THE MAGAZINE FOR THE PROFESSIONAL BREWING INDUSTRY ROOSTER’S BREWING CO Growing older gracefully BREWERS JOURNAL SPRING 2024 | VOLUME 10, ISSUE 1 ISSN 2059-6669 18 | JOHN KEELING ON CASK: NORTH OR SOUTH? 26 | SMALL PACK EQUIPMENT: INNOVATION AND INVENTION 44 | HOMEBREWING: JACK WALKER SHARES HIS SECRETS
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LOOK TO THE FUTURE
As the dust settles on the latest budget, the last from Chancellor Jeremy Hunt before the General Election, the consensus was there were opportunities to be taken but, unfortunately, missed.
So when SIBA’s Barry Watts kindly invited me to the launch of their new manifesto, hosted by the Rt Hon Alun Cairns MP and SIBA CEO Andy Lee, I gratefully accepted.
At its heart, SIBA is urging the next Government to adopt 11 policies that cover four key areas of market fairness, fair taxation, reforming alcohol taxation and improving the environment. These, they say, will help remove the barriers to growth, ensure that independent breweries remain competitive and help them to make the most of the move to Net Zero.
Commenting, Slee said the manifesto “puts improving fairness for independent brewing at its core” and is full of initiatives that they hope that all political parties will consider as they draw up their plans for the next government ahead of the General Election.
“Independent breweries operate at the heart of our communities, supporting our local pubs and delivering innovative, fresh and tasty beer,” he said.
“However they are constrained by a lack of access to market and a tax system that burdens small businesses. We believe that with government support we
could boost the sector and ensure that independent brewing continues to thrive across the UK.”
And elsewhere in Europe, future planning is also on the agenda. With two months to go until the European Parliament elections, The Brewers of Europe have published their 2024-2029 Manifesto for a sustainable brewing future, a paper urging decision-makers to recognise beer as Europe’s beverage of choice, with its “distinct and positive economic and social contribution to communities across the continent” as well as its value in promoting moderation.
The Brewers of Europe head of operations Simon Spillane said the Manifesto aims to show that brewers are looking ahead and providing answers to some of the challenges facing Europe.
“Beer is a force for good in Europe,” he said. “Brewing provide a distinct economic and social contribution; brewers are innovative and support sustainability, while beer brings people together.
“Policymakers should recognise our role and develop regulation that prioritises partnerships, policies and practices that encourage the adoption of lower alcohol products like beer.”
I hope you enjoy the issue and our sustainability supplement, too.
Tim Sheahan Editor
LEADER
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 3
CONTENTS
SPRING 2024
News Analysis
In his final budget before the General Election Chancellor Jeremy Hunt unveiled a number of measures. Unfortunately the opportunity to help brewing and wider hospitality was a chance to be taken but a chance missed.
Comment
Ensuring you don’t mislead your brewery’s customers is imperative, especially when it comes to the environment explains Brabners
Comment
Embarking on a net zero journey can be daunting and difficult. But it doesn’t need to be, says Jack Sowler at Net Zero Now.
Comment
When it comes to contract brewing services, it’s hard to put a price on customer service but “excellent” is worth searching for.
Focus | Small Pack
For many breweries, and their customers, bottles are the vessel of choice when it comes to packaging, selling and serving beer. But canning is also impossible to ignore. It’s a good thing then that both of these sectors and their ancillary industries are both rife with innovation, too.
Packaging
Crown caps have become an iconic feature of beer around the world. But where did the crown cap story begin and what is the history behind them. Joshua Webster from Croxsons explains more.
Brewers Intelligence
The latest insight and expertise from the ingredients and sales sectors.
21 Rooster’s Brewing Co 30 years in, Rooster’s Brewing Co of Harrogate remains one of the UK’s most regarded and respected breweries for very good reason.
07 12 14 16 26 38 50 BREWERS JOURNAL 4 | SPRING 2024
40 Branding
United By Design on how effective brand, design, and marketing strategies strengthen a brewery’s connection with its audience.
18
44 Homebrewing
Jack Walker, head brewer at Azvex charts his journey in beer to the Liverpool-based business and also shares a fantastic recipe of his own.
Dear John What are the main differences between cask beer in the North and also in the South?
John Keeling tells all....
SUBSCRIPTIONS The Brewers Journal is a published four times a year and mailed every March, June, September & December. Subscriptions can be purchased for four issues. Prices for single issue subscriptions or back issues can be obtained by emailing: subscribe@ reby.media UK & IRELAND £29 INTERNATIONAL £49 The content of The Brewers Journal is subject to copyright. However, if you would like to obtain copies of an article for marketing purposes high-quality reprints can be supplied to your specification. Please contact the advertising team for full details of this service. The Brewers Journal is printed at Manson Group, St Albans, UK. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any information storage or retrieval system, without the express prior written consent of the publisher. The Brewers Journal ISSN 2059-6650 is published bimonthly by Reby Media, 6 Grove Road, Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, HP1 1NG. Subscription records are maintained at Reby Media, 6 Grove Road, Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, HP1 1NG. The Brewers Journal accepts no responsibility for the accuracy of statements or opinion given within the Journal that is not the expressly designated opinion of the Journal or its publishers. Those opinions expressed in areas other than editorial comment may not be taken as being the opinion of the Journal or its staff, and the aforementioned accept no responsibility or liability for actions that arise therefrom. CONTACTS Tim Sheahan Editor tim@reby.media +44 (0)1442 780 592 Tim O’Rourke Technical Editor John Keeling Contributor Josh Henderson Head of sales josh@reby.media +44 (0)1442 780 594 Jon Young Publisher jon@reby.media Reby Media 42 Crouchfield, Hemel Hempstead, Herts, HP1 1PA
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 5
AN OPPORTUNITY MISSED
IN
HIS FINAL BUDGET BEFORE THE GENERAL ELECTION CHANCELLOR JEREMY
HUNT UNVEILED A RAFT OF MEASURES.
UNFORTUNATELY THE OPPORTUNITY TO HELP BREWING AND WIDER HOSPITALITY WAS A CHANCE TO BE TAKEN BUT A CHANCE MISSED...
Described as a ‘Budget for Long Term Growth’, the UK Government said the latest Budget sticks to their plan of delivering lower taxes, better public services and more investment, while increasing size of economy by 0.2% in 2028-29 and meeting fiscal rules – taking the long-term decisions needed to build a brighter future.
With the independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) confirming inflation is set to fall to target a year earlier than previously expected, wages rising consistently and the economy outperforming European neighbours, the Chancellor said he would stick to the plan to improve living standards by rewarding work and growing the economy.
Of, understandably, interest to those in the world of beer, the six-month alcohol duty freeze announced at Autumn Statement will be extended until 1 February 2025.
This, the Government said, would save consumers “2p on a pint of beer, 1p on a pint of cider, 10p on a bottle of wine and 33p on a bottle of spirit compared to if the planned rise had gone ahead. This will benefit 38,000 pubs across the UK, while reducing inflation this year,” they said.
Other points of note were the decision to build on the 2 percentage point cut to Employee National Insurance at Autumn Statement, Hunt announced a second 2p cut from 10% to 8% from April. Taken together with the cut to Employee National Insurance at Autumn Statement, this slashes the main rate of Employee NICs by a third and means, they explained, that the average worker earning £35,400 a year will be over £900 better off this year.
A cut in VAT was always unlikely, that much is probably true, but the positive impact felt by a temporary freeze in duty is unlikely to felt but the hospitality industry – breweries and their customers – it is apparently designed to help.
“Whilst the extension to the freeze in beer duty is welcome, it will do nothing to help pubs, the operators of which are really feeling the pinch in the current market, explains Andy Parker, the award-winning founder of Elusive Brewing.
“High energy costs, supplier price increases, looming business rates increases and the cost of living crisis are sadly creating a perfect storm of challenging trading conditions. Sadly I can see many more pubs closing, which in turn squeezes us as suppliers.”
Luci Clayton-Jones and Mike Clayton-Jones, the founders of Double-Barrelled in nearby Reading, Berkshire, echoed this.
“An extension to the freeze on alcohol duty is obviously welcome over a rise in duty rates, but crucially this is not a cut, when we have one of the highest, if not the highest alcohol duty rates in the world and so will not reflect in a reduction of costs for breweries – as a result no reduction in outgoings for publicans or drinkers either,” they said.
“It is disappointing to not have seen any cut in VAT rates that would have had a far greater positive impact for hospitality-led businesses.”
Darron Anley, the founder of Finchampstead-based Siren Craft Brew, which will open a new venue in Reading this year, said the Budget was “not even touching the margins of anything useful for the country”.
“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different results. The government tried a 2p cut in NI in the last budget and got no political capital out of it, why try it again?” he said. “But on an industry-specific point, a hospitality vat reduction is what was required to stave of hundreds of business closures in what is a huge industry sector for the UK. That and business rates. A freeze in alcohol duty won’t help the pubs, bars and restaurants that are our customers.”
Whilst
the extension to the freeze in beer duty is welcome, it will do nothing to help pubs, Andy Parker, Elusive Brewing
And Jordan Childs, the CPO of no-andlow brewery brand Mash Gang says that while a freeze until 2025 will certainly be welcome news for many pubs and taprooms, it does “little to offset the bitter memory of energy gouging which was the final nail in the coffin for many struggling small businesses, and a disgusting windfall for energy giants”.
He says: “Given the last few years, I’ll settle for ‘it’s not getting any worse’. I believe this summer is going to be the best we have seen since 2019 through grit determination and persistence, British pubs keep the dream alive. Drink more cask in 2024!”
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 7 NEWS ANALYSIS
In Norfolk David Holliday, the co-founder and co-owner of Moon Gazer Ales at The Norfolk Brewhouse, added: “Speaking financially not politically but the Budget did absolutely nothing for hospitality and no by not cutting VAT there was such a missed opportunity for a sector which does and can contribute so much to the economy.
“The hospitality sector is still recovering from the perfect storm of enforced shutdowns during Covid followed by massive increases in energy costs and all input costs from food cost to staff costs including the increase in living wage.
“The resilience of the sector is amazing as against all the odds it battles to keep cost down and customer’s coming in –but that is not sustainable and a recent survey showed that over 50% of hospitality have exhausted all their cash reserves and have less than 3 months reserves.
“This simply isn’t sustainable and the recent increase in closures is only set to continue both for financial reasons and also personal reasons as there is only so much people can take!”
Holliday adds: The duty freeze is welcome but this is not a cut. It’s a real kick in the teeth to see the HMRC show on social media that the freeze will cut our costs as a brewery – it won’t – it will just not put them up. If people are not going to help you then we have to live with that – but at least let you down honestly and don’t lie – that’s the kick in the teeth. We will keep campaigning for the meaningful support the sector needs and deserves.”
From an industry body perspective, SIBA’s chief executive Andy Slee says that the Government’s continued support for independent breweries and community pubs through an extended beer duty freeze is a welcome announcement that will help keep the price of a pint from rising, and that the National Insurance cuts will also put more money into people’s pockets which is essential for encouraging spending in pubs and hospitality.
He adds: “However nothing has been done to address the heavy Covid debt the sector still carries, and despite pubs and independent breweries being vital
We are disappointed that nothing specific has been done to help alleviate the cost tsunami facing our much loved breweries and pubs in the months ahead.
Andy Slee, SIBA
global brewing giants and the likes of supermarket alcohol. CAMRA will continue to campaign for the Treasury and all political parties to back our sensible ask of making tax on pints in pubs 20% lower than the general duty rate.
“The Chancellor’s announcement that the VAT registration threshold for small businesses will be increased will not benefit the majority of pubs, breweries or cider producers.”
Phil Halls, co-founder of Grain Brewery in Norfolk, concludes: “A freeze on beer duty is welcome but does nothing to solve the problems faced by today’s small brewers and the pub and bar industry.
“There have been calls for a cut in VAT for hospitality, which would be welcome but unlikely, and again does not confront the real problems we are facing. Going down the pub is an expensive hobby.
to local communities they have received no direct support in the Spring Budget – with a missed opportunity to increase the Draught Relief to 20% or more which could have boosted our hospitality sector. Between them SIBA members run over 2000 pubs, bars and brewery taprooms, making a significant contribution to the local economy and community well-being. We are disappointed that nothing specific has been done to help alleviate the cost tsunami facing our much loved breweries and pubs in the months ahead.”
And CAMRA Chairman Nik Antona adds: “The Budget was a missed opportunity to show ‘backing for the Great British pub’ by significantly cutting tax on draught beer and cider served in pubs. However, freezing alcohol duty until February 2024 will be welcomed by consumer and breweries, helping mitigate an additional hike in costs to be passed on to pubs and pub-goers.
“Making duty on draught beer and cider significantly lower would promote drinking in the regulated setting of a community local and help small and independent producers who sell mainly into pubs and taprooms to compete against the
“The core problem is that brewers have been massively squeezed on their margins because of high ingredients cost, high energy costs and the knock on effect these have on other materials, at the same time as an increase in minimum wage. Then we sell to pubs whose margins have similarly been squeezed, and neither pubs nor brewers are selling beer at the price it needs to be to earn a fair wage.
“And pub goers have had their household budgets slashed, resulting in less ability to buy a pint. Inflation is down to 4%, but that 4% is still an increase on top of already unaffordable prices. Until the fundamental costs of property, energy, and food are brought under control and become fair and affordable, anything else is spin. Our politicians should start by giving frank and honest information to us.”
BREWERS JOURNAL 8 | SPRING 2024 NEWS ANALYSIS
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CICERONE CERTIFICATION PROGRAM ACQUIRED
The Cicerone Certification Program has been acquired from founder Ray Daniels by two Master Cicerones – Dan Imdieke and Jason Pratt.
“For several years now, I have been looking for a suitable group to take over ownership of the Cicerone Certification Program,” said program founder Ray Daniels. “These two Master Cicerones are well known to me and to the program as the result of having worked with us in a number of capacities over the years.
“Based on their experience both in the industry and with Cicerone, I feel very confident entrusting the future of the program to them.”
Daniels formally launched the Cicerone Certification Program in January 2008. Its mission has been to improve the quality of beer service for consumers by educating and certifying beer professionals. Over the past 16-plus years, the program has reached servers and other beer professionals in more than 90 countries to become the de facto standard in professional beer certification in the United States and elsewhere.
