Craft Beer Lifestyle Blog

Tag: craft beer lifestyle (Page 1 of 3)

Lot 30 Brewers

Lot 30 Brewers.
Lot 30 Brewers.

Better and different…

“It’s a lifestyle that’s suitable for any small entrepreneur getting into a product that’s not fully mainstream, or different than the mainstream,” Darrin Earley, owner of Lot 30 Brewers, began when I asked him what a ‘craft beer lifestyle’ might be.

Sitting at a long, copper-coloured high-top table in the middle of the brewpub, with brewmaster, Anderson Sant’anna de Lima joining us, Darrin continued, “It’s focused on trying to make something better and different, while at the same time trying to make a living from it – which is probably the hardest part about a craft beer lifestyle.”

That statement produced a chuckle from the three of us.

“It’s infiltrated everywhere though,” Darrin went on, “Everywhere now seems to have some craft beer on tap. There is a lifestyle, and, I guess, it’s started to reach the more mainstream – at one point you needed to search for it, now you can stumble upon it seemingly everywhere.

“But you have to have a passion for the product and for working with people – and a lot of work – in order to get your different, hopefully better product into the mainstream.”

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Longslice Brewery

The Longslice Brewery sign hangs above the entrance to the brewery side of the operation in the Canary District.
The Longslice Brewery sign hangs above the entrance to the brewery side of the operation in the Canary District.

Bringing the community…

With the Jays game playing on the TVs above the bar, I sat with Jimmy Peat, co-owner of Longslice Brewery, in the Aviary, the brewery’s brewpub. I asked him what he thought a ‘craft beer lifestyle’ might be.

“It’s a sense of community,” he quickly remarked. “You get to know a craft beer community that is really inclusive, but also peeps in your own neighbourhood, which is awesome. It really brings everyone together, I think.

“But it’s equally about a move to supporting local and increasing variety, which stimulates the local economy – and knowing who made the beer: being able to discuss that and learn about what you’re really drinking is super cool…

“It’s dope to have access to cases of beer for house parties too,” he finished with a grin.

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Black Lab Brewing Inc.

The Black Lab Brewing Sign above the entrance to the brewery.
The Black Lab Brewing Sign above the entrance to the brewery.

Able to let loose…

In a packed (with humans and dogs alike) tap room on a Saturday afternoon, I sat at a high top table with Billy Madden, co-owner of Black Lab Brewing Inc. I asked him what he thought a ‘craft beer lifestyle’ might be.

“It’s hard to describe a feeling,” he began. “It’s hard-working, yet easy-going – like a 1940’s mentality or something. It’s charitable and focuses on local, while being artistic and creative. The culture is one that also a strives for high quality, but without being snobby.”

He returned to how he began: “I guess that craft beer feeling is really a sense of inclusion, of wanting to share the experience with others. And with others, I think a craft beer lifestyle is one that is able to let loose and enjoy life.”

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Big Rock Brewery

The storefront of the Big Rock Brewery brewpub in Liberty Commons, Toronto.
The storefront of the Big Rock Brewery brewpub in Liberty Commons, Toronto.

Wanting something different…

Sitting with Bryan Woods from Big Rock Brewery in the restaurant portion of the their brewpub in Liberty Commons, Toronto, I questioned him on what “craft beer lifestyle” might mean to him. “It’s about avoiding pretentiousness and finding out for yourself what you like. It’s wanting something different, and something that’s produced by the ‘little guy,'” he responded.

“One engages a craft beer lifestyle when they want to support something different than the usual – and this is exactly how Big Rock Brewery began: wanting something different from the norm.”

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