Grassroots Beer Brewers Score a Victory in Utah
Just three companies control approximately 80 percent of the beer
industry in the US. Brewing beer at home is one way to counter this
corporate monopoly. However, Mississippi, Kentucky, Alabama and
Oklahoma still outlaw the craft. Recently, a victory for homebrewers
was scored in Utah, when on February 19th the State Senate legalized homebrewing, bringing the state out of the shadows of prohibition.
Three Republican Senators voted against the bill, including Senate
Majority Assistant Whip Gregory Bell. "I'm not comfortable with home
brewing," Bell said to the Deseret News. "It seems fraught with
mischief to me. Maybe I don't understand it."
Why doesn’t Bell understand this delicious an empowering craft?
Perhaps because corporations have taken over an industry than used to
be rooted in the kitchens of the world.
It was in Mesopotamia,
modern day Iraq, where first emerged the trade of beer and barley,
according to Fermenting Revolution: How To Drink Beer and Save the
World by Christopher O'Brien. The need to cultivate crops for this
important product may have been the initial reason for the settlement
of the world's first large-scale community. In Babylonia, where beer
was safer to drink than the canal water, barley and beer were used as a
form of currency. The foundations of modern society appear to be built
on, well, beer.
At the time of the American Revolution, rebels encouraged boycotts
against English beer, chanting the phrase, "Homebrewed Is Best." George
Washington brewed his own beer in a house designated for the craft in
his backyard. At Monticello, Thomas Jefferson gave his friends beer
brewing lessons. In 1872, there were 3,421 breweries in the US.
According to the New Yorker, during the Civil War, a member of the
United States Sanitary Commission said beer was a “valuable substitute
for vegetables.” Now there are more than 1,400 breweries, and over one
million homebrewers in the US.
Yet during Prohibition, home brewers naturally took a hit. After
Prohibition was lifted, wine was allowed to be produced legally at
home, but beer was not. In 1978, NY Congressman Barbar Conable
sponsored a bill that would legalize homebrewing. When introducing the
bill to Congress, Conable said that Americans should not have to “rely
on the beer barons” for their brew. It wasn’t until 1979, when
President Jimmy Carter signed the Cranston Act, that home brewing was
legalized in many states. At the time of the law’s passage, only forty
four breweries were in operation the US.
However, the Cranston Act still allowed individual states to prohibit the production. Before the Utah Senate legalized homebrewing a few days ago, those who brewed at home had to get a license and post a $10,000 bond. Utah
Senator Steve Urquhart said of the new law’s passage, "We're dealing
with adults and this simply isn't a big deal. That's the argument that
persuades me." Utah Governor Jon Huntsman now
needs to sign the bill into law for it to be applied. Pending this
passage, homebrewers will be able to brew legally starting on May 12.
This homebrewers’ victory in Utah is in part
thanks to two years of grassroots activism and lobbying on the part of
the American Homebrewers Association and Gary Glass, the Association’s
director. Glass spoke to the Beer Examiner about the process. “Much
thanks to all of the Utah craft brewers who
have helped us in the effort to legalize homebrewing over the past
couple of years… The huge response we've had from Utah
homebrewers and beer enthusiasts contacting their legislators had a
major impact. I was present and testified at the legislative committee
hearings and was encouraged to hear from many legislators that they
were surprised at the number of contacts from voters urging them to
support the measure.”
Homebrewing is a wonderful pastime that can also help build
community. In Burlington, Vermont my friends and I recently pooled our
money together to buy brewing equipment, and started a collective which
shares the equipment, recipes and the beer with other locals around
town. In this way, homebrewing has built community and allows us to cut
out the corporate middle man.
Similarly, the homebrewers’ victory in Utah is one step close to enabling the beer drinkers of the world to take back their brew from the corporations of the world.
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20 Comments so far
Show All"Homebrewing is a wonderful pastime that can also help build community. In Burlington, Vermont my friends and I recently pooled our money together to buy brewing equipment, and started a collective which shares the equipment, recipes and the beer with other locals around town. In this way, homebrewing has built community and allows us to cut out the corporate middle man."
Gardening Pot would be a wonderful pastime to help build community. Nothing says "hi" like it.
The best reward is the fine tasting fresh beer and variety of beer you will be making.
Just a little tip. Word of your fine beer will spread, so have a failed nasty bottle or two to give to the "strangers" who will show up to suck on some free beer.
One sip and they will go back to the dives they inhabit and spread the word that your place sucks.
LOL that was great, gave me a good laugh, thanks :-)
The most watered down stuff I can tolerate to drink is Shock Top or Blue Moon. Never had homebrewed beer before, but there was this wonderful place called Mr. Dunderbak's in Tampa...mmmm. Hundreds of different imported beers.
