Showing posts with label Brewery Visit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brewery Visit. Show all posts

December 28, 2018

2018 Year in Review: Brewery Visits

I definitely had another banner of year of visiting breweries in 2018. After making it to 54 last year, I really didn't have a goal for this year except to try to go to just as many I guess.

For the record, yes it's really nice to be married to someone who enjoys traveling as much as I do and also puts up with me going to all these breweries. Fortunately, she loves good beer also and we have a blast together. We sneak in plenty of local sights, cuisines, wineries and distilleries as well.

This year included 60 breweries in 8 states: Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, Tennessee, Georgia and North Carolina.



A made it to a few "bucket list" breweries which I hadn't been to yet, like Sierra Nevada (NC) and New Belgium (NC), and a few more recent breweries I've started to love, like Burial (NC) and Bearded Iris (TN).

Some highlights? That's a tough one. We had so much fun at so many places and really met a lot of cool folks. I'll say getting to go to Sweetwater's brewery and The Woodlands facility in Atlanta while there for 420 Fest is up at the top as well as FINALLY getting to go to Jester King in Austin, TX. And it was everything I hoped it would be. I spent plenty of time at my favorite local haunts, like Lost Forty, Flyway and Rebel Kettle plus got up to Springfield, MO on my birthday weekend to one of my favorites, Mother's Brewing.



Anyway... here's the list:


Abita Brew Pub Abita Springs, LA
Anthem Brewing Co. Oklahoma City, OK
Bhramari Brewing Asheville, NC
Big River Grille & Brewing Works Chattanooga, TN
Black Abbey Brewing Nashville, TN
Blue Canoe Brewing Co. Little Rock, AR
Blue Owl Brewing Austin, TX
Brick + Forge Harrison, AR
Bricktown Brewery Oklahoma City, OK
Brieux Carre Brewing Co. New Orleans, LA
Burial Brewing Co. Asheville, NC
Cabin Boys Tulsa, OK
Catawba Brewing Asheville, NC
Coop Ale Works Oklahoma City, OK
Courtyard Brewery New Orleans, LA
Crosstown Beer Co. Memphis, TN
Flyway North Little Rock, AR
Fort Smith Brewing Co. Fort Smith, AR
Great Raft Shreveport, LA
Green Man Brewing Asheville, NC
Hawk Moth Rogers, AR
Heaven & Ale Chattanooga, TN
Hutton & Smith Chattanooga, TN
Independence Austin, TX
Jackalope Brewing Nashville, TN
Jester King Austin, TX
Lost Forty Little Rock, AR
Lost Signal Springfield, Mo
Marshall Brewing Tulsa, OK
Mother's Brewing Co. Springfield, Mo
New Belgium Asheville, NC
New Heights Nashville, TN
Noble Rey Brewing Dallas, TX
NOLA Brewing New Orleans, LA
Oddstory Brewing Co. Chattanooga, TN
One World Brewing Asheville, NC
Pegasus City Brewing Dallas, TX
Peticolas Dallas, TX
Port Orleans New Orleans, LA
Prairie OKC Oklahoma City, OK
Prairie Tulsa Brewpub Tulsa, OK
Prestonrose Farm & Brewery Paris, AR
Rebel Kettle Brewing Co. Little Rock, AR
Rough Tail Brewing Co. Oklahoma City, OK
Sierra Nevada Asheville, NC
Springfield Brewing Co. Springfield, Mo
SQZBX Brewery Hot Springs, AR
STATS Brewpub Atlanta, GA
Stone's Throw Brewing Little Rock, AR
Superior Bathhouse Brewing Hot Springs, AR
Sweetwater Atlanta, GA
Terminal Brewhouse Chattanooga, TN
Twisted Leaf Asheville, NC
Twisted Spike Oklahoma City, OK
Urban South New Orleans, LA
Vinos Brewpub Little Rock, AR
Wedge Brewing Asheville, NC
Welltown Brewing Tulsa, OK
Wicked Weed/Funkatorium Asheville, NC
Yazoo Brewing Co. Nashville, TN

