"The rapid growth of the beer industry was due, in part, to German immigrants who brought with them a taste for good beer and strong brewing traditions. The high quality of the region’s water, inexpensive labor and land, easy access to raw materials, and proximity to Manhattan’s huge market also contributed to the breweries’ success. Most breweries were located in Brooklyn neighborhoods with the highest concentration of German immigrants: Williamsburg, Bushwick, and Greenpoint. By the industry’s height, just before Prohibition, Brooklyn had joined other major cities, including Milwaukee and St. Louis, as one of the nation’s brewing centers. When Prohibition ended in 1933, very few breweries remained. The industry rose again after World War II, but local flavor gave way to large breweries and national brands."
In 1987, two Brooklyn residents, Middle East News Correspondent Steve Hindy and banker Tom Potter quit their jobs and started the Brooklyn Brewery using the Matt Brewing Company in upstate New York. In 1989 they bought their first truck and began peddling their brand of Brooklyn lager to vendors in New York City. In 1996 they opened their newest brewery in Brooklyn, and became the first successful brewery located in Brooklyn since 1976, and are now among America's top 40 breweries. The present brewmaster is Garrett Oliver, who is the foremost authority in the United States on the subject of traditional beer.
Our tour guide also gave a brief overview of how beer is produced by combining barley, water, hops and yeast, with the addition of spices or other ingredients, to produce unique artisan brews.
My husband and I have visited many breweries in our travels over the years, and have gone on many extensive tours of their facilities. We usually found ourselves treated afterward to a free sample of the beers produced by the brewery in their hospitality centers, so we were a little surprised by the brevity of this tour and the fact that there were no samples.
However, on the opposite side of the brew room is a "party room" and visitors are given the opportunity of purchasing six tokens for $20 that can be redeemed inside for 6 full cups of the beers that were presently on tap. As you can see from the photo of the board above, we had quite a selection of interesting beers to choose from.
We tried the Blance de Brooklyn, the Intensified Coffee Stout and the Sorachi Ale in our first go -round.
The room was really crowded, as you can see in the photo above of the long line to redeem the tokens at the serving counter. Finding a seat was mattering of patiently waiting for a group to leave.
The scene in the party room is, for the most part, definitely young and hip. It appears to be a very popular meeting place, and the patrons were definitely having a good time!
Some of the regulars knew enough to bring in food, or have pizza delivered! The longer we stayed the more fun it was for us, too, as drinking all that wonderfully cold deliciously blended beer took a few hours that afternoon.
My favorite? The "Intensified Coffee Stout"! It had a complex coffee aroma and flavor, slightly sweet from the addition of a chocolate malt, and equalled in taste to drinking a delicious chilled effervescent espresso. If you've ever tasted a Manhattan Special soda, it was similar but more intense in coffee flavor. Definitely a coffee lover's beer! It is only sold on tap in limited areas, so it may mean that you'll have to take a trip to Brooklyn to taste it, but definitely well worth the trip.
We plan to visit the Brooklyn Brewery again in the fall, as I hope the "Post Road Pumpkin Ale" will be offered, and I'd love to try that brew, and this time I think we'll also bring in a pizza.
I wish you could join us! Oh --and as a "PS" we always drink responsibly.
We plan to visit the Brooklyn Brewery again in the fall, as I hope the "Post Road Pumpkin Ale" will be offered, and I'd love to try that brew, and this time I think we'll also bring in a pizza.
I wish you could join us! Oh --and as a "PS" we always drink responsibly.

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