The program’s offerings include online exams, training programs, and other remote learning resources in seven languages. When circumstances permit, they also conduct in-person, interactive classes that prepare participants for exams. To date, more than 150,000 individuals worldwide have completed at least one level of certification in the program.
BEER52 ENTERS DISTRIBUTION MARKET WITH EEBRIA ACQUISITION
Craft Beer Holdings Limited, a subsidiary of Beer52 Limited, has entered into an agreement to acquire certain trade and assets of distributor EeBria Limited. The deal secures the future of an important route to market for independent brewers across the UK and Europe. It follows the announcement on midnight of 19th March 2024 that EeBria had been placed into administration. Beer52’s acquisition, the terms of which have not been disclosed, allows EeBria to move forward
well-capitalised, with a strong balance sheet and a clear focus to get more craft beer into more pubs, bars, shops and restaurants.
Fraser Doherty, CEO of Beer52, said: “We are acutely aware of how difficult the current trading environment is for breweries, brands, producers, and customers. Now more than ever, the industry we love needs EeBria’s revolutionary platform to thrive, connecting suppliers and customers and getting more people drinking great beer.”
KIRKSTALL TO RENEW “LANDMARK OF YORKSHIRE BEER CULTURE”
Kirkstall Brewery has announced that it is taking on the lease of The Tetley, with plans to make it a hub for great beer from Leeds and renew its status as a “landmark of Yorkshire beer culture”.
‘The Tetley’ building is the former brewing headquarters of Tetley’s Brewery, built in the Art Deco style in 1931. In the 1980s, Tetley’s Brewery became the largest producer of cask ale in the world, and the site has remained an icon of Leeds beer history, even after its closure in 2011. The building, which now sits at the heart of Leeds’s newest mixed-use district, Aire Park, then operated as a contemporary art gallery from 2013 until 2023, when its lease ended.
From May, Kirkstall will be operating The Tetley as a showcase of the very best of brewing in Leeds. It will feature beers from other breweries in the area, alongside brands from Kirkstall Brewery, Leeds Brewery and Holt’s most recent acquisition, North. Kirkstall also plans to host a number of events at the historic building. “It’s a tremendous privilege to bring Leeds’s most iconic brewery building into the Kirkstall fold,” said Steve Holt, Kirkstall Brewery’s owner and founder.
“As a brewery that pays a great deal of respect to the history of brewing in the city, we believe we are the ideal custodians for the next chapter of this legendary building.”
THE INDIAN BREWERY EXPANDS
The Indian Brewery has expanded its presence in Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter with a new brewery and taproom. The Indian Brewery said it is thrilled to announce its official expansion into a new premises in the heart of the Jewellery Quarter, St Paul’s Square. Situated on the corner of Mary Ann Street and Livery Street within an iconic building, the new location highlights The Indian Brewery’s commitment to becoming an integral part of the local community.
“The Jewellery Quarter, with its rich history and atmosphere, provides the perfect backdrop for the brewery’s growth.”
NEW LABELLING MACHINE AT STAFFORDSHIRE BREWERY
Willis European Limited have supplied and installed a new Sysmec 6 head Fully Automatic labelling machine for Staffordshire Brewery in Cheddleton, Leek. The fully specced machine is fitted with electronic cams which allows it to handle virtually any bottle shape.
As a contract Bottler, Staffordshire Brewery are able to register every bottle and label configuration in the machine menu, and a simple press of the button is all that is required to set the machine for a specific bottle and label dress.
The machine has a maximum output of 6000 bottles/hour, but is available with outputs from 4000 to 50,000 bottles/ hour. A coding device is also fitted to allow printing of Batch Codes and Best Before dates.
NORTHERN MONK BOOSTS CAPACITY 20%
Northern Monk is set to increase their brewing capacity by a fifth following a £500,000 investment in new equipment and the main brewery site. The 20% increase in capacity will be the equivalent to an additional 8,000 hectolitres (HL), or 1.4 million pints, of beer per year. Last year, Northern Monk, who are based in Leeds, brewed around 7 million pints from their two brewing sites, Sydenham Road in Holbeck, and their original home, The Old Flax Store, Leeds.
BREWERS JOURNAL 10 | SPRING 2024 NEWS
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GREENWASHING RISKS FOR BREWERIES
ENSURING YOU DON’T MISLEAD YOUR BREWERY’S CUSTOMERS IS IMPERATIVE, ESPECIALLY WHEN IT COMES TO THE ENVIRONMENT EXPLAINS DANIEL FINN, SENIOR ASSOCIATE AT BRABNERS.
Increased public concern about environmental issues (for example, climate change and plastic in the oceans) means that consumers are more likely than ever before to consider the potential impact of a product on the planet when making purchasing decisions.
Some businesses may be tempted to accentuate their environmental credentials to reflect the mood and maintain or increase their market share. Greenwashing is the practice of making false, misleading or unproven claims about the environmental benefits or attributes of a business, service or product.
Greenwashing can lead potentially to significant legal liabilities. The Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008 prohibit unfair commercial practices aimed at consumers, which is wide enough to include greenwashing.
Similarly, the Business Protection from Misleading Marketing Regulations 2008 prohibit greenwashing claims aimed at businesses.
Breaching either set of regulations constitutes an offence for which the maximum penalty is an unlimited fine and/or two years imprisonment.
In addition, where an offence is committed under either set of regulations by a company or other body corporate with the consent or connivance of a director, manager, secretary or other similar officer (or is attributable to their neglect), that individual will be personally liable as well.
The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has become increasingly active in relation to alleged greenwashing and, in January 2023, announced that it would be reviewing green claims made in the Fast Moving Consumer Goods sector (including beverages). In addition to the regulations, however,
greenwashing could lead to claims for damages brought by customers for misrepresentation.
THE GREEN CLAIMS CODE
To assist businesses in understanding and complying with their obligations under the law when making green claims, the CMA has published the Green Claims Code. At the core of the code lie six principles: Claims must contain correct information and be true. However, claims can also be misleading if what they say is factually correct, but the impression that they give about the environmental impact, cost or benefit of a product, service, process, brand or business is deceptive.
Claims should be worded in a way that is transparent and straightforward so that consumers can easily understand them. They should not be presented in ways that are liable to cause confusion or give the impression that a product, service, brand or business is better for the environment than it actually is.
Claims must not omit or hide important relevant information. These sorts of omissions can occur where claims focus on one environmental aspect of a product, service, brand or business but not another, or where they say nothing at all.
Comparisons must be fair and meaningful. Comparisons should be based on clear, up to date and objective information. They should not benefit one product or brand to the detriment of another if the comparison is inaccurate or false.
Claims must consider the full life cycle of the product or service. All aspects of the environmental impact of a product or service over its life cycle are relevant, including its components, manufacture, production, use, performance and
COMMENT
BREWERS JOURNAL 12 | SPRING 2024
disposal. Claims must be substantiated. This final principle overlaps with that relating to comparisons. Businesses should be able to back up their claims with robust, credible, relevant and up to date evidence.
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) regulates broadcast and nonbroadcast advertising through codes of practice that contain specific rules relating to green claims, including that: The basis of claims must be clear –unqualified claims could mislead if they omit significant information; The meaning of all terms used in marketing communications must be clear to consumers; Absolute claims must be supported by a high level of substantiation; Claims must be based on the full life cycle of the advertised product, unless the marketing communication states otherwise, and must make clear the limits of the life cycle; and It must not be suggested that claims are universally accepted if a significant division of informed or
Businesses should be able to back up their claims with robust, credible, relevant and up to date evidence,” Daniel Finn, Brabners scientific opinion exists.
Although the ASA does not have the power to prosecute or fine, it may, for example, require that adverts are withdrawn or that adverts do not re-
appear in their current form, which can be expensive and embarrassing if a business has invested a significant sum of money on a campaign.
Whilst the Green Claims Code is not law itself, following it may constitute good basic evidence of compliance with regulations.
Whilst there is clearly overlap between them, care should be taken to ensure that any green claims satisfy meet the requirements of the Green Claims Code and the ASA’s rules.
Both of them set high standards and claims, for example, that containers are “100% recyclable” or that ingredients are “sustainably-sourced” may not be justifiable.
Instead, we may start to see more humility and candour in green claims with businesses acknowledging their environmental flaws whilst trying to persuade prospective customers of the steps they are taking to improve.
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brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 13 COMMENT
CREATING A CLEAR PATHWAY TO NET ZERO
EMBARKING ON A NET ZERO JOURNEY CAN BE DAUNTING AND DIFFICULT BUT IT DOESN’T NEED TO BE, SAYS JACK SOWLER FROM NET ZERO NOW.
Since 2022, Net Zero Nowthe climate action platform - has been working with breweries of all shapes and sizes to help them decarbonise.
Breweries follow a dedicated roadmap to net zero, developed by Net Zero Now in partnership with industry sustainability pioneers, Konvoy and Toast, so that climate and industry expertise comes together in the offer of one affordable, easy to navigate package.
Breweries working with Net Zero Now can access all the tools they need to kick-start their sustainability journey and benefit from a standard against which their progress can be measured and certified.
They are supported throughout their process of decarbonisation by Net Zero Now’s friendly and knowledgeable team – from calculating their first accurate carbon footprint, through setting sciencebased reduction targets to implementing a carbon reduction plan and reporting.
Fergus Fitzgerald, Production Director at Adnams Brewery, said: “Net Zero Now provide a solution that makes data collection and analysis manageable for any brewery. The reports helped us identify where we need to focus our efforts as we plan to get to net zero.”
Any brewery that signs up to The Net Zero Brewery Initiative is able to achieve ‘On The Road’ certification – a signal to their stakeholders of their commitment to sustainability.
Many choose to leverage this for competitive advantage - demonstrating to customers, suppliers and peers alike that they are taking action. This certification ensures that a brewery’s
efforts are recognised and can be communicated all the way through to them eventually being fully certified as ‘Net Zero’.
Renegade is among the vanguard of breweries that are already well on the road to net zero. The Berkshire-based outfit may not be long in the tooth, but it is cutting a clear path to net zero, and is keen to do what it considers to be the ‘right thing’ as it continues to expand. Renegade has got to grips with its carbon footprint and has introduced a range of measures – including an array of over 1,000 solar panels that meet approximately 40% of their electrical needs, onsite cultivation of barley and installation of a nitrogen generation plant to cut C02 dependence and output.
They find great value in being able to visualise their carbon usage using the Net Zero Now platform and see, across the business, the impact of the changes they are making.
A recent collaboration with BrewMan also promises to simplify and accelerate the journey to net zero for many breweries. Integration of BrewMan’s operations management software with Net Zero Now’s carbon accounting platform is enabling data to be shared across the two.
In the same way that BrewMan provides an innovative solution to take the heavy lifting out of operations management, Net Zero Now can reduce the burden of sustainability management, and bringing the two platforms together is a massive step forward in catalysing decarbonisation among many breweries.
Sam Williams, Commercial director at BrewMan, said: “Our users care about
the environmental impact of their businesses, and their customers want to be empowered to make environmentally conscious decisions.
“This is why we are delighted to work with Net Zero Now, in offering BrewMan users a simple way to calculate their carbon footprint and find out how they can work to improve it.”
Partnerships across the brewing industry is helping to greatly accelerate its net zero progress according to Jack Sowler, business development executive at Net Zero Now.
“Whether it’s in the development of our bespoke net zero roadmap for breweries or through innovative partnerships that take away some of the burden of moving toward net zero, collaboration between Net Zero Now and key industry players is driving positive change.
“We might be climate experts, but we’re not, perhaps to our dismay, expert brewers. We need to constantly tap into the expertise available in the sector to ensure that we make the journey to net zero as smooth, affordable and accessible as it can possibly be.”
If you’re a brewery considering embarking on a net zero future visit netzeronow.org to take a look at the Net Zero Brewery Initiative or book a walkthrough the Net Zero Now platform with one of our friendly experts.
To quote Martin Kelly, Renegade’s production director, “Every small change that the brewers can make and support through their supply chain will all add up & have a demonstrable effect for the climate, the country and for the world.” Be and brew that change.
BREWERS JOURNAL 14 | SPRING 2024 COMMENT
UNDERSTANDING CONTRACT
BREWING AND PACKAGING
THERE ARE SEVERAL BREWERIES OFFERING CONTRACT SERVICES BUT NOT ALL PROVIDE CUSTOMER SERVICE TO THE LEVELS YOU NEED OR EXPECT. IT’S HARD TO PUT A PRICE ON CUSTOMER SERVICE BUT “EXCELLENT” IS WORTH SEARCHING FOR, EXPLAIN RENEGADE BREWERY.
There are many reasons why businesses selling beer seek out third parties to either brew and pack or simply pack their own beers for them.
Over the last 10 years it has become increasingly common for entrepreneurs with a passion for beer but no brewery of their own to work with established breweries to develop and produce their products for them.
This approach is very sensible if you don’t have a good technical brewing background or lack the investment to establish your own brewery. It also facilitates a faster start into production and is considerably less risky financially.
Several successful brands have started in this way in recent years and, despite the tough economic situation we currently face, many continue to do extremely well.
For brewery owners there are different reasons for considering using a thirdparty brewery to brew and/or pack. Whether it’s a short-term volume increase that cannot be met or a temporary, planned brewery closure, third-party breweries can play a vital role in keeping customers supplied with beer. Another common reason is the proposed launch of a new beer style that cannot, for technical or logistical reasons, be produced in their own brewery.
Possibly the most common reason for established breweries to use third parties relates to packaging.
If a brewery has a customer requiring a packaging format it does not have the
equipment to produce a co-packer can be an excellent solution to delivering the contract.
Whether the new format is cask, keg, bottle, can, minikeg, keykeg or something else if the brewery cannot pack it then finding a capable partner is a godsend.
Transportation of beer via Arlington’s or tankers can be done without any significant deterioration in quality. Clearly, the primary packaging format is key but so too is the secondary packaging. It may be that a brewery has a bottling or canning line but the small pack has to be subsequently packed into flow wrap, tray and shrink or Fully Enclosed Cardboard (FECs - sometimes called “fridge packs”) which cannot be done.
The latter format, FEC, is becoming increasingly popular not only because they look great on a retail shelf but they also guarantee multiple bottle/can sales versus individual bottles/cans, and have the added advantage that they are fully recyclable.