December 22, 2017

2017 Year In Review: Brewery Visits

What a year I had visiting breweries in 2017! I mean I always go to a lot of breweries, as a firm believer that the best place to get beer is from the source, but the wife and I had some great travels and hit a couple of bucket list places (Stone & Ballast Point) plus some newly opened spots. 54 in all! Some large, some small, some in big cities, some in the backwoods, scattered across 8 states: Arkansas, Tennessee, Missouri, California, Texas, Florida, Louisiana and Oklahoma.

I will add here that to me, the "definition" of a brewery visit has changed a bit with all the satellite taprooms and multiple facilities etc., but these are what I'm calling brewery visits for me. Your opinion of some may differ. It is what it is. Also, I drank a beer at all of these place. No just walking in and back out. Or drinking water. Duh.

My favorite? That's easy. We took a passenger train up the beaches of southern California to get to Stone Brewery in Escondido and drank Tangerine Express IPA out of bombers at 9am on the way there. It was a beautiful ride and it just happened to take us to one of my favorite breweries. We arrived just as the brewery opened, got a seat in the garden and enjoyed a wonderful meal paired with the release of their new beer, Ghost Hammer. What a great day.



There were so many other great visits, great beers and great times.

But I could go on, so here they all are...




Brewery Location
3rd Planet Brewing Niceville, FL
4 Hands Brewing Co. St. Louis, MO
American Solera (SoBo) Tulas, OK
Ballast Point (Little Italy) San Diego, CA
Bentonville Brewing Company Bentonville, AR
Bike Rack Brewing Company Bentonville, AR
Boulevard Brewing Co. Kansas City, MO
BrainDead Brewing Dallas, TX
Brieux Carré Brewing Company New Orleans, LA
Courtyard Brewery New Orleans, LA
Damgoode Pies Little Rock, AR
Destin Brewing Destin, FL
Diamond Bear Brewing Co North Little Rock, AR
East Nashville Beer Works Nashville, TN
Flyway Brewing Company North Little Rock, AR
Four Corners Brewing Dallas, TX
Fort Smith Brewing Co. Fort Smith, AR
Ghost River Brewing Co. Memphis, TN
Grayton Beer Company South Walton, FL
Gulf Coast Brewing Pensacola, FL
Half Door Brewing Company San Diego, CA
High Cotton Brewing Memphis, TN
Idyll Hounds Brewing Santa Rosa Beach, FL
Jackalope Brewing Company Nashville, TN
Kansas City Bier Company Kansas City, MO
Karl Strauss Brewery San Diego, CA
Knotty Barrel Brewing San Diego, CA
Lost Forty Brewing Little Rock, AR
Lost Signal Brewing Springfield, MO
Meddlesome Brewing Memphis, TN
Memphis Made Brewing Memphis, TN
Modern Times (Flavordome) San Diego, CA
Mother's Brewing Company Springfield, MO
New Province Brewing Company Rogers, AR
Nobel Rey Brewing Co. Dallas, TX
Ozark Beer Co. Rogers, AR
Pensacola Bay Brewery Pensacola, FL
Peticolas Brewing Company Dallas, TX
Prairie Brewpub Tulas, OK
Prestonrose Farm And Brewery Subiaco, AR
Props Brewery Fort Walton, FL
Rebel Kettle Brewing Co.  Little Rock, AR
Resident Brewing San Diego, CA
Southern Grist Brewing Company Nashville, TN
Stone Brewing World Bistro & Gardens Escondido, CA
Stone Brewing (Liberty Station) San Diego, CA
Stone's Throw Brewing Little Rock, AR
Superior Bathhouse Brewery Hot Springs, AR
Tailgate Brewery (Music Row) Nashville, TN
Tennessee Brew Works Nashville, TN
The Black Abbey Brewing Company Nashville, TN
Thorn Street Brewery San Diego, CA
Vino's Brewpub Little Rock, AR
Wiseacre Brewing Co. Memphis, TN

August 8, 2017

40 Breweries Visited in 2017


I added 4 more breweries to my list for 2017 this weekend while in Dallas. It's pretty easy to add notches there as breweries aren't too hard to find. I went to Peticolas, Four Corners, Nobel Rey and BrainDead without ever getting out of downtown Dallas.


