Episodes

  • Episode 210: Benchmarking Sustainability
    Jun 9 2025
    3 different perspectives from breweries large & small. You'll hear about the BA's Benchmarking tool, other resources to support your sustainability journey, and how to take some baby steps if you haven't made any progress yet. Special Guests: Charlie Hoxmeier, Hannah Johnson, and Lizzy Waters.
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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Episode 335: RVA
    Jun 2 2025
    Should you be paying more attention to fermentable sugars instead of total extract? Special Guest: Trevor Cowley.
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    32 mins
  • Episode 203: Cloudy with a Chance of Production
    May 26 2025
    Our friends at Highland Brewing talk about the network of people, tools, forecasts, and workflows that build their production schedule. Special Guests: Abbey Temoshchuk Reynolds and Matt McComish.
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    51 mins
  • Episode 334: Haná
    May 19 2025
    What happens when you resurrect an old world landrace barley variety and give it to a bunch of brewers in CA? Special Guests: Colin Johnston and Josh Wurzbacher.
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    49 mins
  • Episode 207: Spent Hops Disposal Dilemma
    May 12 2025
    How The Matt Brewing Company deals spent hop material & other things you wish you knew before you built a brewery. Special Guest: Jim Kuhr.
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    44 mins
  • Episode 333: Six Irish Brewing Yeasts
    May 5 2025
    Effects of regional location on the genotype and phenotype of historical Irish brewing yeast Special Guest: Daniel Kerruish.
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    33 mins
  • Episode 216: Profiling 34/70
    Apr 28 2025
    What happens the world's most popular yeast strain gets fermented at different temperatures and pitch rates? Special Guest: Anne Flesch.
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    43 mins
  • Episode 332: Substitutes for the Substitutes of the Substitutes
    Apr 21 2025
    The last of the three-part series of Technical Quarterly articles providing insights to the upcoming MBAA publication The Inspiring and Surprising History and Legacy of American Lager Beer: 1941–1948, the focus of this paper is a review of the American brewing industry during the tumultuous years of World War II (1941–1945) and those immediately following in support of global famine relief (1946–1948). This is perhaps the most remarkable 7 year period ever in the history of the American brewing industry, with production rising by just over 36 million barrels of beer—a staggering increase of 65.3%. While the beer before and after this period was very similar, the beer in between was anything but. Surprisingly, the brewing materials that were scarcest during this period were rice and especially corn-based adjuncts, not malt. But perhaps the greatest surprise of all was that the beer fueling the explosive growth was a significantly lighter, lower original gravity, and lower malt-to-adjunct ratio beer. Indeed, for a time during 1945, the industry's overall use of adjuncts exceeded 50%. A stunning array of materials—many never used prior or since—were employed to brew America's adjunct lager beer. Included in the “adjunct potpourri" were an astounding 141.5 million pounds of cassava products (e.g., manioc and tapioca) and 12.8 million pounds of potatoes. Surprisingly, however, both were first used after World War II, during the Relief years, triggered by federal mandates restricting the use of rice and corn in brewing. All material restrictions lifted in the summer of 1948, and supplies of all brewing materials returned to pre-war levels, but few in the industry could ignore that the lighter lager of the war and famine years had triggered a profound upward step-shift in sales. In the decades that followed, annual industry volume remained largely static, even declining on a per capita basis. Not until 1964 would the industry finally reach 100 million barrels of domestic production, followed in 1970 by the surpassing of the post-Prohibition per capita record of 1948. Buoyed by the 1973–1982 introduction of the modern 100 calorie light adjunct lagers, new records were subsequently set with per capita consumption of domestically produced beer reaching 26.17 gallons in 1981 and domestic production of 203,658,410 barrels in 1990, records that still stand. However, despite the phenomenal growth experienced by the American craft brewing industry over the past 30 years, by 2019 overall industry performance against per capita and annual domestic production metrics has declined by 9.26 gallons and 24.6 million barrels of beer, respectively. Insights to spur 21st century growth, for both macro and craft brewers alike, can be found in the lessons of the past. Special Guest: Greg Casey.
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    59 mins