BREWING AND PACKING
When deciding which third-party brewer to use to brew and pack there are some important considerations.
Firstly, if you don’t have a recipe you’ll need assistance either from a brewing consultant or the contract brewery itself. Either way you’re probably going to want to do some pilot brewing before going to full production scale.
It’s usually best to work with a brewery that has a pilot plant which mimics, as closely as possible, their full-scale kit and have brewers who have experience
in taking pilot brews to full scale successfully.
Having a pilot brew you love which isn’t a good match at full scale can be frustrating and expensive if you decide not to pack it, and whilst there are no guarantees with scale-up having an experienced team will get you there quicker.
If you have a recipe and simply want a third-party to produce the same beer on their kit that’s clearly easier but brewing on different kit and potentially different scales can introduce differences in the final product, the key question here is are those differences significant or not? Will your customers be able to tell the difference?
Again, choosing a brewery and brewing team with experience in doing this can save a lot of pain in the long run. In terms of packing the considerations are the same whether the brewery is producing the beer or you are transporting your own for pack-only.
PACK-ONLY
When selecting a partner to pack your own beers clearly the third-party will need the equipment to pack into the primary and secondary packaging formats you require, that’s a given. However, there are a number of questions to ask such as can beer be split into different packaging formats, e.g. can and keg, in the same run, what kinds of loses are typical, what levels of carbonation can be achieved and what are the specification targets for parameters such as dissolved oxygen,
BREWERS JOURNAL 16 | SPRING 2024 COMMENT
clarity and microbiology?
Stabilisation of the beer prior to packing is also an important consideration whether it is achieved via pasteurisation or sterile filtration. With the high energy costs, impact on the environmental footprint of the brewery and potential for off-flavour development, pasteurisation is increasingly being replaced by sterile filtration in breweries.
Once produced most breweries will provide some basic analyses from their own internal laboratory which may or may not be included in the pricing.
Post-packing storage conditions need to be considered if the brewery are holding stock for any extended period.
Ideally they should have a temperature controlled warehouse held at around 12-14 deg C throughout the year to maximise the freshness of the beer. With summer temperatures occasionally hitting over 30 deg C in the UK, a trend that is likely to increase in the future, nobody wants to be drinking cooked beer.
This approach is very sensible if you don’t have a good technical brewing background or lack the investment to establish your own brewery.
However you decide to work with a thirdparty to brew and/or pack your beers make sure you have a contract in place which is fair and works for both sides. Pricing is important but so are the terms and conditions in which the two organisations agree to work together. The contract covers the codified aspects of the relationship, and most third parties will have a standard contract to use, but you also need to find a partner who you feel comfortable working with and trust. You need to feel confident that they will care about your products as much as you do, that communication is likely to be good and the team are responsive to your questions and needs.
There are several breweries offering contract services but not all provide customer service to the levels you need or expect. It’s hard to put a price on customer service but “excellent” is worth searching for. Happy hunting!
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THE UK IS BLESSED WITH GREAT BEERS. BUT WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENT CHARACTERISTICS AND WHICH DO YOU PREFER? HERE’S JOHN KEELING TO SHARE HIS OPINION.
JOHN NORTH VERSUS SOUTH
Now, I have long maintained that despite the myriad of beer styles judged in competitions there are only two types of beer. These are beers I like and beers I don’t.
As a brewer, I only wanted to make beers I liked and for most of my career this was the case. I reasoned that if a brewer did this, they would make the beer as good as they could and be proud of what they had achieved.
They would recognise unwanted changes in the beer flavour and would be quicker to correct them.
If you care about something you make it better, rather like the difference between a brewery and a factory.
However where did my taste come from? I was born and bred in Manchester but spent most of my brewing career in the south.
I was proud of being a Mancunian (I still am) and a typical Northerner. I supported Manchester United and Lancashire and started my drinking on Boddingtons, Robinsons, Lees, Hydes and Holts. Unfortunately, none of them wanted me as a brewer – however Fuller’s did. I had
only ever drunk Fuller’s once before, so it was a leap into the unknown for me. On arriving at Fuller’s, I leapt into the unknown with a certain amount of gusto quickly developing a taste for their beers.
The brewer’s favourite was Chiswick Bitter, and we always tended to drink that, especially as it was only 3.5% ABV. And in those days we would have a couple at lunchtime.
Chiswick was dry-hopped in cask with Goldings and therefore had a lovely hop character. London Pride was malty and fruitier, much different to the beers of Manchester which were dryer, and with a pronounced bitterness.
So, the Fuller’s beers were very different to the beers in Manchester but then Robbies was much different from Boddies.
In fact, one of the great delights of the beer world in those days was to try each brewery’s version of bitter. None were the same and this provided great interest to the beer drinkers of that era.
However, there was one major difference between the north and south and that was one of presentation.
DEAR
BREWERS JOURNAL 18 | SPRING 2024
It still provides arguments today and that is the use of the sparkler. So, I am going to weigh in on this debate with my customary diplomacy. Northern beers use them to produce a massive head which certainly makes the beer look good and appetising but southern beers have a looser fluffy head.
If you pour beer from a cask into a glass, you will get a very small head indeed and this was the way beer was dispensed before the invention of the beer engine. This produced a bigger head, but it needed the invention of the sparkler to produce the tight creamy heads much loved by Northern drinkers. However, it might look good, but does it taste better?
Firstly, with such an agitated pour the beer must lose some condition, I cannot think that this would be a good thing.
Secondly, we know that certain flavour compounds such as bitterness dissolve into the head which makes the beer less
bitter. However, that foam redissolves into the beer as you drink it making the last few drinks very bitter indeed. Again, I cannot believe this is a good thing and makes the beer inconsistent to the drinker.
So, which do I prefer and to answer that I have to say that the best-tasting beer I have ever tasted was poured directly from the cask. The best-looking beers are the ones poured through a sparkler.
When I was working for Wilsons in Manchester as a young laboratory technician, I was asked to sample beer from a pub which complained about head retention particularly at lunch time.
Turns out they served the best pork pies in Manchester, and everybody had one for lunch. The fat from the pies dissolved the foam very quickly. This helps explain the old adage that you drink with your eyes…
There was one major difference between the north and south and that was one of presentation.
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 19 DEAR JOHN
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AGEING GRACEFULLY
BEING ABLE TO MARK YOUR THIRD ANNIVERSARY IN THE WORLD OF BREWING DOESN’T HAPPEN BY ACCIDENT AND ROOSTER’S BREWING CO OF HARROGATE REMAIN ONE OF THE UK ’S MOST REGARDED AND RESPECTED BREWERIES FOR VERY GOOD REASON.
PHOTOGRAPHY: MARK NEWTON
Where were you a little over 30 years ago? England had failed to qualify for the World Cup, 2 Unlimited were Top of the Pops, Shane Warne had bowled the ‘Ball of the Century’ and Rooster’s Brewing Co has just hatched. And in doing so, forever changing the shape of beer in the UK. Though they’d be too modest to admit, they were originators and innovators of quality and new world pale ales. Rooster’s beers, then brewed by original founder Sean Franklin, were starting to stand out and turn heads amongst a sea of brown beer, with flagship pale ale Yankee leading the way. And a little more than 30 years on, Rooster’s Brewing Co of Harrogate are still going strong.
A brewery known for quality, consistency and approachability, their beers are reaching a new generation of drinkers. Be
that in the wild, their fantastic taproom space in North Yorkshire, or anywhere in-between. And thankfully in 2024, cliché or not, they are showing no signs of slowing down, either. To welcome in the new year, Rooster’s announced that it was ramping up its limited release offering, with close to 50 different beers scheduled for production in addition to their year-round core range.
The Harrogate brewery mapped out their brewing schedule for the twelve months ahead, which includes several new recipes, the return of a few old favourites from the archives and a series of collaborations with some of the UK’s most highly-regarded breweries. So what better time then to catch-up with Tom Fozard, the brewery’s commercial director, to discuss the plans for this year. We look back on the impact and influence that Rooster’s founder Sean Franklin has had on the UK brewing
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 21
Rooster’s has built its name on quality and consistent beers
industry, and also the way that Tom and his family have helped Rooster’s evolve since taking on the business back in 2011. But sticking with the modern day, and to kick-start the year, Rooster’s released no fewer than six limited-edition beers for January to tie in with #Tryanuay, the online, social campaign that promotes and supports smaller, independent beer business during what is typically a tough trading period in January.
Among them was Sleep Is For The Week (a 5.8% breakfast stout), Volstead (a 4.4%, gluten free pre-prohibition American lager) and Democracy Manifest (a 3.6%, cask-only U.S. pale ale), brewed in collaboration with Lakes Brew Co. Other collaborations taking place this year include those with SALT, Fyne Ales, Thornbridge, Brew York and Siren.
And this Spring marks the start of another year in the story of a brewing staple. Not just in Yorkshire but the UK as a whole. And a new chapter for a beer business some 30+ years young can be no accident. But for Fozard and his family, they will always respect and acknowledge the formative work of founder Sean Franklin.
“If you go back to day one, when the brewery was founded by Sean, the real magic ingredient he had was his background in winemaking. And once
Sean Franklin really broke the mould with Yankee” Tom Fozard
he realised he wasn’t going to be a winemaker for a living, he wanted a way of expressing what he’d learned and understood about grapes, and recognised that that similarity exists with hops,” explains Tom.
Before Rooster’s came to be, Sean was already experimenting with hops at his first brewery - Franklin’s. Located in Bilton, North Yorkshire, brewing commenced at the start of 1980 with Sean hearing about the emergence of beers such as Sierra Nevada Pale Ale in California around the same time.
“Sean tried to have some with fun with these beers in the 1980s but to be pretty direct, the market wasn’t really there. So a good few years later he would give it
another go and set up Rooster’s,” recalls Tom. Being a mere 11 years old when Rooster’s came to be in 1993, Tom wasn’t au fait with the liquid itself but looking back, and being local to the brewery he would recall a sea of brown beer with Sean instead leading the way with that focus on American hops and in particular, Cascade. A hop that features in the brewery’s flagship Pale Ale - Yankee.
Coming in at 4.3%, It was one of the original, new-style, pale ales to be brewed in the UK - Yankee is a modern classic. Light and easy-drinking, it’s a beer that showcases the floral and citrus fruit aromas of the Cascade hop, grown in the Yakima Valley in Washington State, USA, projected against a back drop of soft Yorkshire water and Golden Promise pale malt.
“Sean really broke the mould with Yankee,” says Tom. “He worked directly with farmers in the US because there simply wasn’t the availability over here. Hop merchants were, understandably, focused on English varieties in particular. “It took him considerable time to convince people of what this beer was and why it tasted the way it did. Sean and Yankee were the definition of experimentation. He stripped back that beer to really allow the hops to express themselves.”
BREWERS JOURNAL 22 | SPRING 2024 ROOSTER’S BREWING
Rooster’s Brewing Co is based in Harrogate, North Yorkshire
Rooster’s celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2023
While Sean Franklin admired and was inspired by the early stages of the US craft beer movement, his creations have gone on to inspire others, too. But while beers like Yankee are something of a household name for many beer fans, Tom feels that Rooster’s remains something of a well-kept secret.
“This is a lovely, friendly industry to be involved with, and we do get quite a lot of people come up to us and express their respect for the brewery and how it made them want to start brewing themselves,” he says. “And obviously my brother and I can’t take credit for that! But it shows that we have a solid reputation. I think people respect that we’ve remained committed to creating consistent, drinkable beers.
“But I think, you know, on a commercial level, despite the success we’ve had and the progress we’ve made, it definitely feels like we’re still a little bit too much of a well-kept secret. Maybe we need to push ourselves out there a little more. I guess that comes with being an established brewery within a fast-paced, challenging market. There are always shiny new beer styles coming out left, right and centre. People want to explore new things, and that’s understandable.
But we’ll continue doing what we do best, too.”
Lots has, predictably, changed, in the three decades Rooster’s has been in business. A business now owned and run by Tom, his brother Oliver and their father Ian. Before the opportunity to take on Rooster’s arose, Tom would pursue a career in journalism while Oliver worked at breweries such as Daleside of Harrogate, a brewery that Rooster’s recently acquired earlier this year. “The financial crash of 2009 meant I lost my job in publishing and I found myself working at a local bar. And before long, I discovered homebrewing. A good brewer is often described as being something of an artist and a scientist combined. I was definitely neither of those. To be honest, I don’t know what I was. But I enjoyed it and got carried away with it.”
Tom’s love of beers, especially US numbers such as those from Odell, Dogfish Head and Stone Brewing, would develop further when working at a local bottleshop and he would soon hatch a plan with a close friend to open up a brewery of their own. “We started working on a business plan but soon decided this wasn’t going to go anywhere. So I put the
business plan to my dad and basically said, ‘What do you think of this?’”.
Fozard adds: “I was looking for a steer in the right direction. He looked at it, laughed and effectively said it was rubbish! But what I didn’t realise at the time was that, even though my brother and I were close, he was getting bored working where he was and that he had also approached our dad for some careers advice.
“Neither of us knew that our dad was ready to sell a small group of pubs that he had built up with a consortium. We found ourselves in a position where Oliver and I wanted to do more work in the industry with a dad who wasn’t ready to just sit back and be bored.
“So we started working on a plan to open our own brewery and about six months into that process Sean Franklin got in touch and said he was ready to retire and if we’d be interested in taking Rooster’s on - and that was it!”
And since taking on the business with their father Ian, Tom and Oliver have successfully built on Rooster’s foundations with the beers they’ve brewed. But in the very early days, they were very firm on their desire to act
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 23 ROOSTER’S BREWING
as caretakers for such a beloved local business.
“The first thing that we did was spend seven months working side-by-side with Sean, while due diligence was going on. It served as a really good handover period. While Oliver had been brewing for some 10 years at that point, he was still able to learn a great deal with Sean,” he explains.
“We also knew that beer such as Yankee were so highly regarded. There was no way we were going to come in and drastically change things and turn things into ‘The Fozard Brewing Company’ or whatever. We were there to build on the great work Sean had already carried out. “And because Sean had won three backto-back medals at the World Beer Cup in the US, he and the brewery had a great
We aim to create consistent, drinkable beers”
Tom Fozard
reputation overseas. So we’d often have calls from Americans who were visiting and wanted to visit us. But on the flipside, there were people living in a three-mile radius of the brewery that didn’t know we existed....”