I may actually make it to my goal of 50 for the year.

Here's an updated list:



Brewery Location
Bike Rack Brewing Company Bentonville, AR
Bentonville Brewing Company Bentonville, AR
Peticolas Brewing Company Dallas, TX
Four Corners Crewing Dallas, TX
Nobel Rey Brewing Co. Dallas, TX
BrainDead Brewing Dallas, TX
Stone Brewing World Bistro & Gardens Escondido, CA
Superior Bathhouse Brewery Hot Springs, AR
Boulevard Brewing Co. Kansas City, MO
Kansas City Bier Company Kansas City, MO
Rebel Kettle Brewing Co.  Little Rock, AR
Vino's Brewpub Little Rock, AR
Damgoode Pies Little Rock, AR
Stone's Throw Brewing Little Rock, AR
Lost Forty Brewing Little Rock, AR
High Cotton Brewing Memphis, TN
Ghost River Brewing Co. Memphis, TN
Memphis Made Brewing Memphis, TN
Wiseacre Brewing Co. Memphis, TN
Tailgate Brewery Music Row Nashville, TN
Southern Grist Brewing Company Nashville, TN
East Nashville Beer Works Nashville, TN
Jackalope Brewing Company Nashville, TN
The Black Abbey Brewing Company Nashville, TN
Tennessee Brew Works Nashville, TN
Courtyard Brewery New Orleans, LA
Brieux Carré Brewing Company New Orleans, LA
Flyway Brewing Company North Little Rock, AR
Ozark Beer Co. Rogers, AR
New Province Brewing Company Rogers, AR
Half Door Brewing Company San Diego, CA
Knotty Barrel Brewing San Diego, CA
Stone Brewing World Bistro Liberty Station San Diego, CA
Ballast Point Little Italy San Diego, CA
Thorn Street Brewery San Diego, CA
Modern Times Flavordome San Diego, CA
Resident Brewing San Diego, CA
Karl Strauss Brewery San Diego, CA
Mother's Brewing Company Springfield, MO
4 Hands Brewing Co. St. Louis, MO

July 27, 2017

36 Brewery Visits and Counting for 2017

One of my goals for 2017 was to visit 50 different breweries. Checking on my status so far it seems I've made it to 36, perhaps using the term "brewery" a little loosely on a couple. It's almost hard to say anymore with all the satellite taprooms and such, but if a place is brewing beer I call it a brewery. Anyway, it's not exactly a scientific study so whatevs, just roll with it.

But my 36 so far are from across the country, with stops in Missouri, Tennessee, California and Louisiana as well as my home base in Arkansas. I do have trips to Florida and Texas in the next few months so 50 may not be out of the question.

Here's my list I've compiled with the help of Untappd, included with the last time I visited them. Some of these I've obviously been to a lot more than once this year.


