Stirring the 750mL pot

Stirring the 750mL pot

The **New York Times** recently ran an article, [*Craft Beer’s Larger Aspirations Cause a Stir*][1], that left many in the craft-beer world scratching their heads. The beer bloggers I follow on [my **Twitter feed**][2] were abuzz after this piece. And, after reading it myself, I did my own head scratching. The article was full of glaring holes and, may I say, blatant misinformation that just didn’t sit right with me. Maybe it was the word *wine-ification* that burst a blood vessel. The comment section on the online article just wasn’t large enough for my thoughts, so I figured I better write them here.

The article begins, “…[W]alk into a craft-beer store these days and you’ll see shelf after shelf taken over by giants: 22-ounce ‘bombers,’ 750-milliliter wine bottles, even three-liter jeroboams.” This may be true, but it’s just simple math, not a conspiracy. There are more breweries in the United States than ever—[922 microbreweries breweries as of July 2012][3], up from 615 just 2 years ago, according to the **Brewers Association**.

Top: Antique beer bottles from the Musée Européen de la Bière collection. Bottom: 22oz bottles from the Long Ireland Beer Company.

What was old is new again or never went away, we just weren’t paying attention. Top: Antique beer bottles from the **Musée Européen de la Bière** collection. Bottom: 22oz. bottles from the **Long Ireland Beer Company**.

Microbreweries do not start out producing over 100,000 barrels a year that established brewers such as **Dogfish Head** will in 2013. They usually start out with a determined brewer, supportive family and friends, a single van, and a lot of upfront costs. Want to start your own brewery? After the costs associated with licenses, property, construction, and equipment you’re looking at being six figures in the hole without producing a drop of beer.

I wrote to [**Long Ireland Beer Company**][4], based in Riverhead, New York, which produces beer in the larger 750mL and 22oz. bottles, to ask why and was told:

> The larger format bottles (750mL & 22oz.) options are more efficient from a small breweries perspective. The labor to apply a label—many times by hand—and cap a bottle—also by hand—is the same effort on a bottle holding 12oz. or 22oz. The only efficiency we gain is by selling a larger amount of product to offset the labor expense. To operate even a small-scale canning or bottling line is still labor intensive, and the equipment capital can range from $30,000 dollars into hundreds of thousands.

[**Barrier Brewing Company**][5], which has just recently recovered from superstorm Sandy, had more than just financial reasons why it chose the larger format, or should I say, Mother Nature chose it for them. Craig Frymark, owner and brewer at **Barrier** explains:

> This was our first-ever bottle release, and [it] evolved somewhat spontaneously due to the fact that our brewery was heavily damaged by [Hurricane Sandy], and we had limited options on how to rescue the beer from the tanks. We had no power for over three weeks, which meant no ability to clean kegs or transfer beer via pumps, so we decided it was an opportune time to make our first hand-bottled beer. Cans require a canning line, so they were never an option for us. We decided to go with 750mL bottles for a few strategic reasons. Hand-bottling is time-consuming, and smaller bottles mean more bottles and more bottling time, so a larger format greatly reduced our bottling time—we still had a brewery to rebuild and needed most of our time and labor for that! Also, bottles require caps and labels, and smaller-format bottles means more material costs—including the bottles themselves. Lastly, we saw this as a special beer, commemorating an historic event not just for ourselves but for the entire surrounding area, and we knew a number of people would hold onto the bottle itself as a keepsake. So we felt a larger, more elegant bottle was the appropriate choice.

Very few microbrewies have the beginning capital or capacity for that large-scale beer production, because the costs are great. That isn’t to say some microbreweries can’t start with 12oz. bottling. For Larry Goldstein, owner and brewer at [**Spider Bite Beer Company**][6], it was more a consideration of the alcohol content.

> …[O]ur first beer was the pale ale. To me, this is a beer best served in 12oz. A six-pack gives a range of choices. For a 5.5% beer you can have one, two, three, etc., where in large format it is more like counting by twos. …So for *Boris the Spider*, we were going to go large format, but mainly because we wanted to use a larger label, and also because it costs us less for packaging, so [it’s] a better margin. But not everybody drinks a large 10% ABV bottle. It is great for sharing, though.  …[So consumers] might just buy one bottle vs. a four- or six-pack. I personally prefer 12oz. now.  [It was] the other way when I went to tastings.

But this doesn’t mean it’s not an expensive proposition. Larry continues:

> Yes, the upfront costs are a lot more for the six-pack.

A six-pack of 12oz Spider Bite Pale Ale bottles

*Pale Ale*, the first **Spider Bite** beer bottled as a 12oz. six-pack

Cost wise, 750mL and 22oz. make sense, especially when it comes the beer distributor. My local beer distributor sells beers from over one hundred different breweries across the U.S. and some from Belgium, France and Germany. If these beers were all sold as six-packs the distributor would not be able to keep this many breweries in stock. Physically, he just would not have the room.