Central in those early days, and something that has continued in the years since, was building upon the Rooster’s Brewing Co reputation while also putting the team’s own stamp, their own identity on things.
“When it comes to Rooster’s and the way my brother and I approach things, I feel that we are somewhat of a mix. And that’s a good thing,” he says. “His passion is consistency in the beers we brew and we meet in the middle with how we honour and respect the history of this brewery.
BREWERS JOURNAL 24 | SPRING 2024 ROOSTER’S BREWING
While Yankee remains its flagship, Rooster’s creates a raft of beers across the year.
I’m probably a little bit more out there, always throwing ideas around. “But at the end of the day, he’s the one to actually turn this ideas into beers that people enjoy and want to drink.”
While the last 12 or so years have no doubt flown by, that time has seen the team grow and evolve Rooster’s into a completely different proposition. And that has included moving facility, updating its kit and opening a taproom that can welcome an ever-increasing number of visitors. Much has changed since the team that inherited that cask-only business in nearby Knaresborough.
“When Sean found the land the brewery would start out on, his landlord told him he had a prefab building available lying in a nearby field. It was also something he could put up for him. And I’ll be honest, when we first saw how the flooring was laid, I felt it had to be someone’s first attempt or they were p*ssed when they did it!” laughs Fozard.
“I suppose ramshackle is the best way to describe it. But it was also home to the brewery during Sean’s greatest successes in terms of the beers he was producing, too.”
A few years after really “getting their feet under the table” Rooster’s would invest in their own canning line at the start of 2014. “Breweries such as Fourpure, Camden and Beavertown all installed theirs a few months earlier but outside of London we were really the first of our scale to do so. “The decision to do that in such a premises really stretched us. It was like working with a giant puzzle where you have to move one piece to make space for another. You’d often spend an hour moving stuff out of the brewery just to make space. It was manageable but it was painful.”
Rooster’s would soon reach a point where the team felt it was unable to capitalise on certain opportunities coming their way, and unable to concentrate on growing. So they set about looking at new premises for the business. In searching Harrogate for their new forever home, a lack of suitable industrial properties threatened to hinder this pursuit.
“Harrogate is a lovely area but not one built on industry of that kind,” says Tom.
However, one ideal spot did exist. Hornbeam Park, located several miles south of Harrogate Town centre, simply “screamed perfect location” but it was financially out of their reach. That was until the landlord informed the trio that its break clause had been activated and subsequently was available. Despite some hesitations from father Ian, with the premises been three times larger than their original site, a deal was struck and they had the keys at the start of 2019.
In the years since, not only has it become home for the brewery but also for its ever-popular taproom. This has been an integral part of the Rooster’s offering, seating up to 160 indoors and more than 100 outside. There’s also a private events space, too.
“Before we found this building, I drew up plans for three types of taprooms with option C being a temporary bar and us moving some malt pallets out of the way on a Friday night,” says Tom. “But instead we now have somewhere with quite a large proportion of the premises is dedicated to the taproom and we couldn’t be happier.
“The private events space has also been really important for us. I recall Rich (Burhouse) when he was still at Magic Rock explaining how he wished they had somewhere they could hire out. “Often they’d be approached by people wanting to spend a lot of money to have the space exclusively but he would always decline because he didn’t want to upset the regulars. It was never worth the risk.”
But for Tom, Oliver and the rest of the team at Rooster’s, that ability to entertain and delight is very much high on the agenda for 2024 and beyond. And a busy beer release schedule, and events to enjoy those at, is key to that. In addition to a raft of new beers, its popular Suds With Buds invitational beer festival returns in 2024, too.
“It’s something we wanted to do ever since we moved to this site. We’re really pleased with how it went last year and we’re looking forward to going again,” says Tom. “Being able to welcome people here, to see and hear people enjoying our beers and to have a good time while doing so is massively important to us. We always want that to be the case and really hope it will be.”
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 25 ROOSTER’S BREWING
SPECIALISE IN SMALL PACK
FOR MANY BREWERIES, AND THEIR CUSTOMERS, BOTTLES ARE THE VESSEL OF CHOICE WHEN IT COMES TO PACKAGING, SELLING AND SERVING BEER. BUT CANNING IS ALSO IMPOSSIBLE TO IGNORE. IT’S A GOOD THING THEN THAT BOTH OF THESE SECTORS AND THEIR ANCILLARY INDUSTRIES ARE BOTH RIFE WITH INNOVATION, TOO.
In recent years, there has been an undeniable rise in popularity of packaging beer into can. There are a number of factors behind this, of course, but for countless breweries beer in bottle is still the go-to option and for good reason.
Craig Wilson, is the managing director of Enterprise Tondelli UK. The company has been working in the beverage industry for more than 45 years and in that time they’ve seen many changes from returnable bottle washers in the late 70’s (now possibly coming back…) to PET bottles rising and now falling in popularity. Also, as he says canning rising, falling and now rising and rising.
“We are seeing a surge of interest in stouts and porters with widget in cans. Widget cans require very particular processing during the filling process and we our filling partner Matrix have recently completed a complete line for this,” he explains. “A conventional filler is not able to effectively handle the widget can which needs nitrogen flushing of the can instead of CO2 to purge the widget of oxygen at high pressure. “This is done with a particular sequence and recipe, then filling with nitrogen at lower pressure followed by Nitrogen injection. A traditional filling valve is also not well suited to the application so the electropneumatic filling valve with adjustable vent tube is ideal for this. These products are then tunnel pasteurised which is also seeing a resurgence in popularity due to the product stability it can provide.”
While canning’s rise continues, that is simply only part of the packaging equation. When it comes to premium
packaging, consumer safety and a low impact on the environment, glass is still the number one choice for breweries, argues Dawn Pugh, sales and marketing director at Beatson Clark, the only independently owned glass works in the UK.
The company has served the brewing sector for many years and the list of familiar brands using Beatson Clark bottles for their beers is growing, from craft brewers like Mount St Bernard and Hurns Brewing Company to bigger brands like BrewDog and Halewood. They offer a flexible approach and can supply standard beer bottles, customised bottles and completely bespoke designs. This means they can cater to a wide range of breweries, and their standard bottles are offered in lower production quantities, perfect for smaller breweries. Currently Beatson Clark is placing particular emphasis on amber beer bottles, which are ideal for breweries as they offer over 90% protection from UV rays which could harm the beer inside the bottle. The company currently has capacity in amber glass, which is visually appealing for the consumer and which has the added benefit of protecting the contents of the bottle from harmful ultraviolet light.
Amber bottles contain more recycled glass or cullet – over 60% recycled content – so they’re more environmentally friendly than white flint or clear bottles.
“Our standard amber beer bottles are very popular, and for a small extra cost we can customise these to reflect the brewery’s branding,” she tells us. “We offer embossing options on our standard bottles, perfect for ordering in smaller
volumes, as well as more tailored services including bespoke bottle design, labelling and crowns.”
Glass bottles can be manufactured in any number of shapes, sizes and designs, and they can achieve stunning decorative effects too, from embossing and debossing to textured surfaces, spray coatings, sleeving and screen printing. The option of embossing words, logos and patterns onto glass containers can elevate a brand and achieve better shelf presence. Recent advances in technology have revolutionised what the company’s in-house design team can now achieve with embossing, and using the latest sculpting software means that the results are better defined and easier to manufacture.
“Nine out of every ten bespoke designs we produce for our customers includes unique embossing – names, straplines, logos or patterns embossed on the glass to enhance its appeal and make the container truly unique,” said Dawn.
We are seeing a surge of interest in stouts and porters with
in
Craig Wilson, Enterprise Tondelli.
widget
cans,”
BREWERS JOURNAL 26 | SPRING 2024 SMALL PACK
Pharmaceutical bottle designs continue to be popular with food and beverage brands seeking to achieve a retro vintage look for their brand. For breweries looking for a cost-effective yet distinctive container, Beatson Clark recently launched a 330ml amber drinks bottle for general sale. Its design is based on an Alpha Sirop medicine bottle, it can be manufactured with a standard crown neck finish, and unlike the original pharmaceutical design it’s tested to 3.0 bar which makes it suitable for carbonated drinks.
“It’s a completely new design and can be supplied as a standard bottle from our general sale range,” said Dawn. “Or for a small initial outlay customers can add their own embossing to the bottle with a minimum order of just 150,000 units in either neck finish.”
With the craft beer revolution in the UK has come an increase in the use of aluminium cans for beer. However, Pugh says there are many good reasons why glass should still be the first choice for breweries.
“Not only are our amber bottles made with over 60% recycled content, but glass is the only primary packaging
material that doesn’t require a plastic layer between the product and the packaging,” she explains. “Many people are surprised to discover that most mainstream beverage containers –including aluminium cans – are lined with plastic which is in constant contact with your beer.
“Glass meanwhile is completely inert. This means it’s safe to be in contact with the beer inside the bottle as the glass will not contaminate the product inside.”
For Craig Wilson at Enterprise Tondelli, another trend they are seeing in the market place is the desire for greater flexibility in the secondary packaging area of the line. For many years the company and its partner Baumer have been supplying wraparound cartoners and shrink wrappers as well as a combined packer for trays with film and also able to handle corrugated wrapround cartons all on the same machine.
“However we find that now the market is looking for the smaller kraft board packs; as well as capability to handle larger
corrugated cartons too,” he says. “Baumer have therefore developed and Enterprise have supplied machines that can handle wraparound cartons for 24 and 12 cans in a wraparound carton with corrugated board.
“In addition we can now handle kraft board material to produce an FEC or fully enclosed fridge pack carton. This can be 4, 6;s, 8’s or 12’s too and means the marketing department or budding entrepreneur has almost no limits! Even in a limited space. Machines speeds start at 20 packs per minute and can be up to 65-70 packs per minute.”
Wilson concludes: “Of course once you have produced your 4 or 6 pack the issue becomes how to palletise and distribute. So Enterprise and Baumer can also supply a special 90 degree infeed tray erector loader that packs the 4 packs into a high sided tray. The system is modular so this can be added in a second stage thus reducing capital investment and allowing upgrades to be made as cash flow is generated.”
Tynt Meadow is mahogany-coloured, with a subtle, warm red hue, and a lasting beige head
Beatson Clark says there are many good reasons why glass should still be the first choice for breweries
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 27 SMALL PACK
BUYERS GUIDE BOTTLING
WHEN IT COMES TO BOTTLING LINES, THERE ARE OUTPUT OPTIONS FROM THE MODEST TO THE MIND-BLOWING. HERE ARE SOME OF THE BOTTLING LINES ON THE MARKET THAT CAN CATER FOR EVERY NEED.
The Galaxy Monobloc (right) from Costral is a standalone machine handling bottle rinsing (as well as sterilising), filling and capping: T-Corks, Vinoseal (all closures). This 3-in-1 machine combines everything you need to bottle your wines, juices, beers or spirits in one single frame. Described as a comprehensive, versatile bottling unit. According to the business, the major advantages of the rinser/steriliser are that it’s a rinser/steriliser with 24, 36 or 48 stations, it has entirely stainless-steel construction, rinsing time of up to 3 seconds, sterilising by injecting a chemical solution followed by rinsing with filtered water, very long draining time (up to 40 seconds), fast bottle format changeover, possibility of injecting a neutral gas for inerting prior to filling, a small footprint and low noise pollution.
Whether for glass bottles, PET containers or cans, for filling, labelling or packing, for water, beer or soft drinks – Krones offers a customised system solution for every process step, every container type and every beverage category. The wide portfolio comprises all machines required for beverage production: From stretch blow moulders for PET containers and rinsers for glass bottles and cans, through to fillers suitable for every container type and labellers for all conventional labelling and decoration variants, as well as all dry-end systems. When it comes to glass, Krones says that it’s the container type of choice for alcoholic beverages. For water, soft drinks or juices, they often underline the premium character of the brand: glass bottles. Their material properties offer two significant advantages for their use in the beverage industry: Thanks to their good gas barrier, glass containers guarantee a high standard of hygiene and a long shelf life for the end product. And their optical appearance can also be a highlight: A range of different labelling methods, including the use of direct print allow for a myriad of design options, which draw the consumer’s eye to the product. The image shows an installation at Schlossbrauerei Maxlrain which features a new returnable-glass line from Krones rated at 20,000 bottles per hour.
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The Sraml Bottling Monoblock System (above), available through V-Brew, is a set of automated high quality machines combined in one unit to perform rinsing, filling and capping whether you are handling glass, plastic bottles or aluminium cans. The Monoblock System has many advantages over an invidual stand-alone machine. It is designed to perform different tasks during the bottling process while being part of the same block. It requires less space and personnel, optimises energy consumption and enables perfect synchronization between units The system features quick and easy bottle format changeover and high flexibility, even when working with different bottle shapes or closure types. The integral CIP system is fully automatic, which allows fast and thorough cleaning while complying with the highest food-safety standards. Remote access can be optionally included for easy remote control, troubleshooting, or updates.
Comac Group offers a range of beer bottling lines and machines scaled to fit to any production size. From compact machines to industrial-size plants, they have the right solution for any kind of brewery. If you are a small brewery or a microbrewery, you can add to your production line a compact machine for bottling and capping. Their machines require minimum space and yet they guarantee professional results, time savings and reduction of product waste. They are manufactured with high quality materials such as AISI 304 stainless steel, an alloy that prevents rust, corrosion and contamination, and lasts for years. Plus, their bottling machines are equipped with a system for the oxygen pick up, an important process in beer production as it guarantees the excellence of flavour over time. For smaller breweries, the Sagitta 12-12-1 P bottling machine offers production capacity up to 6,000 bottles per hour. For medium-size outfits there are the Sagitta 12-16-3 P (above) and the Sagitta 20-20-3 P lines, while for industrial breweries it offers the Master G Tech model designed to process from 3,000 up to 80,000 beer bottles per hour.
The ModulBlock (right) from Framax boasts rinsing, filling and closing technologies in one machine The virtually-unlimited combinations allows the possibility to deliver to our customers a solution that will cater specifically for their bottling needs, enabling to process various types of containers and closures under one roof.
Perfect synchronism is obtained from one single machine drive having gear transmission or as an option through the use of brushless servo drives controlled electronically by the machine’s PLC.
