Good Beer Hunting

Things Are Not What They Seem — Hildegard Ferments & Botanicals in Seattle, Washington

By Holly Regan
“The labor hours for Rosa Vissers’ elderberry syrup are more than she and her husband, Howard Kuo, can count. First, someone hand-harvests the berries. Next, Vissers manually strips the berries from the branches for the long process in which she prepares three separate infusions—with honey, alcohol, and water—that she later combines. Despite the extra effort and local, organic ingredients, Hildegard charges half the price commanded by commercial syrups.”

Lone Star Legends — A Foraging Trip Reveals How It Takes a Village to Make West Texas Gin

By Ruvani de Silva
“Our woefully inadequate two-wheel-drive RAV4 stutters and stumbles behind Molly Cummings’ older, but far more sturdy, mother-of-pearl Land Rover as we ascend through tall piles of ochre boulders, patches of shrub, long grass, and prickly pear cacti. I’m mesmerized by the raw beauty of the mountains, the blue-gray clouds sitting low over the endless rugged peaks, but acutely aware of the sheer remoteness of our surroundings.”

 
 

TG-009 The One with the Pivot

If we’ve said it once, we’ve said it a thousand times—beverage companies are going to have to expand their offerings not just to grow, but to survive at all. In this episode of The Gist, lead Sightlines reporter Kate Bernot joins me, Beth Demmon, to take a big look at 2023 and what the numbers mean for 2024, why diversification is the word of the year, and what a brewery buying into CBD could signal to the rest of the industry. This is the Gist.

EP-401 Jen Blair of Under the Jenfluence

In this episode, Jen Blair, who recently became a Master Cicerone—the highest level of certification and a title just 28 people in the world hold today—shares details from her almost decade-long journey to reach this pinnacle. If you’re interested in becoming a Cicerone, this episode is for you. But even if you’re not planning to take these tests, you’ll learn so much about what it means to explore beer, its history, and all the sensory experiences it can provide.

EP-400 Julia Astrid Davis of Burke-Gilman Brewing

In this episode, we’re talking about process. And it’s not just in context of the brewing of beer, but everything that leads up to it, what happens during, and how a brewer can get better after. Helping us get into the detail of it all is Julia Astrid Davis, the head brewer and zygurmatrix at Burke-Gilman Brewing Company in Seattle.

Lost Dog — Lagunitas Tries to Find Itself After Leadership Turnover, Sales Slumps

Hits Different — Some Breweries Don’t Shy Away from Confronting Dry January This Year

Sticky Tentacles — Asahi Grabs First U.S. Manufacturing Plant with Acquisition of Contract Brewer Octopi

Next Germination

Underwriting Collection in Partnership with Guinness

Lady Lager On a Mission — How Alisa Bowens-Mercado Is Using Beer to Bring Economic Empowerment to the Black Community

Social Security — The Hospitality Businesses Offering New Opportunities for Former Prisoners

A Land of Rice and History — The Role of Tuak, the Traditional Fermented Rice Drink, in Sarawak, Malaysia

‘I See You’ — The Evolution of SoCal Cerveceros

Olly Olly

Underwriting Collection in Partnership with Oskar Blues

Our Wilder Selves — The Hunt for Sasquatch in Middle America

Unplugged Under the Stars — How Black Beer Organizations are Diversifying Camping

Ursa Major — Recalibrating for Risk in the Land of Grizzlies

Dead Castles — Exploring the Ruins of the Fortress That Abercrombie & Fitch Built

B-Roll No. 724 Emily Whitchurch
“Moving to London as a very overwhelmed 18-year-old for university, finding places of solace amidst the chaos was key. Three years later, nights spent at The Blues Kitchen remain a treasured part of my routine. Clutching a sticky bottle of Desperados, sweating and dancing with friends and strangers as live music swells from the small stage. Amy Winehouse, Aretha Franklin, Nina Simone — every Wednesday, I know I’ll hear the classics. Guitar twangs linger in the air, coalescing with jubilant saxophones and velvet vocals. Huddled around small tables overflowing with glassware, the crowd is encouraged to get up, let loose.

Every year, we reflect on how lucky we are to chronicle the stories of folks making the beer world better. From incredible leadership to innovative ways of thinking, these are the people shaping the future of the industry—and we’re thrilled to share them with you. These are the 2023 Signifiers.

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