Closing South and North


Two breweries to the south and north of L.A. have called it quits. The combination of slowed growth with increasing competition is probably the wellspring of trouble for both Valiant of Orange County and Speakeasy from the Bay Area and it might foretell further closures ahead (or not).

Valiant seemed to fall due to specific business model choices whereas Speakeasy just fell behind the zeitgeist. Both though, I believe were OK as long as the nationwide sales numbers were growing in double digits. When that trended downward, the music stopped and the pair found themselves without a chair. And if more chairs are removed, more might call it quits.

We must remember though, that this all new territory for craft beer. The U.S. has never had this many breweries before. California, alone, has more than 800! Even foreigners like Guinness, BrewDog and Mikkeller have facilities or plans for them stateside. The Global beer sellers have gobbled up breweries across the nation and are loss leader spending like crazy. A brewery starting in 2015 versus one starting today would face radically different business climates.

My guess is that there is more turbulence ahead. Which makes your beer dollar a very potent vote, use it.

Session 47 – # 2

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Now I wasn’t fond of Baby Daddy, the session IPA that kicked off the Session 47 series but this new Vienna lager-ish beer, Suds, sounds promising to me.

According to Speakeasy, “The beer was inspired by Vienna Lagers, but fermented with California ale yeast. It associates with English Pale Ales, minus the earthy hops.” You get American Two-row, English Maris Otter, plus Carafa and Carahell malt to match with Cascade and Merkur hops to clock in at 4.7% ABV.

It is a great can design as well.

Review – Speakeasy Betrayal

I first had this Speakeasy beer in 2011 before the Limited Series was re-branded and more beers were added to the portfolio with the likes of Butchertown Black. The beer is described as “Deceiving, double-crossing, and treacherous, Betrayal strikes a chord in the deepest shade of red. At first glance, she’s sweet and seductive, yet at the last sharp enough to curl your tongue. The allure of her dazzling caramel sweetness and scintillating aromatic hops is enchanting.”
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This beer does not betray it’s name. It pours a vivid red with a nice (nitro looking) head to it. The aroma comes at you with an Imperial IPA bite which does follow through in the taste. Big malt and big bitterness vie for supremacy which each sip. And it do warm the palate. This is a strong beer to compete with the biggest of Imperials or doubles or whatever they are being called these days.
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Back in 2011, I reviewed this beer with the following words, “Certainly big and boozy. I get more hops out of this than I expected. Also getting a touch of sweetness at the back. A slow sipper that you can dig and find many flavors in.”