Brewery Location Last Visit
Rebel Kettle Brewing Co.  Little Rock, AR 16-Jul
Vino's Brewpub Little Rock, AR 15-Jul
Flyway Brewing Company North Little Rock, AR 10-Jul
4 Hands Brewing Co. St. Louis, MO 4-Jul
Boulevard Brewing Co. Kansas City, MO 3-Jul
Kansas City Bier Company Kansas City, MO 2-Jul
Bike Rack Brewing Company Bentonville, AR 1-Jul
Bentonville Brewing Company Bentonville, AR 1-Jul
Ozark Beer Co. Rogers, AR 1-Jul
New Province Brewing Company Rogers, AR 1-Jul
Damgoode Pies Little Rock, AR 6-Jun
Stone's Throw Brewing Little Rock, AR 16-Jun
Half Door Brewing Company San Diego, CA 28-May
Knotty Barrel Brewing San Diego, CA 28-May
Stone Brewing World Bistro Liberty Station San Diego, CA 28-May
Ballast Point Little Italy San Diego, CA 27-May
Stone Brewing World Bistro & Gardens Escondido, CA 27-May
Thorn Street Brewery San Diego, CA 26-May
Modern Times Flavordome San Diego, CA 26-May
Resident Brewing San Diego, CA 25-May
Karl Strauss Brewery San Diego, CA 25-May
Lost Forty Brewing Little Rock, AR 1-May
Courtyard Brewery New Orleans, LA 13-Apr
Brieux Carré Brewing Company New Orleans, LA 13-Apr
Superior Bathhouse Brewery Hot Springs, AR 25-Mar
Tailgate Brewery Music Row Nashville, TN 19-Feb
Southern Grist Brewing Company Nashville, TN 19-Feb
East Nashville Beer Works Nashville, TN 19-Feb
Jackalope Brewing Company Nashville, TN 19-Feb
The Black Abbey Brewing Company Nashville, TN 19-Feb
Tennessee Brew Works Nashville, TN 18-Feb
Mother's Brewing Company Springfield, MO 16-Jan
High Cotton Brewing Memphis, TN 14-Jan
Ghost River Brewing Co. Memphis, TN 14-Jan
Memphis Made Brewing Memphis, TN 14-Jan
Wiseacre Brewing Co. Memphis, TN 14-Jan

February 5, 2015

2015 Brewery Tour Rolls On

While I'm nowhere near on the level with beer gods like Brew Travelers, I do visit a lot of breweries during the year. Punxatawney Phil has just made his appearance and I've already been to 9 this year in 3 different states, with more on the upcoming schedule. My recent trip to Memphis this past weekend added 3 more to my list, and I've got Fort Worth in the sights for a few more.

Here's where I've been so far in 2015:

  • Diamond Bear (North Little Rock, AR)
  • Vinos Brewpub (Little Rock, AR)
  • Stone's Throw Brewing (Little Rock, AR)
  • Lost Forty Brewing (Little Rock, AR)
  • Blue Canoe Brewing (Little Rock, AR)
  • Marshall Brewing Companay (Tulsa, OK)
  • Wiseacre Brewing Company (Memphis, TN)
  • Memphis Made Brewing (Memphis, TN)
  • High Cotton Brewing (Memphis, TN)
I love all my local breweries and pretty much a week doesn't go by that I'm not in at least one of them, but it's really become something fun to do when traveling as well. Lucky for me, my wife is also a craft beer lover so we really enjoy the road trips. At some point I need to go back and count how many I visited last year, but I'm going to do a better job of documenting this year's breweries. Hopefully I'll be adding Martin House (Fort Worth, TX), Rahr & Sons (Fort Worth, TX) and Pecan Point Brewing (Texarkana, TX) next weekend.

Here's a few pics from the past weekend :

My favorite Memphis brewery currently.

First visit to Wiseacre Brewing and found it to be a fantastic place.

Barrel room at High Cotton Brewing.

High Cotton Taproom

High Cotton Brewing

Memphis Made Brewing Company

July 12, 2014

A Visit To Charleville Vineyard & Microbrewery

On the way home from St. Louis last weekend we stopped by a brewery that I've been a pretty big fan of since they started distributing in our area over a year ago. And if you like your breweries in the middle of the wilderness, then maybe a visit to Charleville Vineyard and Microbrewery is for you also. We got off I-55 and visited the beautiful town of St. Genevieve, Mo before following the website directions through the winding hills to the brewery. I recommend using their directions as my Garmin was leading us to who knows where, but I swear I heard "Dueling Banjos" at one point before giving up on it. But finally, on top of a hill, at the end of a gravel road and surrounded by gorgeous vineyards, I got to visit where El Mucho Hoppo and Whiskey Scented Santa and all their wonderful liquid friends are created.

