beer [bɪə] n 1. (Miscellaneous Technologies / Brewing) an alcoholic drink brewed from malt, sugar,

beer [bɪə] n 1. (Miscellaneous Technologies / Brewing) an alcoholic drink brewed from malt, sugar,
Showing posts with label At the Ale Beer Blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label At the Ale Beer Blog. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Growlers: a sidenote within a subculture

The Growler
(or 'flaggin' as my British co-worker refers to.)
My wife and I recently moved into a new rental and I found a growler in the fridge. This prime piece of real estate (the growler I mean) was the excuse I was looking for to get started in the world of growler refills. Over the past few years I have become increasingly dependent and trusting on bottled beer. Getting excited about beers on draft seemed amateurish to me; there were just too many variables with draft that I did not want to deal with. Buying draft was something you did because the bar had a special on it.

I knew that growlers were popular to collect and refill. Someone, in my mind, who was religious about getting a growler filled probably was more into growler culture than they were beer culture. Novelty and inconvenience came together and I decided I was not interested. Given the choice between Sierra Nevada Pale on draft and in a bottle, I would always choose the bottle for taking home.

Since a couple of years ago in Nashville the local beer scene has exploded and growlers have become a convenient medium to support local business. Many young breweries cannot afford to bottle which limits their availability to bars and consumption at the brewery. With a strong undercurrent of growler buyers and a renewed interest in buying local smalltime breweries can distribute to a wider audience.

I have been to Craft Brewed and Woody's in Franklin so far to get my new growler refilled. I have gotten the beer to last a couple of days and I have not found myself rushed to finish the beer before it expires. The average size of a growler is $10 and Craft Brewed offers a wide selection and a free growler with the first fill. Woody's has a better price on refills 8$ and allows you to drink the beer on their porch--they also keep at least two local beers on tap at a time. Craft Brewed cannot by law allow customers to drink out of growlers on premise in their beautiful new beer-garden and deck. They can sell you a pint and you can drink that on premise.

I had mine filled at Craft Brewed with Jackalope Rompo Red (pictured above) and am currently very pleased.

In Tennessee you can get fined for an open container in your car. I err on the side of caution and have the business wrap my growler in tape or with a sign and a receipt and just take it home in the back-seat or in the trunk.

A full growler is a great house warming gift and a good size for parties or a casual get-together. I look forward to more refills and taking more local beers home to be enjoyed with a book or with friends.

--AS