Archive for category Interviews

Olde Rabbit’s Foot Release: Dec. 12, 11 AM.

For Sweetening Countenances and Enhancing Reputations

For Sweetening Countenances and Enhancing Reputations


Make sure you don’t miss the release of Olde Rabbit’s Foot, an Imperial Stout brewed with honey and cocoa nibs, and aged in bourbon barrels.

Olde Rabbit’s Foot is a collaborative brew between three North Carolina Brewers Guild members: Olde Hickory Brewery, Duck-Rabbit Craft Brewery, and Foothills Brewing Company. Each brewery made one-third of the wort, it was blended before fermentation and then aged in 23-year-old Pappy van Winkle barrels for 4 months.

Jamie Bartholomaus of Foothills took a few moments to share his thoughts on the process:

Getting to work with the other brewers was the most fun part for me. From inception of the whole idea, down to the label design, getting to work side by side with some of the most accomplished brewers in North Carolina and the Southeast has just been a real pleasure. We are so excited about it, we have already begun initial plans for the next round.

Paul and Steven are great brewers, and doing a collaboration with them has really invigorated my desire for a more cooperative environment in the NC beer scene. Also working on the North Carolina Brewer’s Guild since its inception has helped me see, more now than ever, that as the whole craft industry grows, so my company will grow with it. Collaborative efforts make sense not just from a beer perspective, but as a business. Working together, sharing services such as trucking, raw material purchasing, etc. is the future of our business. By doing this sort of thing, it helps small companies like us compete in the ever changing, ever consolidating beer industry.

The logo was created by Shapiro Walker Design. David Shapiro is the mastermind behind all of Foothills art, The NCBG logo, and now our project Olde Rabbit’s Foot. Forrest Causby, who works at Shapiro Walker, was the actual artist who created the art. With the guidance of David Shapiro, we think the label has turned out fantastic.

Steven Lyerly, brewmaster at Olde Hickory Brewery, does not make an Imperial Stout as part of their regular line. His is the wort with the honey in it. He added:

Moving beer about, especially in and out of barrels is always a challenge. Bottling is also a challenge, mostly; but it is all in a days work at a brewery. For me, the most challenging part of the whole project was getting the approval of the Government. That was a real job! It took months, many emails, phone calls, letters and begging and pleading. We even offered to pay twice the tax on the beer, and were turned down! Finally, we were able to reach a solution.

To my knowledge this is the first “blended” beer made in NC. Previous projects have revolved around different brewers brewing the same beer using same ingredients but at different breweries. Or, different brewers working on the design and production of a special beer, but brewed at one brewery. Our project was much different. We used the brew houses, ingredients and creativeness of three different brewers working independently; and blended them all together in some amazing barrels. Really, the barrels are the common thread in Olde Rabbit’s Foot.

625 22 oz. bottles will be released on Saturday at the Foothills Brewing Company in Winston-Salem. Sales start when the pub opens at 11:00 AM. They are $20/each and there is a limit of 4 bottles per person.

Friday night, before the release, Foothills is hosting an informal Beer Advocate gathering. If you’re nearby, bring something rare from your cellar to share with old and new friends, and get into the spirit of sharing and great, rare beer.

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Old Mecklenburg Brewery

Similar to Raleigh’s LoneRider Brewing Company (see KYB #2), Charlotte’s Old Mecklenburg Brewery is a production brewery started by an intrepid team of three. John Marrino, Jon Hayward, and Carey Savoy purchased the old Southend Brewery equipment last year, moving it from its uptown Charlotte location to a nearby manufacturing district. They’re already brewing German-inspired beers and, within a few months, they expect to build out an on-site tap room.

KYB is kinda sorta of based in the Triangle right now (hey, anyone else interested in conducting interviews?), so we corresponded via email with OMB’s Jon Hayward. Hope you enjoy!

KYB: It looks like it’s three of you at the brewery. What do each of you do at the brewery?

Jon:I focus most of my time on sales and marketing. John is the Brewer. He also oversees the general direction of the brewery, brewery operations, marketing and finance. Carey is the Assistant Brewer and does a little bit of everything including all maintenance tasks. Both John and Carey are also currently building out our tap room.

KYB: How did you meet?

Jon: John and I grew up together. We met in elementary school in Massachusetts and thirty years later we both ended up in Charlotte. Cary worked with John at his previous employer.

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Aviator Brewing

Mark Doble opened Aviator Brewing last November in Fuquay Varina. This production brewery is tucked away in a hangar of the airport. From this humble beginnings Mark puts his passion daily into his two loves brewing and flying. Know Your Brewer recently stopped in to visit Mark and his brewery.

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LoneRider

Steve Kramling, Mihir Patel, and Sumit Vohra are three everyman working in office jobs until the idea of starting their own brewery moved from the watercooler conversation to reality. LoneRider is a production brewery in Raleigh just around the corner from the Research Triangle Park where they all met. They opened in January this year. We sat down recently and they told Know Your Brewer about their experiences in opening LoneRider Brewery.

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French Broad Brewing Co.

We’re excited to kick off the main feature of Know Your Brewer: the interviews!

Our goal is to get you — yep, you — to ponder one simple question. Do you know who brews your beer? Since only around 1 percent of all beer consumed in North Carolina is brewed here in North Carolina, we’re guessing that most of  you don’t. That’s okay…don’t worry. This isn’t a guilt trip.

It’s just that we’d like to change that. Through these interviews, we’d like for you to discover and appreciate your local North Carolina brewer, just like many in generations past knew their neighborhood baker, fishmonger, florist, and milkman. It shouldn’t be that difficult: around 9 out of 10 North Carolinians live within 10 minutes of a locally-brewed beer.

By interviewing and featuring your neighbors who brew beer for a living, we truly hope that you’ll become a part of that crowd who personally knows a North Carolina craft brewer. Who orders a local North Carolina beer. Who gives a local beer as a gift to a friend or family member…or recommends it to a neighbor.  And, when at a bar or restaurant, who regularly asks, “What local beer do you serve?

May this be a New Old Era: an age where we get to know the craftsmen and women whose careers depend on your interest in and loyalty toward locally-brewed beer.

Buy local, support your local brewery, and Know Your Brewer. Our first interview is with Drew Barton, head brewer at Asheville’s French Broad Brewing Company.

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