I recently completed a beer trade with a couple of friends and ended up with the equivalent of two mixed six-packs after the swap.
Once home, I put the 12 beers, which reflected the eclectic tastes of my fellow craft enthusiasts, into two separate camps on my kitchen table. One had either “bottled on,” or “canned on,” or “best by” dates and the other side had none. As it turned out, it was a 50-50 split when it came to identifying the age of the beer – or not – among this far-reaching sample of American craft.
I was disappointed but not necessarily surprised. But isn’t it time that all craft brewers come to the aid of the consumers that keep them in business by adding notice of when their beers were put into bottles or cans?
Craft’s calling card has always been fresh in the sense of being unique, whether it be a creative approach to styles, names of beers, labels and can design, marketing via social media and on and on. So why can’t craft brewers commit to providing notice on when its beer was freshly packaged?
I tend to not think this is a make-or-break industry issue. It’s a little like the mythical argument that poor quality craft beer that tastes sub-par hurts the entire independent brewing industry. Doesn’t the marketplace, which now has plenty of competition in all 50 states, sort the quality issue out pretty quickly?
When it comes to stale beer on the shelves, I don’t think anybody interested in craft is going to stop buying beer from independent brewers due to one bad experience with a six-pack. It’s more of an identity question. How do craft brewers want to present themselves to the community they participate in? Do they want a community where the beer drinker continues to feel a direct kinship to the brewer?
This story is from the Fall 2016 edition of The Beer Connoisseur®.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the Fall 2016 edition of The Beer Connoisseur®.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Madtree 2.0- How To Grow A Brewery
Cincinnati Brewery Doubles Down on Quality, Employees, and Charitable Giving
Incredible Pulp Blood Orange Extra Pale Ale – Boneyard Beer – 91 Rating
Responses from Boneyard Beer’s founder and brewmaster Tony Lawrence.
Gueuze: The Champagne of Craft Beer
With a new year swiftly approaching, it’s time to dust off that lambic basket and prepare to ring in 2017 with a beverage far superior to champagne.
Winter Style Recommendations
Think outside the Bocks with these “alt-wintry-night” beer styles.
The Mixed-Culture Master
Chad Yakobson of Crooked Stave discusses his brewing techniques and his pioneering work with Brettanomyces.
Chasing the Rabbit: Bobby Thomas of Red Hare Brewing
The head brewer talks background, beers and bunnies.
Why Beers Need “Packaged On” Dates
I recently completed a beer trade with a couple of friends and ended up with the equivalent of two mixed six-packs after the swap.
Foeders
The Barrel's Big Brother
Drinking in the French Countryside
England, Belgium, Amsterdam, Germany and even the Czech Republic rank as noted European beer travel destinations, but what about France?
St Bernard's A Tail Of Licker Barrels And Heroism
The Story Behind the Most Interesting Man’s Best Friend in the World.