The ModulBlock is available to suit the packaging of a wide range of products such as mineral water, carbonated soft drinks, wine, beer, edible oils, mixed alcoholic beverages, liqueurs, fruit juices, sauces etc, into traditional or modern packaging such as bottles made of Glass, Aluminium, and PET, among others.
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TO CAN OR NOT TO CAN?
THERE ARE MANY FACTORS TO CONSIDER WHEN IT COMES TO THE QUESTION OF CANNING YOUR BEER. HERE, GIGI LORENCE, GLOBAL MARKETING DIRECTOR FOR PSA, EXPLAINS ALL.
If anyone had told us in the Fall of 2019 what the early Spring of 2020 would bring, we probably would have thought it had the makings of a blockbuster Science Fiction film. But for craft brewers with a lot of beer on hand and no way to get it to a quarantined public, those challenges were all too real. For many brewers, this meant considering a new business model that included bringing canning in-house. For others, it accelerated what was already a goal for their growing business.
Stepping back for a moment, what’s the real motivation behind taking charge of your own canning operation?
Fundamentally, if you’re considering heading down that path, you’re looking to preserve quality and taste, to maximize your product stability and extend its shelf life, and ultimately, to protect your most valuable asset: Your Brand.
All of this means you need a filling machine that enables you to customize your production parameters to suit your unique product. You want to be assured of your ability to achieve consistent fill volumes, limit dissolved oxygen levels, and maintain desired carbonation levels while minimizing product loss and maximizing throughput. You need a hygienic system to eliminate the risk of product contamination and, above all, you don’t want to compromise when it comes to delivering fresh, great-tasting beer to your customers.
COUNTER PRESSURE FILLING
There are two primary filling technologies to consider –Atmospheric (i.e., Open Air) and Counter-Pressure (i.e., Isobarometric, in its purest sense) – but how do you know which one is right for you? The first step is to find a supplier with experience who is willing to spend the time to understand your needs for today AND tomorrow. Not just where you are now with your packaging experience, but where you want your business to grow for the future. One place to start is with this quick primer on these technologies. Table 1 gives a useful side-by-side comparison. One critical element to consider is the temperature/pressure relationship, as carbonation levels are a direct result of this relationship. To maintain a given carbonation level, pressure must be met or exceeded through the entire packaging process. Higher pressures allow for higher temperatures, which means you can enjoy great flexibility in your product mix with a counter-pressure system.
HOW DOES IT WORK?
All counter-pressure systems are not created equal. Isobarometric counter-pressure technology requires
ATMOSPHERIC FILLING AND COUNTER-PRESSURE FILLING
Atmospheric (Open Air) Filling
Product flows from a filler manifold into an open can
System is simple to operate and maintain
Foam is created as a natural part of the filling process; undercover gassing limits DO pickup
Production variables, (batch temperature, pressure, etc.) can be challenging to maintain
Technology is well-suited to low speed, linear production, but can be impacted by environmental variables such as temperature
Offers a cost-effective solution for lower carbonation products, but imposes limitations related to carbonation level, temperature, and pressure
Counter-Pressure (Isobarometric) Filling
Product flows from a pressurized tank into a pressurized can
System requires a slightly higher investment in filling technology and packaging savvy
The closed system design minimizes CO2 loss and DO pickup
Precise control over production variables is possible by filling into a purged, sealed container and using easily-adjustable machine parameters (e.g., purge length and purge cycles)
Technology allows for greater flexibility in product range, from still to high-carbonation and is less impacted by temperature variations
Is the preferred filling method for high-production environments
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pressure in the can being filled to be equal to the pressure of the product going into the can to maintain carbonation solubility throughout the filling process. Pressurizing the can alone introduces back pressure that the feed system must overcome. Pressure in the can mitigates foam, but does not provide true counter-pressure filling.
True isobarometric filling, like that used in PSA’s CB50C and CB100C systems, requires a fill tank to be positioned above the fill heads, allowing the product to be gravity-fed and minimizing agitation versus being pumped or forced upward. Excess agitation leads to reductions in carbonation.
Gravity filling means that the product is always filled at the same rate, regardless of the pressure. In competing technologies, changes in pressure lead to changes in fill rate. Snifting is an effective means to control pressure – to reduce a pressure delta – before breaking the seal with the filling head. High-speed filling technologies that are core to PSA’s history follow this principle.
Ultimately, packaging your own beer is only as successful as the integrity of the seam on your cans. Double seaming is the process of attaching the can lid to the body of the can. This is important for beer and beverage products because any introduction of air – through the loss of gas or internal pressure – has a direct negative impact on taste and shelf life of your product. Recognizing defects and correcting them – or preventing them from happening in the first place – is critical to protecting your product. Just as the technology of your filler is crucial, you must also choose a seamer design that can accommodate different can and end sizes and materials and can mitigate these threats.
WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?
Filling and seaming are the foundational elements of packaging your beer, but there are other things you should consider optimizing your processes and guarantee your success:
IS IT RIGHT FOR ME?
Counter-pressure filling is the method to choose if you:
u Want to fill a variety of products from still to higher carbonation, either with your current product line, or with an expanding future portfolio in mind.
u Have difficult-to-fill products that require higher carbonation such as seltzer, kombucha, highcarbonation beer, RTD, craft sodas, etc. or if you have still products that need to be filled at higher temperatures (up to 120 °F/50 °C).
u Want to fill nitrogenated products.
u Are looking for a hygienic filling technology to reduce the opportunity for contamination.
u Want to achieve the lowest DO levels.
u Want more control over your production parameters and variables.
Safety and Hygiene. Remember that temperature matters, also filling precision and its impact on dissolved oxygen and CO2 consumption, finally why the connection to high-speed beverage matters. You also want to be sure you factor in the rest of your operation. Consider details like is your brewing process set up to run higher pressures – from fermenting to brewing to the brite tank? Do you have the ability to maintain the required pressure for your desired carbonation level at your typical process temperatures? Consider cleanability – For example, if you want to run seltzers, you may need to change fill lines at product changeover, or choose a filler that uses stainless nozzles to prevent flavour contamination between products. Consider your product mix when purchasing cans – different pH values (e.g., seltzers typically have a lower pH, around 3), may cause corrosion – make sure your can supply is able to compensate for such variations.
Equivalent pressure in the can (P1) and Product Tank (P) prevents breakout
Gentle filling is achieved using gravity only
Consistent head pressure is maintained - Tank to Fill Valve distance does not change, regardless of container size
Counter-pressure is the industry standard for high-speed rotary filling
It is suitable for highly carbonated beverages (up to 4.1 Vols of CO2), in addition to still/ lower carbonation products (2.7 Vols and below)
Also suitable for nitrogenated products in widget cans
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The fundamentals of counter-pressure filling.
BUYERS GUIDE CANNING
PACKAGING YOUR BEERS IN SMALL PACK IS, FOR MANY BREWERIES, THE PREFERRED ROUTE TO MARKET. WITH THAT IN MIND, HERE ARE SOME OF THE LATEST AND GREATEST CANNING LINES TO FILL YOUR BEER WITH.
The CraftCan35 Canning Line was designed and manufactured by ABE Beverage Equipment to extend the CraftCan range. Supplied by Vigo, it is suitable for beer, cider, wine, kombucha, cocktails, coldbrew and various other drinks.The CraftCan35 Canning Line is fully automatic and has been designed for use as either a mobile canning system or as a locked-down, stand-alone unit. It has seamer monitoring to ensure optimum quality, shelf stability and reduce product loss and has a capacity of up to 2,100 cans per hour (up to 35 cans per minute).
Elsewhere, the LinCan was designed and manufactured by ABE Beverage Equipment originally for, and as a result of, close collaboration with craft brewers. It is also suitable for cider, wine, cocktails, kombucha, coldbrew and various other drinks. It s available in capacities of up to 2100 (option for upgrade) and 3900 cans per hour (cph).
Wild Goose has introduced the Fusion 2.0 canning line. The counter pressure + atmospheric canning system accommodates a wide range of product conditions, like higher product carbonation levels, pressures and temperatures. The patent-pending Wild Goose counter pressure filling technologies combine Wild Goose fast-pour innovations with the versatile bandwidth of pressurized filling. For beverage makers that produce non-carbonated drinks, the Fusion integrates with liquid nitrogen dosing for still beverage adaptability. The Fusion can be upgraded to add fill heads on the same machine when users require more speed. A new Fusion 2.0 infeed streamlines and quickens the transfer of cans through the filling process to achieve throughput up to 45 cans per minute (7200 cans per hour). For craft beverage makers interested in filling multiple can sizes, a simplified can-change process reduces changeover time and parts needed. With a compact footprint designed to fit in a standard box truck, the system also suits mobile canning and other contract packaging applications.
The Fusion canning line accommodates virtually every craft beverage, including seltzer, beer, RTDs, soda, kombucha, wine, cannabis drinks and more.
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The CP10 from Micro Can Canning Machines is a twin lane 10-head innovative counter pressure filling and seaming machine with the ability to change can size at the turn of a wheel and the flexibility to fill products of various carbonation levels the CP10 offers more versatility for the operator. The twin lane setup allows the operator to run lanes independently. The throughput of cans is up to 4,000 cans per hour, this is based on the can size, equipment supplying the fluid and temperature. As an example, a 330ml can, packaging beer is 4,000 cans per hour. Throughput can be increased via speed control valves, once the customer is competent with the operation. These speeds are based on the correct presentation of product.
The brand new Microblock 661 EPV 2023 model from IC Filling Systems hosts a number of major improvements on its specifications as it places itself as the innovative new generation system compared to similar all-in-one machines on the market. It fills glass bottles, aluminium cans and aluminium bottles. Described as pretty much a first in the industry. The 661 EPV is suitable in its counterpressure version for filling beer, cider, still or sparkling wine, kombucha and carbonated soft drinks and its Gravity version is suitable for filling oil, vinegar, still wine and spirits.
The 661 EPV features the new EPV (Electro Pneumatic Valve) technology. The EPV valve allows total flexibility in adjusting the filling cycle by adapting the vacuum filling and degassing timings to the necessity of each different carbonated drink via a colour touchscreen HMI control panel. Gone is the mechanical rigid camme of once upon a time, now you can change product and bottles shapes very easily.
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When it comes to filling craft beer into cans, the Craftmate C (above) from Krones claims to be “your ideal partner”. The Krones can filler is aimed at the low output range. It safely cans even small production quantities starting from 12,000 containers per hour and it offers double flexibility. This allrounder processes cans of various sizes and formats, and masters not only beer, but also carbonated beverages and wine. It offers high flexibility also in the low output range, is cost-efficient filling technology in the quality you are used to from Krones has a compact design and also a short change-over times for different can sizes.
The Nano ACS (above) from Cask, is designed to give craft beverage makers the flexibility to can nearly every can size. Changeover between different can sizes is quick and easy. It is also designed as so much more than an automated beer canning system. The high carbonation capabilities and Nitrogen-dosing integration make it ideal for a number of other craft beverages, including RTD Cocktails, Hard Seltzers, Wine, Cider, Coffee and more. A 2 head filler, capable of filling up to 18 cans per minute, it can handle cans from the slim to the sleek and standard.
With the Pneumatic Scale Angelus CB50 and CB100 inline craft beverage canners, proprietary flowmeter technology helps you get a perfect fill with little waste at speeds of up to 100 cans per minute (CPM). Its gas flush systems help you keep oxygen levels under control. And their high-speed seamer design, scaled for single head operation, delivers the only repeatable hermetic double seam in the beverage industry. The CB50C leverages the CB50 design, but transitions from open air to counter-pressure filling technology to meet the growing demand for hard seltzers, sparkling wines, and highercarbonation beers. The CB50C canning line uses true isobarometric filling technology, with the fill tank above the fill heads, allowing your product to be gravity-fed, as opposed to pumped/forced upward. This means true counter pressure filling, allowing you to expand into new and rapidly-growing markets.
Its CB244/324/404 rotary beer canning machines (CB244 pictured above), with 24, 32, or 40 electro-mechanically controlled filling heads ensure fill level accuracy to within +/- 0.5 grams of target volume, and 4 seaming heads that offer that same industry-leading seal as their slower speed machines, these systems allow you to increase your overall production without drastically increasing your overall footprint. So when your product is in serious demand, you can deliver with confidence.
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MAXIMISING PACKAGING EFFICIENCIES
WHEN WYE VALLEY BREWERY IN BROMYARD, HEREFORDSHIRE STARTED PLANNING THEIR NEW PACKAGING HALL, IT WAS IMPORTANT TO MAXIMISE THE FLEXIBILITY OF THE PACKAGING HALL TO ALLOW BOTH BOTTLING AND CANNING ON THE SAME LINE. HERE’S HOW THEY DID IT.
Wye Valley Brewery has recently undertaken a project to revamp its packaging facilities. Whilst the space was a challenge the final layout ensured good access, rationalisation of operators and good functionality.
The line was supplied and installed by Enterprise Tondelli who also supplied the new bottling line too.
The empty and full product warehouse is located at a lower level so the high level empty can depalletiser was situated on a lower level.
The all stainless steel empty can depalletiser from Enterprise Tondelli manufacturer Eurosistemi has automatic layer card removal and a very compact footprint not much bigger than an empty can pallet.
Cans are fed at high level to a twin lane gravity can cleaner that uses de-ionised filtered compressed air to remove any foreign bodies.
The use of de-ionised air means no water consumption which can be as much as a thousand litres per hour on conventional rinser thus reducing impact on the environment.
As well as flow sensor the rinser is also fitted with a flow meter so it cannot detect any blocked nozzles to guarantee effective cleaning.
Twin lanes ensure easy change over between 330 ml and 440 ml that the brewery run on the line just by switching a gate at the top.
Cans can be either pre-printed or for
some smaller runs they are labelled on an empty labeller supplied by Enterprise Tondelli.
This simple machine is part of Enterprise range of in-line labellers for slower applications and can be configured for both bottles and cans.
As cans are filled at 2-4 degrees C. the cans are pre-labelled before filling to ensure good adhesion by the self adhesive labels to a clean and dry surface with no bubbles or wrinkling or slippage.
A rotary can filler/seamer was installed that fills by counter pressure for minimising of dissolved oxygen and also control of fob.
Cans are flushed with CO2 before sealing and multiple times after sealing against the filling valve. The CO2 used for flushing does not come from the filler bowl but from a separate gas ring to give better control of flow for more effective flushing.