It's several buildings in all, log cabin style, in sort of a little village type setting. We got there a little before they actually opened at 11am on a Sunday but it didn't seem to matter, we were welcomed into the huge gift shop and tasting room and I began sampling beers right away. I tried a couple that I haven't tried yet, the 2014 Barley Wine (wonderful) and their Coffee Stout (wonderful + 1). My wife wasted no time getting a wine sampler as well, and I sipped a few of these too and realized that I like their wine about as much as their beer. We brought home 2 bottles of wine (2008 St. Vion and 2009 Estate Norton), a growler full of the Coffee Stout and a 4-pack with 2 bottles each of 2013 Barley Wine and 2014 Barley Wine. I also picked up a nice growler koozy and a t-shirt of my favorite brew of theirs, El Mucho Hoppo.

There's a bed & breakfast on site with 2 bedrooms and as soon as we saw the big back porch overlooking the beautiful hills, we decided we'd be back to stay for a weekend. A still smouldering fire pit from the previous night made me wish we'd been there to sit around it sipping more of their beers and wines. Soon!

They're in the process of building a new, much larger, brew house and said it might be done as early as this October.

So anyway, it's a fantastic brewery to add to your visit list and since a picture is worth a thousand words, I'll shut up and post some.


So worth the trip off the main road

Beautiful views all around

Tap room selections

A beautiful site indeed

An inviting view to the patio

The new, much larger, brewhouse is almost finished

This is the bed and breakfast, which accommodates 2 couples

The current brewhouse

My short-lived 2014 Barley Wine sample

The tap room and gift shop

I can have a few with this view I think
Got a bit to go of course

July 10, 2014

A Quick Visit To Alpha Brewing

The wife and I visited one of my favorite cities, St Louis, over the 4th of July weekend to take in a couple of Cardinal's games and some local flavor. It was my first trip there in almost 5 years, after going up almost every Summer for at least a weekend series for a decade. A lot has changed, especially in their beer scene. It seems there are new breweries popping up all over, like a lot of American cities now. We hit a few, but it became pretty apparent I need to get back up there much more often and see some more.

First up was Alpha Brewing, a microbrewery and taproom downtown (1409 Washington Ave Rear). I had their Berlinerweisse, which they add raspberry syrup to. It sweetens up what is a nice, clean, tart easy drinker. Very nice. They tapped a cask of their Storter (malty, dark chocolate) with mustard seeds added, which was very interesting, and my wife had the Pacific Gem, a nice IPA made with an experimental New Zealand hop. I also brought home a bottle of their coffee beer, Kofe Karmel, which I'll be digging into soon.

All in all a pretty cool place. Nice set-up, good beer, nice people. Recommended. I hope to get to stay a bit longer on my next visit.

Here's a few pics:

Patio seating at Alpha Brewing

Tap wall, all house brews

A beautiful Berlinerweise

Sipsters are a club of their regular patrons

Cool artwork at Alpha Brewing
We'll definitely be back to Alpha Brewing

May 19, 2014

Fayetteville Ale Trail All In A Day's Work

Trust me, there are several problems with trying to visit 8 breweries in 1 day and document it along the way. The biggest is that by the end, I was just totally forgetting to snap photos and even checked a beer into the wrong location on Untappd. Wonder why? Sober driving friends and taxis are very handy and we even walked the last few. Well, sort of walked.

All in all it was a spectacular day though. I'll be back soon to do it over a more spread out weekend, and give things a proper write-up. I promise.