Facing the facts, macrobreweries are still king. **InBev**, **Miller-Coors**, **Heineken**, and **Modelo** rule the shelves. Any space left over goes to the largest craft beer producers, **Samuel Adams**, **Sierra Nevada**, **Brooklyn Brewery**. What room is left for the microbreweries? Distributors love the larger bottles, which give customers what they want and what they demand: A wide-range of brews of different styles and origins, without taking up that much space. They do sell at a higher price margin, but how much higher?

The **New York Times article** states, “Bottles sell for as much as $30 in stores,” and “Internet message boards dedicated to craft beer are replete with complaints that large bottles are too expensive” Sure, there are stores in New York City that sell 750mL bottles of aged brew for $30, but 90% of the stock at my local distributor on Long Island was under $20. About half of the 22oz. and 750mL went for $16 or less. I just picked up a **Southern Tier** *Choklat* for $9.95. Where was Clay Risen, the author of the **Times** article, shopping?

Two recorked bottles of beer. The first cork is a rubber stopper, the second is a metallic stopper with a glass star on the top.

Starfish makes my “bomber” pretty.

Continuing with the **Times** article, “…and, thanks to their typically higher alcohol content, [750mL bottles are] a challenge to finish in one sitting. Unlike wine, a beer is nearly impossible to recork.” First, what is considered a high alcohol content? A reasonable rule of thumb is over 10% alcohol by volume (ABV). On the shelves of my local distributor, nearly half the bottles are under 8% ABV. There are 12% ABV *tripels*, along with 5% or 6% ABV *biers de Mars* or *saisons*. And, why do we have to finish a bottle in one sitting? A good wine cork gets two or three days out of an open beer bottle, about the same time as an opened growler and average for a recorked bottle of wine. How do I know? I’m drinking a *Birra Etrusca* by **Dogfish Head** while writing this. Today is Sunday, and I first opened it on Friday. Does it taste exactly the same as I first opened it on Friday? Maybe not, but does a glass a wine?

Here’s more to disagree with in the **Times** article: “Brewers have many reasons to go big. Prestige, for one.” *Prestige?* With whom? I think the more accurate words are “experimental” and “local.” Craft brewers get into the business because they didn’t want the same old beer. The large bottles help them flex their creative muscle, allowing them to experiment, and may introduce a new styles into their brand. Craig Frymark from **Barrier**:

>”We were really happy with the outcome of our first bottled beer and consequently have plans for several more bottled releases throughout the year. And, while we haven’t decided what all the beers will be just yet, we have decided that we aren’t sticking to just one bottle format. A few may go into 750mL bottles, but we definitely want to experiment with several different formats, from 330mL to 40oz.!”

Many brewers are heavily involved in their communities and want to use local ingredients to support local businesses. That often includes using oak barrels from their local wineries, whiskey barrels from their local distiller, and fresh farm ingredients. How can they produce enough these specialized beers on a larger scale without sacrificing quality? There aren’t enough Bourbon barrels in Kentucky.

Even if there was a avalanche of 750mL bottles, the tried and true 12oz. bottle or can isn’t going anywhere. There are hundreds of breweries which produce the 12oz. format, and that number is growing every day, and they can be found in most restaurants and craft beer bars. The 750mL is not the norm, not by a long shot. Restaurants that want to serve a craft-beer clientele are more inclined to add or rearrange their taps then add “bombers.”

I could go on and on picking apart the **Times** article but they did get one thing right, these larger bottles are meant to be shared. Last year, craft-beer drinker, *DnU* contributor, and friend [Scott S][7] returned to Long Island from Colorado. We met up at a [local restaurant, **Bobbique**,][8] in Patchogue, which has many craft beers on tap and in bottles, but one caught Scott’s eye. He wanted to try a 750mL bottle of **Brooklyn Brewery** *Black Ops*—an imperial stout aged in Bourbon barrels, with 1less than 1000 cases produced. It cost $30.00. We split it between us, and it was amazing.

The only complaints we hear are from people in restaurants and bars in New York City spending $15–20 for a simple cocktail or a glass of wine.

[1]: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/06/dining/craft-beers-trend-toward-larger-bottles-causes-a-stir.html
[2]: https://twitter.com/melba_dnu
[3]: href=”http://www.brewersassociation.org/pages/business-tools/craft-brewing-statistics/market-segments
[4]: http://www.longirelandbrewing.com/
[5]: http://www.barrierbrewing.com/Site/HOME.html
[6]: http://spiderbitebeer.com/
[7]: http://drunkandunemployed.com/index.php/search/scott
[8]: http://www.bobbique.com/