The filler is fully enclosed with hepa filtration and laminar flow of air for hygiene. An x ray level inspector rejector is fitted on the discharge.
After level inspection cans are inverted, pass through a Eurosistemi TF1 air drying tunnel with directionable nozzles and punt drying prior to coding. All of the above is very easy for one operator to access and monitor.
After drop twist the cans feed into the bottle conveyor system that feeds them to the Baumer packer.
This incredibly flexible machine then packs the cans into fully enclosed kraft board fridge pack in fours and sixes as
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multipacks. Or it can pack 12 cans into a kraft board wrap-around carton. This machine packs the bottles into wraparound cartons of 12 packs and can also make a 4 bottle pack too. Baumer can now supply kraft board FEC packers at 65 packs per minute too.
Of course the 4 and 6 multipacks need to be consolidated together for palletising so a second Baumer packer was installed next tow the first allowing one operator to with the two Baumer machines. The second machine has a continuous motion 90 degree infeed featuring a rotating wheel with pushers to make lines of 3 four packs or two six packs which are then automatically loaded into a high sided wrap-around tray for palletising
and distribution. The use of high sided trays means no shrink film waste as only cardboard is used from sustainable sources.
Trays or boxes then go to a low level pack palletiser with high level infeed from the packaging hall to be palletised on a Fipal palletiser.
Some products running on the line include 330 ml Fandango. This humdinger of a hoppy brew is full of tropical flavours and light, citrusy crowdpleasing undertones that will have craftbeer fans dancing with delight. Also Wye Valley’s lager called 1985 is a deliciously refreshing premium lager that boasts a moreish malty base, flecked with delicate floral notes.
Pale straw in colour, 1985 is brewed using the best of British hops together with European lager hops to give this unique lager a cool, crisp taste.
Enterprise Tondelli has been working in the industry since 1977 and supplying equipment in over 40 countries. The Wye Valley Brewery canning project is just one of the latest projects by Enterprise that has ranged in scope from nitro beer canning, high speed wine bottling and turn key beer bottling.
Suppling canning lines 1,500 to 72,000 cans per hour , bottling from 600 to 60,000 bph and kegging lines too. This wealth of experience ensures Enterprise add something to all their projects.
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BRANDING’S CROWN JEWEL
CROWN CAPS HAVE BECOME AN ICONIC FEATURE OF BEER AROUND THE WORLD. GIVING OPPORTUNITY FOR INCREASED BRAND RECOGNITION, AND EVEN A COLLECTABLE ITEM FOR SOME CONSUMERS. BUT WHERE DID THE CROWN CAP BEGIN AND WHAT IS THE HISTORY BEHIND CROWN CAPS? HERE IS JOSHUA WEBSTER FROM CROXSONS TO EXPLAIN MORE.
Before the invention of crown caps, the average life of beers and soft drinks was short. Often sealed with corks, these seals lacked reliability and often had leaks of both liquids and carbonated gases. Then, in 1892, the crown cap was patented by William Painter, and it revolutionised the beer industry.
William Painter was an American mechanical engineer and worked with manufacturers to develop a universal neck for all glass bottles.
After registering the patent, William Painter founded the Crown Cork and Seal Company, in Baltimore (now Crown Holdings). Here, he dealt with closing drinks using only his new, innovative cap.
Inexpensive to produce, it was composed of metal with a knurled end in the form of an inverted crown (hence the name crown cap).
To prevent any leakage of liquid, the cap was covered with a thin cork disc and a film sealing the contents of the bottle.
This was to avoid the direct contact between liquid and the metal which could have affected the purity and taste of the beverage.
The reliability of the seal allowed breweries to distribute beer over longer distances due to its extended shelf life.
In the early 20th century, William Painter’s cork crown quickly became the preferred sealing method due to its reliability and ability to preserve the freshness and carbonation of beer. However, with prohibition in 1920, the focus of the crown cap was shifted to carbonated soft drinks. With the end of prohibition, came the wide use of crown caps across the drinks market.
It originally had 24 teeth, along with a cork seal with a paper backing to stop the liquid and metal from touching. Since, the cork disc has been replaced with PVC material and the cap height has been shortened. In the 1930s, testing was carried out to determine the optimal number of teeth, as the 24 teeth, that was
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standard, made the cap too tight and difficult to open.
The current version has 21 teeth and is international standard. The standardisation of the crown cap design with 21 teeth has allowed for compatibility and ease of use across different bottle sizes and brands.
The crown cap provides more than just a secure seal for breweries, but also a unique branding opportunity. By customising design, colour, and logo, breweries can establish their brand identity to help increase visibility and brand recognition. This can be a useful tool for products placed in supermarkets, with height of display varying.
The association of specific crown cap designs to consumers favourite breweries helps to create a familiarity and trust, which has helped to enhance brand loyalty for beer brands.
Croxsons previously worked on a project with Robinsons Brewery for their Trooper
The crown cap provides a unique branding opportunity..” Joshua Webster, Croxsons
This branding, with 16 different designs, helped provide a collectible item that stood out on the shelf.
As well as brand recognition, the easy-to-use design of a crown cap has benefited consumer experiences. There is something special about the sounds of a crown cap being popped off a beer bottle with a whisp and a fizz.
In 2024, storytelling is playing more of a role in building a strong brand, having a uniquely designed crown cap can help you build an experience for your customers and increase brand loyalty. Whether you are looking for a complex design, like the Robinsons caps above, or you just want your logo printed.
– Light Brigade, a product to raise money for Help for Heroes.
The company challenged our printing team with an intricate design on what is a small surface area. Supplying a 3-colour printed crown cap that celebrated the albums of Iron Maiden, with each album’s original artwork replicated on the face of a crown.
‘Premiumisation’ and quality are areas that brewers can focus their attention to maximise potential sales uplift. Customers want a more premium experience and if you currently can your brews, then glass packaging can deliver exactly what your customers want when it comes to a special brew run.
Our class-leading range of fuel-fired and electric steam boilers and portfolio of aftercare solutions can help with your decarbonisation strategy and put your company on the Road to Net Zero.
As a complete solutions provider, Fulton can provide your brewery with:
· fuel-fired and electric steam boilers
· off-grid and point-of-use solutions
· ancillary plant / engineered systems
· steam surveys
· project management
· water treatment contracts
· accredited / certified training
· installation / commissioning / upgrades
· repair / service / maintenance programmes
HELPING YOUR BREWERY FBW253 - Net Zero Advertisement - BJ.indd 1 08/03/2024 10:14 brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 39 PACKAGING
For further information scan the QR code, visit www.fulton.co.uk, email sales@fulton.co.uk or call the office on +44 (0)117 972 3322. ON THE ROAD TO NET ZERO
NAVIGATING CHALLENGES AND SEIZING OPPORTUNITIES
WHILE THERE’S NO MAGIC SOLUTION, EFFECTIVE BRAND, DESIGN, AND MARKETING STRATEGIES STRENGTHEN A BREWERY’S CONNECTION WITH ITS AUDIENCE AND CONTRIBUTE TO SUSTAINED SUCCESS AND SALES, EXPLAINS OWEN TURNER, THE FOUNDER, MD AND CREATIVE DIRECTOR AT UNITED BY DESIGN.
The United Kingdom boasts around 1800 active brewers, yet the industry faces a tumultuous landscape, marked by closures surpassing openings.
Influencing factors include the enduring impact of Brexit, the lingering effects of COVID-19, and the relentless cost-ofliving crisis.
A poignant example of these challenges is the closure of Hull-based Bone Machine Brew Co., a notable client of United by Design for over six years. Despite their effective operations in the UK and a robust export supply chain to Europe, post-Brexit complications, notably increased paperwork and transaction complexities, led to their unfortunate closure.
This underscores the industry’s vulnerability and the critical role effective branding and marketing can play in overcoming adversities.
On a brighter note, strategic responses to challenges open doors for new opportunities. Treboom Brewery, for instance, seized a favourable moment in 2022 to pass on ownership.
The brewery, including its name, brand, and packaging designs, relocated from Yorkshire to North Wales.
United by Design facilitated the transition, supporting the move to 440ml cans from traditional 500ml bottles, allowing the new owners to pivot and present a fresh offer to customers while capitalising on the established equity built by the original founders.
Breweries of all scales grapple with an intensely competitive environment, vying for market share in macro, regional, micro, and nano sectors.
The significance of geographic location in influencing trade and consumer sales is now more apparent than ever.
A keen awareness of strengths and weaknesses is crucial to maintaining and
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expanding market share, even beyond UK boundaries.
Regardless of location, the development of a compelling brand story that resonates with consumers, highlighting a brewery’s history, values, and the people behind the brand, is invaluable.
In Yorkshire, examples abound of breweries leveraging community support. Ainsty Ales Brewery, led by Andy Herrington and his team, exemplifies community engagement, fostering trust through events like ‘Coptoberfest.’ This commitment to branding and community-building has cultivated a loyal following.
Consideration for all types of drinkers is essential when making decisions about core ranges, specials, and seasonal offerings, including unique and unconventional brews.
Striking a balance between being known for a specific strength, such as crafting exceptional stouts, while remaining flexible enough to produce sessionable pale ales and even non-alcoholic options is crucial.
This approach not only contributes to revenue generation but also helps smooth out sales fluctuations.
Brew York brewery has consistently
embraced this strategy since its inception in the craft brewing scene. With over 450 beers introduced to the market, each brew represents a meticulous process of testing, measuring, and monitoring both successes and failures.
Our involvement in the design and marketing of nearly every one of these beers, starting from the original six bottled 330ml offerings, has been a testament to our commitment to innovation.
The brewery’s adeptness in adapting to market dynamics is evident in their swift transition from 330ml bottles to cans within six months of launch, followed by a rapid shift to 440ml cans. This agility complements their diverse product offerings, which include keg and cask options.
Building from a strong and credible core range establishes a brewery as a trustworthy entity and allows certain ales to shine, emphasising the brewery’s specialisation or unique focus—yet another strategy ensuring consistent and reliable sales.
Seasonal considerations are paramount, aligning brand and marketing activities with the ebb and flow of the year.
While many breweries aspire to be
distinctive, it’s crucial to recognize that consumer habits are deeply rooted in centuries-old behaviours. Sometimes, meeting a consumer’s needs can be as straightforward as offering a cask beer below 5%.
This not only avoids alienating potential customers but also provides an entry point for them to explore other, stronger beers within the range, such as an 8% NEIPA.
Brew York’s ability to navigate this delicate balance is evident in the longevity and continued presence of some core range offerings on bars even after eight years.
Their agility and commitment to meeting diverse consumer preferences make them a standout player in the everevolving craft brewing landscape.
Consumer behaviour evolution, with an emphasis on online shopping and home consumption, requires breweries to adapt marketing strategies.
Leveraging online platforms, social media, and digital channels becomes imperative. Breweries like Brew York, a longstanding client of United by Design, showcase the success of adapting to these shifts.
Their pursuit of brewing excellence, collaborations, and a strong brand
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narrative underpins their resilience in a fiercely competitive market.
Building a tribe around a brewery’s distinct personality is key, extending beyond local and regional levels to global recognition.
Treating consumers as fans fosters longterm success. Strengthening ties with local communities, supporting initiatives, and emphasising a brewery’s role resonates well with consumers.
Brew York’s proactive approach, from brewery taprooms to beer halls and strategic investments, demonstrates the power of community-focused marketing.
Considering diverse drinker demographics is paramount in developing core ranges and specialty offerings.
Brew York’s agile approach, exemplified by their diverse beer portfolio and packaging transitions, demonstrates adaptability and consumer-centric decision-making.
As of 2023, United by Design initiated a strategic brand review for Brew York, focusing on developing distinctive ranges for consumer ease and trade understanding.
The brand refresh, including a new core range and distinctive signature offerings, reaffirms Brew York’s commitment to evolving with consumer preferences.
Maintaining product quality and consistency across formats is a cornerstone of brewery success. Collaborations, both within the industry and beyond, contribute to the everevolving landscape of brewing.
Brew York’s collaborations with Moersleutel, Blech Brut, Funky Fluid, Hidden Spring, and Lervig showcase the dynamic potential of partnerships.
Beyond brewery collaborations, Brew York extends its creative alliances to encompass companies and organisational partnerships, including doorstep sponsorships.
Notably, a recent and meaningful venture involves a flourishing relationship with two local sports teams, York City Football Club and York City Knights and Valkyries rugby league teams.
In this endeavour, Brew York has
produced bespoke cans that intricately showcase the enduring heritage and association these teams hold in York. For instance, the two can designs for York City Knights feature Viking illustrations, elegantly incorporating the team’s branding.
Furthermore, aligning with the brewery’s commitment to storytelling and character narratives, Brew York has teamed up with the renowned UK-based Anderson Entertainment, recognized for iconic productions like Thunderbirds, Stingray, and Captain Scarlett. This collaboration was particularly significant, commemorating the 40-year anniversary of the Terrahawks animation. The resulting collaborative brew is a testament to the fusion of bespoke illustrations that seamlessly intertwine Brew York and Anderson Entertainment’s brands, creating a unique and memorable celebration of shared history and creativity.
Marketing and promotion should be a collaborative process involving founders, directors, leadership, and production teams.
Graphic designers and design agencies play a crucial role in aligning visual
elements with business objectives. Nurturing a brewery brand through various stages is essential for long-term success. Emerging from the pandemic emphasises the need for strong customer relationships through both traditional and online channels. Social media, events, and strategic marketing efforts enhance brand visibility and loyalty.
Creating physical focal points to market and sell beer provides breweries with control over the supply chain and the customer experience. Finally, active participation in industry conversations, alongside advocacy for inclusivity and sustainability, contributes to a brewery’s reputation and marketing success. Brew York’s initiatives, from empowering women and LGBTQ+ communities to environmental efforts, exemplify a commitment to societal and industry responsibilities. Listening to customer feedback and addressing concerns reinforces a brewery’s position.
While there’s no magic solution, effective brand, design, and marketing strategies strengthen a brewery’s connection with its audience and contribute to sustained success and sales.
BREWERS JOURNAL 42 | SPRING 2024 BRANDING
HOMEBREW HERO JACK WALKER
AS HEAD BREWER AT LIVERPOOL-BASED AZVEX, JACK WALKER IS RESPONSIBLE FOR CREATING A RAFT OF CELEBRATED BEERS. HERE’S HOW MADE HIS START AND THE BREWERIES THAT HELPED HIM ALONG THE WAY.