But for our 1 day adventure we started at at new kid on the block Ozark Brewing (which I LOVED), then hit Apple Blossom for wonderful lunch, then Saddlebock for a guided tour by Steve Rehbock which was just fantastic. After then checking in to the hotel and chugging quite a bit of water during a 90-minute beer break, we were off too Core Brewing where Jesse and Jonas gave us another fantastic tour of the new facility and taproom (new to us), then off to Fossil Cove. Next was Tanglewood for dinner and finally finishing with West Mountain and Hog Haus. Just for good measure we hit Sideways for a Mother's beer on the way to the hotel.

Whew.

Here's some pics I did remember to take. Too many tales to share, just know that the Northwest Arkansas brewing scene is kicking ass right now. Great people everywhere, great beer easy to find. I'll be back in June.

Cans for American Pale Ale at Ozark Brewing.

Ozark Brewing taproom.

Selections at Ozark Brewing.

Ozark Brewing

Apple Blossom Brewing



Saddlebock Brewing

Saddlebock taproom

On the deck at Saddlebock

Future plans for Core Brewing's offsite taproom

Selections at Core Brewing taproom

Core Brewing


Core Brewing

Fossil Cove

Tanglewood Brewing

March 9, 2014

A Visit With Flyway Brewing's Matt Foster

Flyway Brewing is a brewery here in Little Rock and if you've never visited their blog, I'd like to now suggest that you do that. I could go over how they got started and where their name came from and so-on-and-so-forth, but trust me, the blog is simply fantastic and full of great stories from their short history. Go ahead and read it (and bookmark it while you're there) and I'll wait here.

http://flywaybrewing.blogspot.com/

You're back? OK good. Then you now know that Matt Foster is the man behind Flyway, who is trying to get things up and running (or flying) while also balancing a full time job as a high school teacher (and husband, and father). He's a man with a passion for beer and a goal for making and sharing great beer. He's also just a genuinely nice guy.

The facility is a modest one, which doubles as the home of Little Rock's own fantastic Loblolly Creamery during the day. They share the kitchen and freezer and shelf space and Matt was kind enough to show me around and tell me a bit about his plans and what's coming up.

Arkansas Beer Scene: So what's the history of this place? A former bar?

Matt: This place was called The Flaming Arrow and it's an old restaurant apparently from the 70s and 80s. One of my good friends had her wedding reception here and a lot of big movers and shakers used to hang out down here, including Bill Clinton. Rumor has that this is where he met Gennifer Flowers and she might used to have lived in this building. Check on that one, but apparently some of the residents remember seeing him in the hallways.

ABS: Ole Slick Willy might have slept here? Great! Some history! Now you share this with Loblolly Creamery?

Matt: Yes. They've been extremely generous to me and made it possible for me to become a legal Arkansas native brewer.

ABS: And this building is where you plan on staying?

Matt: Yes, staying here indefinitely. I do have plans to move and get my own space in here in some business planning phases, working with the Arkansas Small Business Technology Development Center at UALR, something I can take to bankers and investors to get my own business loan and be able to get some more space and reasonable equipment.

ABS: What is your brewing capacity now?

Matt: It's the SABCO Brew Magic and it's a half-barrel brewing system. It's either a fancy home-brewing system or a great pilot brewing system, there are several ways of looking at it I guess. Maybe famous because Sam Calagione at Dogfish Head started on a Brew Magic as one of it's claims to fame. Piney River started on a Brew Magic too.

ABS: Piney is one of my favorites!

Matt: It's a long list actually. It's because it's affordable and allows you to control a lot of variables and create a really consistent and repeatable product. When somebody goes somewhere and gets your product you want it to all be the same.

ABS: Speaking of getting your product, where all are your beers now?

Matt: Since October I've had a permanent tap at South on Main, rolling out the Free Range Brown Ale. I've had a rotating tap at Superior Bathhouse in Hot Springs. The only other place, besides special events, so far was the collaboration with Rebel Kettle at Big Orange for Christmas.

ABS: Are you trying to expand to more right now?

Matt: No. That's a good question, but I'm pulled in so many directions and have turned my attention to more planning I'm actually going to scale back a little bit and brew less often with more variety. I feel like the Free Range Brown recipe is nailed down. I'll have it at Food and Foam Fest (April) and I think it's the best it's been. It's very approachable and it's a good gateway type beer.

