What you missed on Beer Sessions Radio™: From Home Brew to Pro Brew

BitterEstersTrainingThis week on Beer Sessions Radio™, host Jimmy Carbone once again welcomes back fall co-host Stephen Valland, who is right in his wheelhouse as they discuss going from homebrewer to pro-brewer. Bitter & Esters owner John LaPolla discusses his class offerings that range everything from how to make beer to how to brand your brewery.

The homebrew to pro-brew route is distinctly American. The brewing education curve is very different in America as opposed to Europe, where you have a more structured path to becoming a brewer. In America, you start out by cleaning kegs and one day you just get thrown in to a professional situation. American homebrewers tend to learn the ins and outs of making beer on their own before launching a business in the hopes of “making it big.”

New brewery owner Jason Sahler, an award-winning homebrewer, is getting ready to launch his two-barrel enterprise, Strong Rope Brewery, a Brooklyn-based brewery that will create handcrafted local and organic ales featuring seasonal offerings that will use the freshest vegetables, fruits, herbs, and spices. While serving many of the ales on draft, the brewery will also feature living ales: cask and bottle-conditioned beers where live yeast remains in the beer, which continues to condition and evolve in its serving vessel, showcasing the subtle natural flavors that this unique conditioned environment creates.

If you’re interested in trying some homebrew, Bitter & Esters is hosting a fundraiser for Ales for ALS on October 29th featuring an experimental hop (tickets here).

You can listen to the full episode here.

What you missed on Beer Sessions Radio™: The Beer Bible with Jeff Alworth

Photo courtesy of All About Beer Magazine.
Photo courtesy of All About Beer Magazine.

This week on Beer Sessions Radio™, host Jimmy Carbone welcomes back one of the nation’s premier beer writers, Jeff Alworth, whose newest book, The Beer Bible, is on sale now. Hear how “every beer tells a story,” as Jeff talks about the depth and scope on the subject of beer. The book is aimed at audiences seeking an in-depth analysis of beer delving into the pleasure of discovery, knowledge, and connoisseurship. Divided into four major families—ales, lagers, wheat beers, and tart and wild ales—there’s everything a beer drinker wants to know about the hundreds of different authentic types of brews, from bitters, bocks, and IPAs to weisses, milk stouts, lambics, and more.

Co-hosting this week’s epsiode is Brooklyn Brew Shop’s Stephen Valand, who discusses the nuances of creating a British mild ale. Also hear from Mugs Alehouse owner Ed Berestecki who discusses the challenges of meeting the demands of a “promiscuous” craft beer drinking market.

Hear how history affects beer making, including special beers made during a coronation in England. Drinking historical beers is an experience, even if the beers tend to taste more like sherry than the original recipe. Learn which beers can be sampled even 100 years later!

You can listen to the full episode here.