Istarted home brewing at university. I won’t lie, the concept of cheap booze was a major driving factor. At first, it was just a case of buying pre-hopped malt extract, some hot water, an included packet of yeast and some equipment bought from Wilkos. As a biomedical science student, you’d think I may have a passing understanding of sanitation. Alas, I am fairly sure there were some false starts to my career.
After a few semi-successful ventures (read: just about drinkable) I decided I quite enjoyed this new hobby. Thus began a costly few years of building boilers, retrofitting fridges and a lot of experimentation. It began with adding extra steps such as some steeped speciality grains, buying a higher quality yeast, or buying unhopped malt extract.
I will never forget my first time buying a little 100g pack of hops from a local (unfortunately long defunct) homebrew shop in Hull.
I am fairly sure it was whole cones of Challenger in a little unsealed, unpurged, unlabelled bag and quite possibly brown around the edges. Despite the condition, they were a whole leap ahead of the pre-hopped worts.
Alongside making a mess of a student house kitchen, I had not forgotten to “research” as much about beer as I could. There were a few little bottle shops around, mainly stocking Belgian, Dutch and German beer, along with some local real
ales and I attempted to try as many as possible on a meagre student bursary.
One beer in particular always caught my attention, Schneider Meine Hopfenweisse. Something about the punch of exotic and new hops such as Mosaic and Citra, combined with banana and clove always sent my mind into overdrive. Somewhat inevitably, I wanted more and more intense beers.
What was pushing the limits? How tasty could beer get? Well, at the time that was the Belgian Quadrupel. The holy grail of the Quad was Westvleteren 12 and my first bottle of this godly (in a few ways) beer was another revelation.
By this point, I had moved onto all grain brewing in a converted coolbox, with drilled pipes for lautering and a big catering spoon as a mash paddle. I had a plastic fermenter as a boiler, with kettle elements and gaffer tape holding it all in situ.
It was rudimentary, but I finally had a good level of choice and control over processes. I was now at the point that designing a recipe and pouring over American home brew forums (they were miles ahead in info) and magazines was as fun as the actual brew day.
I was trying every big name hop on the market, pushing dry hop rates to a then boggling 10g/l of Nelson, Galaxy and Citra.
One beer in particular always seemed to be a huge point of discussion, Three Floyd’s Dark Lord. It was the combination of technical prowess, boundary breaking ABV and lots of adjuncts.
Double mashing, tonnes of sugar, a wallet emptying amount of yeast, vanilla and coffee and a patience testing maturation period. It was a dream for a nerd who brews.
I may have attempted this recipe far too many times, and I am sure my friends were sick of big roasty and intense beer being forced on them.
After I completed my degree, I had a very unfruitful experience of working for the NHS during a financial crash. Budgets were slashed, and alongside it so were the behind the scenes staff. I found myself working at a supermarket, and to be honest, loving it.
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I still find joy in constantly tweaking recipes, trying new processes and constantly learning new lessons about ingredients.
I was on a management progression scheme and had a lovely team I worked with. I was always home brewing in the background and kept “researching” all the delicious beers I could.
A family friend opened a brewery, Brass Castle, locally and I got in touch with him/pestered to go help with some brew days.
At the time Phil Saltonstall et al were brewing on an old 1800s brew kit on Lord Halifax’s estate in East Yorkshire.
It was a truly bucolic scene of old brickwork, a copper kettle and mash tun and fields as far as the eye could see. It was my first experience of commercial brewing and I was truly in love. Quickly, I was trying to spend as much time as I could with the Brass Castle gang and trying to learn as much as I could.
I then found an assistant brewers role at Hop Studio near York, and truly learned the art of cleaning casks for 8 hours a day! I cut my teeth and learnt the basics of production roles here. It was gruelling, sometimes very long, but I really enjoyed it.
A few years later I began working at Atom Beers in Hull, and found myself as the head brewer in a couple of years. It was here I could start putting all the home brew experience into practice. One beer that sticks in my mind was Feynman Diagram, where we blended yeasts to push ester character to the forefront, perhaps trying to mimic those flavours I sought in those Hopfenweisses.
It was “double dry hopped”, which in my mind then meant mid-fermentation, and at the end. At that time, I don’t really think the industry knew what biotransformation was, but it was becoming the latest buzzword.
It was stupendously hazy and fruity, in hindsight our first NEIPA, perhaps. Another was Neutron Star, essentially my best take on a Dark Lords style high gravity, unctuous imperial stout with coffee and vanilla. It became a focal point of our release schedule for the next few years. Many, many hours
Jack Walker, Azvex (Pictured Left)
brewersjournal.info SPRING 2024 | 45 HOMEBREW
At Azvex Jack makes leading hop-forward, hazy beers
were spent hand waxing every bottle. At the time, I think we were one of very few breweries trying these big double digit abv beers, and I am still really proud of the time we spent trying to develop our recipes and process to create them.
Fast forward far too many years, and I was fortunate enough to join the team at Azvex Brewing in Liverpool in 2022.
Our modus operandi is hazy hops, big stouts and silly sours. It’s a fulfilling role making beer that still excites me. We have a 4-vessel brew house, which allows for ultimate flexibility and control over a multitude of variables in the brewing process. Developing those recipes from years gone by, we make a big imperial stout pretty much quarterly, working with local suppliers for adjunct ingredients such as cacao, coffee, maple syrup and more.
Our grain bill is significantly different, and our OGs and FGs are a lot higher too, but the base fundamental concepts are those I began to learn at a home brew level. Likewise, the fundamentals of our hoppy IPAs are still good basic brewing practice, but evolving how and when we use hops, our percentages of adjunct grains, and always focusing on quality markers such as dissolved oxygen and pH. Currently, we are focused on biotransformation and the flavour impact from the interaction of yeast and hops, and we have some really silly 60%+ adjunct grain bills. Pray for our lauter tun.
I still find joy in constantly tweaking recipes, trying new processes and constantly learning new lessons on how to get the best expression out of our ingredients.
I’m happy to say I think we’re making the best beer I’ve made in my career so far. I may be a grizzled, baldy, beardy, grumpy Yorkshire brewer, but i’ll always have that eager-to-learn home brew spirit at heart.
HOMEBREW BREWERS JOURNAL 46 | SPRING 2024
THE KNOW-HOW
WE ASKED BREWERS WHAT IS, OR WAS, THE MOST VALUABLE PIECE OF KIT WHEN MAKING THOSE EARLY CREATIONS, AND WHAT THEY STILL TREASURE TODAY.
In the vast landscape of craft beer, where innovation and creativity flourish, there exists a thriving community of passionate individuals who have taken their love for beer beyond mere consumption.
These enthusiasts, known as homebrewers, embark on a journey of artistry and science, transforming their homes into miniature breweries, crafting unique brews that reflect their personal tastes and ingenuity. However, amid the excitement of brewing lies a crucial question: What are the most valuable pieces of equipment for aspiring homebrewers?
In this article, we asked the community what is the essential equipment every homebrewer should consider, guiding novices and seasoned enthusiasts alike on their quest to master the art of brewing at home. Whether you’re a hobbyist seeking to expand your repertoire or a connoisseur aiming to perfect your techniques, understanding the importance of key equipment is paramount to achieving brewing excellence - or at least striving for it at the very least….
I was once told “set up a good home dispense system”, the logic explained to me was that enjoying beer is more important than perfecting beer. Best advice I ever got! So my kegorator…
Peter Hughes Group Head Brewer at Brewhouse & Kitchen
A decent heat exchanger. The thought of using an immersion wort chiller again, fills me with dread. The water wastage, time it took to chill and infection risk (Shouldn’t happen but can) .... Shudder…
Carl Marshall Brewer Vocational Trainer at HIT Training
My Stainless Steel Mash Paddle, after using plastic ones and having them bend all over whilst stirring a mash this was a revelation. But coming in a close second was my Ferminator which allowed me to control temperature.
David Jeffery
Senior
Project Manager
The lessons learned from being in a local homebrew group. There’s a wealth of knowledge and experience with years of getting it right and wrong to tap into. That and the chance to get real-time feedback on your beers. Least that’s how it is with our lot.
Anglian Craft Brewers Homebrew Club
A grain mill... I can fudge everything else in the process using basic pots and swiss voile instead of a bag... but I am not even entertaining the idea of doing kilograms of grain crushing with a rolling pin... so I put forward the humble grain mill.
Steven Clark Homebrewer
The RIMS kit I built and set up. Just gave me loads more control on mash profiles and mashing out to control fermentability.
Ben Fisher
Round Corner Brewing
Outside of the basic essentials its got to be a way of controlling fermentation temperature. You can have the fanciest equipment in the world but if you have wild temperature fluctuations or temperatures above/below the yeasts temperature range then its very easy to get off flavours. Its a relatively cheap and simple piece of equipment which can have a big contribution to the flavour.
Craig George
Joseph Holt
A good book on the subject obvs :-)
Nigel Sadler
IBD Accredited Trainer and Caskmarque Assessor.
My trusty 30 litre Cygnet tea urn. Or mash tun / wort kettle if you will
Dave Morton Homebrewer
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BREW MY BEER
EVIL OVERLORD
IF YOU’VE ENJOYED SOME OF THE FANTASTIC IMPERIAL STOUTS PRODUCED BY AZVEX THEN YOU’LL KNOW THAT JACK WALKER IS A MAESTRO WHEN IT COMES TO THIS STYLE OF BEER. HERE HE SHARES HOW YOU CAN MAKE ONE OF YOUR VERY OWN.
I’ve done my best here to make an Azvex style take on a big coffee and vanilla stout inspired by beers such as Dark Lord (pictured below). This is a deliciously unefficient and difficult style of beer to make.
I have no bones about using sugars and DME on a homebrew scale to stop those modest mash tuns from bursting at the seams, and still get a decent yield or beer in the end.
I prefer DME to dextrose as there is a flavour contribution, and a more complex blend of sugars. There is also a long boil to reduce down your collected wort and increase gravity. This can be shortened/extended depending on how efficient your system is.
Yeast health is going to be key. The hydrostatic pressure of high gravities is a really unfriendly environment for yeast, so they will need plenty of help.
Relatively cheap are yeast nutrients to give them everything they need to get going. Fermaid O is a particular favourite of ours for high gravity beers.
There are a few expensive items which will really help you get the yeast to attenuate and keep healthy. Namely, a diffusion stone and O2 canister. A good oxygenation at pitch, and then 12-24hrs later will help your yeast proliferate nicely.
Ultimately they will help in every beer you brew from now on, so worth the investment if you’re a long time home brewer. Despite this, don’t be surprised if fermentations can lag a bit, you
may need to pitch more yeast or oxygenate or feed some sugar in to get the fermentation to restart.
It is also really helpful to have good temperature control for your fermentation vessel. When the yeast does take off, it does so vigorously. You may find it hard to control, and it may indeed bubble out of your airlock, lovely and messy.
When you’re sure the fermentation has ended, make sure you crash the yeast out at 10 Celsius and transfer the beer off the yeast cake.
Then give it a long maturation period to allow the remaining yeast to fully drop out. Add your adjuncts when you’re confident it is tasting nice and yeast free, give it a week to infuse and package.
RECIPE
Evil Overlord
13% ABV
SG 1.164
FG 1.066
If amounts are specified, it’s based on a 20l batch size
HOMEBREW BREWERS JOURNAL 48 | SPRING 2024
Malt Bill
5.5kg Golden Promise
1kg Chocolate Wheat
1kg Flaked Oats
.5kg Medium Crystal
.5kg Chocolate
.25kg Carafa III
.25kg Chateau Cafe
.25kg Rice hulls
5kg Dried Malt Extract (boil addition)
Mash
Mash – 65c – 60min 18l water (2kg/l)
Sparge 75c 17l water. Collect 26l wort around 1.065sg Boil – 180 Min
Boil Hops
180 mins –30 ibu addition of high alpha hop
10min 15g Fermaid 0
10 min 15g Yeast Nutrient
Yeast
US05/WLP001- 3-4 sachets
Dry Hop – 100g of good quality local coffee beans. I prefer light/medium roasts over dark roasts. A good starter region is Brazil, and then experiment with others next time you brew 10 Madagascan vanilla bean pods, split in two. Sterilise in a
With brewing enzymes, you can experiment with the taste and texture of your beer as well as off-set raw material costs. Enzymes give you greater exibility in brewing recipes while helping optimise the brewing process.
little vodka first before adding.
Fermentation
Start at low at 17 Celsius and gradually allow the fermentation temperature to increase as the beer attenuates up to 22 Celsius.
Once sure fermentation is complete, crash to 10 celsius and transfer off your yeast.
Maturate the beer to clear and more yeast, and then add adjunct additions a week before packaging.
Water
We aim for 150ppm Ca and 200+ppm Cl for Imperial stouts. We also use bicarbonates to keep our mash and boil pHs in line.
5.3 mash, 5ph boil.
Equipment
Fermentation temperature control- help you keep that fermentation steady
Oxygenation equipment. The yeast will likely need help to attenuate fully.
Muslin bags. These are really helpful to remove your adjuncts easily when you’re tidying up.
SPRING 2024 | 49 HOMEBREW
Experiment with the flavours and texture
Be Sustainable. Be Creative. Be AEB.
In a sustainable way.
THERE ARE TOOLS YOU CAN USE TO GET THE MOST FROM YOUR INGREDIENTS AND KIT, WHILST SAVING MONEY TOO, EXPLAINS ALIX BLEASE FROM AB VICKERS
THE YEAST REPORT
Brewing beer, in its current form, faces sustainability challenges. In today’s economic and environmental landscape, extracting the most value from your ingredients and brewing equipment is crucial.
Without purchasing equipment, process aids and yeast nutrients are two solutions you can incorporate into your brewing process to improve beer quality and maximise capacity, thereby boosting profitability.
By increasing packaged volume per brew, optimising fermentation tank capacity, and reducing tank residency time, you can make your brewing process more sustainable.
Process aids are a broad category of products; from clarifying agents to stabilisation products. Which products should you be considering using in your brewery to save time and therefore money?