ABS: It's very accessible and easy-to-drink for sure. Very sessionable. So this is your "staple" we'll say, or flagship at this point. What other beers do you have coming up?

Matt: I have another recipe for a "drinker" I'll call it. If Free Range is approachable then Migrate Ale I want to be known as "drinkable". It's a pale ale. I use some two-row barley malts, a little bit of wheat and some Northern Brewer and locally grown Dunbar Cascade hops. I'm proud to say that every batch of beer I've made and served in public has used some locally grown hops. We've gone out and hand-picked the hops ourselves, someone from Dunbar or one of us. I've got a freezer full of them. I may not always be able to do that but because of the size so far I can. I want to source more and more ingredients from Arkansas.



ABS: I saw on your website a Shadow Hands Stout coming up?

Matt: Yeah, definitely, that's part of the plan where I'm going to stop making as much Free Range. South On Main alone keeps me brewing that as I can make just enough Free Range to keep that tap up. That's a good problem to have. The Shadow Hands I have been working on for a while, it's inspired by coffee cake, sort of a coffee cake stout. I have a good brewing buddy that came up with it with me.

ABS: So where might we see these?

Matt: Migrate Ale will be at Food and Foam Fest. I'm going to start rotating a lot more often after that. South On Main has agreed to rotate so they'll have more variety too.

ABS: I love the Shadow Hands Stout label for the record.

Matt: A girl named Jennifer Perren, who graduated from Central High here, she's a senior art major at UALR and just the most talented artist. The original is actually an etching. She did the Free Range label too. She's so talented. There's no label for the Migrate Ale yet but I have tattoo artist here in town working on that one as we speak.

ABS: I hear you talk a lot about organic, you're big on that.

Matt: I feel strongly about organic and I really believe in organic farming practices, I'm not a fan of industrial farming. I'm a proud environmentalist. If I'm going to be making large quantities of beer I want to support things I believe in, you know? I think organic farming is cleaner. I think I'll have a line of beers that are organic, may have to be a little more expensive, and then a line of beers that aren't all organic. I also want to support the Arkansas Native Beer Project, it's something I'm probably the most excited about. It's something we conceived of a while back (ed. note: read the blog!). As recent as the late 50s barley was the number 2 or 3 cash crop in Arkansas. It was grown mainly as a feed crop for livestock. I wanted to grow it here. Now we've got barley growing at Dunbar Community Garden on Chester. We have other varieties growing at Victory Garden, 12th and Oak Street Garden, Laughing Stock Farm, and on research land at the U of A Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service. We hope to harvest a couple of tons of barley, and when we do we'll malt it and make the first Arkansas Native Beer. An acre of barley will yield like 2 to 4 tons if I remember correctly. We planted about 150 lbs. so we're talking like 6 tons of barley. That's a lot of barley. I'm going to play around with malting the barley, mash it, boil it, brew it, hop it, ferment it, carbonate it, keg it... the first Arkansas native beer.

ABS: I love it!

Matt: It's going to be a long process, it's going to take years. But so worth it.

ABS: So where do you see yourself in a year from now with Flyway Brewing?

Matt: I'm learning so much. I'm still making mistakes, but I'm learning a lot about brewing and business. It's paying for itself, but I'm not making a living with it. But if going to do this I feel I need to set myself to be successful with my equipment and location. Get a storefront that will enrich my community, put in a brewpub and brewhouse. Be able to make a modest living. Everybody isn't going to be Founders or Dogfish Head you know, but you can make a living doing it the right way. The next year is going to be big. I'm going to try to do it the right way. I'd really like a larger brewing system that can support the business, but on a reasonable scale. I think I see exciting things happening in the next year. I think the scene here is right, in Little Rock and South Main.

ABS: I'll sure be pulling for you. Thanks so much for your time Matt!