economic reasons for why brewers decide not to do lagers, but it would be nice to see more of them.

4. What beer has really found an audience that you thought might not? And conversely, which sure thing didn’t pan out like you thought it would?
I’m pretty sure all beer will have an audience, as long is it is made well. I’ve had a couple of mint beers on recently, the flavor isn’t working for me, but there have been plenty of people that have been really enjoying them.
4b. Not positive I know what the question is, but I’ll give it a go. There have been a couple of beers that we’ll put on and I’ll think is amazing, but it doesn’t sell well. Usually I think it is because it came from one of the larger craft breweries. There are definitely a lot of people that think New Belgium, Sierra Nevada, Widmer and the like, can’t produce a good beer, and that is very frustrating.

5. What do you think of the recent surge in brewery openings? (Migration, Coalition, Mt. Tabor)
I think it is great. I don’t think there is a saturation point yet. I think most of these brewpubs are just setup as your local tavern, that just so happens to also make their own beer, seems good to me. If I had a small brewpub or a regular bar, with the same beers that every other bar in town has, right next to my house, I’m going to the small brewpub.