There is definitely something toxic in Blue Moon. I'm not kidding. After two pints within an hour it comes right back up. Every time. (It only took twice to figure this out). Horrid stuff. The Appalachian Brewery in Harrisburg PA makes a wonderful wheat beer (as is Blue Moon, supposedly) that goes down smooth and stays down. Their stout can only be described as delicious. They make several other varieties as well, all great tasting. ABC is a small, local "craft" brewer that has a beer hall/restaurant onsite. You can see the stainless steel brewing vats through a window between the restaurant and the brewery. Good beer. Beer you can taste.
d.k.shaw
I've never had a problem with Blue Moon, and I usually drank two at a time, 2 for 1 specials are nice. Think that brewery's stuff is available in DC?
Probably not in DC, but maybe. But then I just read PJD's comment so apparently it is available in bottles at retail stores, so maybe in bars, too. I like draft, though, not bottled. And yes, Troeggs, also in Harrisburg brews excellent beers. Their "hopback" is outstanding.
One would think it is available in DC - Harrisburg, PA isn't very far away. Troegs brewery, in the same area makes good beer too.
But DC and it's burbs are not at all an easy place to find a good beer - either on tap or bottles to go. But I think I've seen Appalachian brewery beer even in Giant or Safeway in that area.
Blue Moon is brewed by Coors owned by nasty right wingers; avoid it. You should go to the source for this style of beer (Belgian Witbier) and drink Hoegaarden - it is on tap everywhere - or it seems that way here in Pittsburgh in the summer months.
---USAn---
If you're tired of Utah's "3.2 and Proud of It" soda pop that passes for beer, this should make you happy. "Heavy Beer" comes to the home.
This article must be in error regarding the legality of home-brewing in Kentucky.
When I lived in Lexington in the 1990's I brewed a couple of batches, and a chain of big-box stories called "Liquor Barn" even dedicated a whole aisle to home brewing and winemaking supplies.
---USAn---
Laws against home brewing are just another example of stupid laws where it almost the DUTY of a citizen to disobey.
Good for Utah! Homebrewers Unite!
I've been a homebrewer for over 10 years. I also make hard cider. I once read that John Hancock had a large glass of hard cider upon rising from bed in the morning.
Friends ask me if I can make a beer like the commercial ones. I have to tell them that as a homebrewer it is almost impossible to remove enough of the body and taste to match any of the commercial brews. Their trick is to use rice syrup or corn syrup. If you use barley syrup or whole grain mashing (the cheapest) like I do, you just have to settle for all that body and taste. Tough, huh?
In other words, you couldn't make a beer as horrid and foul tasting as most American commercial beers even if you tried to. Cool!!
d.k.shaw
Exactly!
When I first met my wfe, she didn't drink beer at all until I introduced her to homebrew and microbrew. Consquently, she likes real beer but cannot stand Budweider or other watered down standard US beer.
From this, I've concluded that, like so many American tastes (Suburbia, SUV's hollywood crap) the watered down taste of standard American beer is not at all the result of popular tastes, but rather the result of mass-marketing-indictrination. The public had to be trained to like watery beer.
And, what I find so funny is in my area is how as the the more macho and manly a guy is, the bigger their pickup truck or Harley, the more watery their tastes in beer are. Following a big TV ad-blitz, they have even abandoned the local, union made (and suitably watered-down) Iron City beer for the ultimate in tastelessness the scab-made right-wing extremist-owned, Coors Lite.
But oh! how they will insist that there is this huge difference between all these uniform-tasting, watered down products - some are denouced as undrinkable, others upheld as nectar!
Kind of reminds me of the differences between most US politicians. Miller and Budweiser? Specter(R) and Casey(D)? Same to me...
---USAn---
A friend of mine used to work at the Olympia Brewery, before Miller bought it, swindled millions from the local utility, then closed down the plant...
He told me that there were only a few recipes for the dozens of macrobrews bottled there... The exact same flavor, but with twelve different brand labels... Then distributed to the local stores, and sold for different prices...
For the amount of rice used in Budweiser, they should call it sake...
It's interesting to consider that the impending Depression will face a populace with a better quality of beer to stay drunk on. Prohibition unquestionably depressed the quality of beverage available to the average working Joe, fueling the rise of organized crime.
Legalizing and taxing pot would provide a real boost to some local revenues. Keep the taxation authority at the local level to help our communities rebuild. The coming bad times are going to inspire a lot of bong hits.
q
"I'm not comfortable with home brewing," Bell said to the Deseret News. "It seems fraught with mischief to me. Maybe I don't understand it."
priceless for its stupidity.
beer is proof that god loves us and wants us to be happy-ben franklin
I am straining to envision the mischief. Sell (or hopefully, give as a gift) a few bottles to friends? First of all, while there are molds, wild yeasts and bacteria that can make a batch of beer taste bad, nothing harmful can grow in beer. Wild yeasts and lactobacillus even define some Belgian and German beer styles.
Compare this this to the botuslsm that can grow in home-canned stuff which no one would think of outlawing.
---USAn---
Nice! I recently have begun to delve into the world of beer and so far I love it. I decided that I will only buy beer made in my state of Montana for the many obvious reasons. Having a beer and a fine smoking herb is a nice way to relax in evening after a day of tele skiing.
What does Budweiser have in common with sex in a canoe?
They're both f***ing close to water.
Long live craft beers and home brews!