Starting with the brew day; CompacCG. These carrageenan tablets or granules are used in the kettle to remove the soluble protein from the wort, namely proline-rich haze forming proteins. Using CompacCG will reduce haze in the finished beer and improve hot-break protein compaction; therefore increasing your kettle yield.
A word of warning however, optimisation is key! If too much carrageenan is added then you can get increased losses further down the process.
throwing that sample away; take the sample in a transparent measuring cylinder and leave it overnight, the following day note how much protein settles in the bottom of the cylinder. Ideally the amount should be no more than 5% of the volume. The wort should be bright and have a compact sediment. If you see any changes… re-optimise!
To maximise the capacity of existing vessels you can utilise Foamsol. When used in the kettle it keeps foam from forming during the boil. This means the kettle volume can be maximised and the risk of boil-over is reduced, thus improving safety in your brewery.
It may seem counterintuitive to use antifoam in a fermenter, but when added at this point Foamsol can actually improve the head retention in your beer. Foamsol will reduce the krausen produced by 15-20%, meaning the foampositive proteins will remain within the liquid.
A reduction in krausen will also reduce the demand on your CIP. Iso-alpha-acids (which also contribute to foam stability) are hydrophobic, and therefore reducing the krausen will also minimise the loss of IBUs during fermentation, without Foamsol these losses can be as high as 20%.
Yeast can also be lost via over-foaming in FV, therefore Foamsol can lead to more consistent fermentation results.
This article is produced in partnership with Lallemand
It is important to optimise CompacCG additions for each beer brewed, as well as twice a year when the malt season changes. However it is possible to continually monitor the efficacy of CompacCG.
All brewers take a sample from the fermenter after transfer to measure starting gravity and pH. Instead of just
Yeast nutrients enhance fermentation performance and accelerate product throughput. They are especially important when brewing beers with high levels of adjuncts, like stouts, as well as beers with high levels of alcohol. One of the problems with adding high levels of adjuncts is that the wort created can be very nutritionally poor for yeast;
BREWERS INTELLIGENCE
BREWERS JOURNAL 50 | SPRING 2024 BREWERS INTELLIGENCE
which can lead to stuck fermentations and the production of off-flavours. Yeastlife Extra contains amino acids, minerals, vitamins and sources of both organic and inorganic nitrogen; this allround nutrition ensures healthy yeast at every generation, thus minimising off-flavours, reducing diacetyl faster and generally promoting a more efficient fermentation.
To further decrease tank time and therefore save money, ALDC can be added at the start of fermentation to completely bypass the formation of diacetyl by yeast. Servomyces™ is a single-strain brewing yeast enriched with zinc which can be used as a biological yeast nutrient. This cellular-zinc is more bioavailable to your chosen brewing yeast during fermentation than mineral zinc. The addition of zinc can reduce fermentation times, improve yeast sedimentation, improve repitchability and since zinc is necessary as an enzymatic cofactor in the last step of alcohol
By increasing packaged volume per brew you can make your brewing process more sustainable.
which is package-able thus reducing your overall losses.
Protosol is a colloidal silica-sol fining agent which promotes the settling of proteins and other solids from your beer. Optimisation is required, as the Protosol effectively fines beer at very low addition rates.
This means you can increase the throughput of your brewery without the need for investment in additional tank or centrifuge capacity.
production, it is highly encouraged to use Servomyces™ for high gravity fermentations.
When you have maximised your vessel capacity and sped up your fermentation, the final stage of the process is to maximise the amount of beer in your tank
Protosol also reduces the chance of chill haze forming in the packaged beer. Using process aids and yeast nutrients can increase efficiencies, maximise yields, decrease fermentation times and improve overall product quality and consistency.
Due to the current challenges facing the brewing industry utilising these tools is vital to get the most from your ingredients and equipment, and ultimately save money.
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BREWERS INTELLIGENCE
THE HOP REPORT
AS
BREWERS SEEK NEW WAYS TO ELEVATE THEIR BEERS, HOP GROWERS CONTINUE TO PLAY AN INTEGRAL PART IN THIS JOURNEY. HERE TODD NICOLSON FROM FREESTYLE HOPS OUTLINES THE ROLE LIQUID HOP PRODUCTS
AND PHANTASM BLENDS CAN PLAY IN YOUR BEER.
The ingredients landscape is changing, and it has been exciting bringing new products to the UK to give brilliant brewers something new to experiment with.
As a hop grower in Nelson, New Zealand, we are obsessed with growing the most flavourful, unique and intensely aromatic hops in the world. We grow nine of New Zealand’s favourite varieties, along with numerous advanced selections from our joint venture breeding programme with Garage Project in Wellington and MPI, as well offering new products like our SubZero Hop Kief.
SubZero Hop Kief is extremely versatile and although intended for dry-hopping it can even be added to the brite tanks prior to carbonation and packaging to give your beer a flavour/aroma boost. Hop kief has all the flavour intensity of Freestyle pellets and is designed to be true-to-lot, delivering the same flavour/ aroma profile as the individual hop lot from which it is made.
We recommend starting with about at 33% substitution rate, although you can
go as high as 50% of the normal T90 pellets in a dry hop.
SubZero Hop Kief can be used in ways that traditional pellets can’t, giving you more options with your brewing process. It can be added super late to lift the flavour and aroma of your beer (immediately before packaging).
It provides efficiency gains, it can be substituted for traditional pellets, giving you more beer yield. SubZero Hop Kief can also deliver attributes that might be hard to achieve with traditional pellets, such as creamier mouthfeel and a complex juicy profile for your beer, helping you achieve a different character than might be possible with various forms of pellets.
Freestyle SubZero Hop Kief is made with a process that allows us to extract all the desirable flavour and aroma compounds, unlike other products you may have used. Many other products claim to be solventless but actually use CO2 as a solvent, meaning that compounds that aren’t soluble in CO2 don’t end up in your beer. For example, free thiols are not typically solubilized in CO2.
It’s a liquid dry-hop made with a cryogenic, solventless, patent pending separation process. It’s all-natural, 100% New Zealand grown hops and designed to deliver flavour intensity, brewing efficiency and new dry hop options. SubZero Hop Kief delivers the full spectrum of flavour compounds in a normal T-90 pellet without the vegetative matter. It is intended for flavour/aroma use on the cold side or whirlpool and not as a bittering concentrate.
We are stoked with how well the SubZero Hop Kief has been received by brewers and their customers. Feedback has been that it’s really easy to use particularly when it comes to dosing. It’s super soluble, really flexible when it can be applied to the beer and is good for all
styles of beer. The feedback on the finished beer has been that it’s really dialled up the intensity and flavour of the finished beer.
It’s also been exciting bringing new products like the phantasm blends (Mega Motueka and Super Sauvin) and the hop fruit blends like Kohia Nelson to the UK.
Mega Motueka is an exciting new blend born out of a collab with our friends and thiol-related research collaborators at Phantasm. It’s a thiol-enriched blend of thiol precursor laden Phantasm, combined with a Motueka lot that has high concentrations of cysteine bound 3SH precursors and terpene alcohols, to create Mega Motueka. Delivering appealing passion fruit/tropical intensity with a deep citrus backbone. Green grape and lime notes are often more prominent in cold side use. Mega Motueka is intended for mash, hot side, whirlpool and/or active fermentation dry hopping with thiolized yeast strains.
Elsewhere Super Sauvin is another new blend born out of a collab with our friends and thiol-related research collaborators at Phantasm. It’s a thiol enriched blend of thiol precursor laden Phantasm, combined with Nelson Sauvin that has high concentrations of cysteine bound 3SH precursors, bound 3S4MP precursors and terpene alcohol
It’s intended for whirlpool use and/or active fermentation dry hopping with thiolized yeast strains. This blend looks like, and should be used in the same manner as, a normal T-90 hop pellet. We recommend whirlpool dosage rates from 4 g/L upwards depending on style and yeast strain. Phantasm is incorporated into the hops prior to pelleting and we’ve created a homogenous blended pellet. It’s intended to provide a wider array of thiol precursor compounds than is available from Phantasm alone.
BREWERS JOURNAL 52 | SPRING 2024 BREWERS INTELLIGENCE
THE GRAIN REPORT
IN THIS GRAIN UPDATE, ADAM DARNES, BREWING AND DISTILLING MALT SALES MANAGER AT MUNTONS, OUTLINES KEY CHANGES IN THE SECTOR.
We can summarise this latest update by noting that global prices for malting barley dried on lack of market activity. Any demonstration of demand leads to upward price pressure while 2023 crop feed values are lower than 2024 crop given soft demand and well supplied markets following quality downgrades. Futures markets edge lower on slack demand, a gap emerges as yield expectations for crop 2024 fall. There was 4% year-on-year rise in anticipated barley plantings for 2024 harvest. UK total barley area is expected to grow to 1,179 Kha (4% higher) as higher spring barley plantings intentions outweigh a drop in the winter barley area. A wet autumn throughout Western Europe is impacting growing crops and planting intentions. Much winter barley has recently turned a yellow colour, because the wet conditions mean barley roots are sitting in water, curtailing their growth.
Top Left: Futures markets edge lower on slack demand Left: 4% rise in anticipated barley plantings for 2024 harvest
Above: A wet autumn impacted growing crops
This is fairly typical of winter barley in winter and most agronomists expect it to pull through. Wet conditions can affect yield if root growth does not restart but for short periods, the discolouration is relatively harmless. In this condition though, barley will not cope well with persistent waterlogged soil all winter or possible dry conditions in the spring as root structure and biomass will be harmed.
Farmer intention to plant spring crops, in particular barley, have increased. However, this intention is constrained by the availability of seed and the prospect of lower malting barley premiums. The option to give the land a break and prepare for an early entry into crop 2025 is attractive for some growers. Malting barley markets have softened on low activity. However, strength is visible as soon as demand appears.
BREWERS INTELLIGENCE
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AS WE ENTER SPRING, ATTENTIONS TURN RAPIDLY TO RELEASE SCHEDULES FOR THE MONTHS HEAD. BUT ACCORDING TO RATING SITES, RECENT WEEKS HAVE SHOWN THAT HIGH ABV HOPFORWARD IPAS AND IMPERIAL STOUTS, ARE STILL A HIT WITH MANY.
As we delve into 2024, it’s fascinating to observe the shifting preferences and trends that shape the nation’s beer culture. With spring among us and summer fast-approaching, we’re unsurprisingly likely to see an increased focus on great lagers, session-strength pale ales and sours, and also an ever-burgeoning number of no-and-low options.
But a look at recent popular beers, eight of the current top trending beers on RateBeer fall into the IPA category, while seven of the current top new beers also fit into that segment.
The recent collaboration between Track and Great Notion, Move In Waves, has been a hit with drinkers. It’s an 8.0% Double IPA showcasing Nelson, Southern Cross & Rakau Sub Zero Hop Kief. As has the Double IPA collaboration between Cloudwater and Uchu. This 8.0% release is described as a blended DIPA saturated in hops with a large addition of oats creating a creamy and juicy beer. Also popular with beer fans was Double Midnight Oregon Trail IPA from Berkshirebased Elusive Brewing. A classicallystyled West Coast Black IPA, this 8.0%
THE SALES REPORT
beer features Simcoe, Chinook and Columbus hops which combine to deliver a resinous profile with a citrus undertone. The bitterness helps to balance the light caramel and roastiness of the malts.
Other beers from Track, Verdant from Falmouth and Leeds-based Northern Monk feature. As does another release from Elusive Brewing. Their Double Sunset Oregon Trail, which is a West Coast Red DIPA. However, other additions to the list are the latest 2023 iteration of Fuller’s Vintage Ale series. Like each release, all Vintage Ales are bottle-conditioned, featuring a new recipe every year since 1997.
Focusing on other new releases, Stouts are proving incredibly popular with users of the site. Zombie Squirrel Returns is an 8.0% Coffee and Cacao Breakfast Stout from Liverpool-based Azvex, whose head brewer Jack Walker features in our homebrew section this issue. Also a hit is Donut, an Imperial Stout collaboration between Lewes’ Beak and Manchesterbased Cloudwater.
It was brewed using a combination of Terra Rossa cocoa, Callebaut cacao nibs, Madagascan vanilla and Kenyan Karimuki AA coffee from Workshop, before being blended with a portion of stout that had spent two years ageing in select bourbon barrels.
Hop-forward, hazy beers and high ABV stouts, aided in-part by the cold winter months, have dominated rating sites but looking ahead, where is there opportunity for growth? Richard Preiss, the founder of Escarpment Labs, expects the return of what he describes as the “rent beer”.
He explains: “Cost of goods and production efficiency matters now more than ever, so breweries are getting efficient and exploring styles that can be made and sold affordably (read: not triple dry hopped or barrel aged).
“The idea here is to ensure that your brewery’s lineup has a “rent beer”, a beer
that helps pay the rent bill (or mortgage, or glycol chiller maintenance bill). It might not be the top seller, but it’s beer you can produce and sell in volume, with low production costs.
“This means it shouldn’t be aggressively full of hops or malt, shouldn’t take 10 weeks to ferment and condition, and shouldn’t require any excessively complex processing methods. Luckily, a lot of styles fit into this mould.
At the other end of the spectrum, he positioned thiol-enhanced beers as wine contenders saying “you know a bunch of people that would buy the heck out of a 5% sparkling Sauvignon Blanc-ish beer”.
“New yeasts open up the possibility to make beers taste more like thiol-forward wines like New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc. This is important, because this is one of the fastest growing and most successful categories in the wine market,” he explains. “Utilizing a thiol enhancing yeast in a light (4-6% ABV) beer base, possibly with some inclusion of grape juice or lactic souring, could produce a compelling product for white wine consumers looking for a lighter and lower ABV option.”
Natalya Watson is the EMEA business development manager for beer at WSET - Wine & Spirit Education Trust and she says that haze is here to stay. “Over the last few years, craft breweries have largely shifted to a substyle of IPA, called hazy or New England IPA, that focuses less on hop bitterness and more on hop aroma and flavour, and specifically citrus, stone fruit and tropical fruit notes that give this beer its nickname of “juicy” IPA,” she explains.
“While craft beer fans are likely very familiar with this style (and some may be ready to see the haze craze die down), I think we’ll only see it continue grow, as craft brewery buy-outs bring hazy IPAs to a more mainstream audience and more drinkers realise that the IPA has evolved.”
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BREWERS JOURNAL 56 | SPRING 2024