• The Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Back Issues
    • Features
      • Brewing
      • People
      • Culture
      • History
      • Food
      • Travel
      • Styles
      • Homebrewing
    • Departments
      • Coming Soon
      • Columns
        • Visiting the Pub
        • Behind the Bar
        • It’s My Round
        • The Beer Enthusiast
        • The Beer Curmudgeon
        • In The Brewhouse
        • Michael Jackson
        • The Taster
        • Beyond Beer
        • Your Next Beer
        • Industry Insights
      • What’s Brewing
      • Pull Up A Stool
      • Travel
        • Beer Travelers
        • A Closer Look
        • Beer Weekend
      • Stylistically Speaking
      • Home Brewing
      • Beer Talk
      • Beer Books
  • Events
    • World Beer Festival Raleigh – July 7, 2018
    • World Beer Festival Durham – Oct. 6, 2018
    • World Beer Festival Columbia – Feb. 17, 2018
    • Event Calendar
    • Brewery Tastings & Events
    • Beer Explorer
  • Reviews
    • Staff Reviews
    • Beer Talk
    • Flights
    • Book Reviews
  • Learn
    • What is Beer?
      • Water
      • Malt
      • Hops
      • Yeast
    • Styles
      • Lagers
      • British and North American Ales
      • Belgian and Continental Ales
      • Wheat Ales
      • Stouts and Porters
      • Seasonal and Specialty
    • Glossary
  • News
    • New on the Shelves
  • Web Only
    • Blogs
      • Daniel Bradford
      • John Holl
      • Acitelli on History
      • The Beer Bible Blog
      • Bryson
    • Video
    • Photos
    • Podcasts
Menu
logo
  • Advertise with Us
  • Subscriber Services
  • Retailer Services
Give a Gift Subscribe

When Beer Really Took Off

All About Beer Magazine - Volume , Issue
August 5, 2014
Tom Acitelli

airplane beer

Dale’s Pale Ale from Oskar Blues Brewery has been available on Frontier Airlines for more than 10 years.

In the fall of 2002, the five-year-old Oskar Blues Brewery out of tiny Lyons, CO, decided to can rather than bottle its beers for retail sale. It became, then, America’s first independently owned, smaller-scale brewery to can its beers in-house. (Others had done it under contract at other breweries, starting as far back as the early 1990s.)

Shortly before Christmas that same year, Denver-based Frontier Airlines, itself dating from the mid-1990s (1994, to be exact), announced that it would be selling Oskar Blues on its flights, particularly the brewery’s beloved Dale’s Pale Ale, which founder Dale Katechis had devised in part through homebrewed batches in his bathtub.

This partnership opened up an ongoing trend of choice for consumers, something to be grateful for this vacation season.

Dale’s Pale Ale can still be found on Frontier Airlines as can Fat Tire Amber Ale from New Belgium Brewing Co., another Colorado-based concern and one of myriad smaller brands to follow the moves of Oskar Blues and others into the friendly skies.

Fat Tire Frontier Airlines

Beer from New Belgium Brewing Co. is available on Frontier Airlines, Southwest Airlines and AirTran Airlines.

Continental Airlines once carried Pete’s Summer Ale from the old Pete’s Brewing Co. in the late 1990s, and Northwest Airlines, now a part of Delta, carried beers from the James Page Brewing Co., the defunct contract operation, around the same time. Currently, Virgin America carries beers from 21st Amendment Brewery; Hawaiian Airlines serves beers from Maui Brewing Co.; and Alaska Airlines offers beers from Alaskan Brewing Co.. New Belgium is also on Southwest Airlines and AirTran Airlines; and Delta Air Lines carries SweetWater Brewing Co., a move announced only this spring. (If I’m missing any, let me know.)

Napa Valley

Delta started carrying beers from SweetWater Brewing Co. on select flights this spring. Photo courtesy Iain Bagwell Photography.

Also, while the canning of beers from smaller breweries certainly helped this aeronautical trend along (cans are lighter than glass bottles and easier to store), it was not essential.

Take the Boston Beer Co. In mid-2008, the Delta Shuttle between New York and—where else?—Boston started offering Samuel Adams Boston Lager in good, old-fashioned bottles. In the summer of 2013, Boston Beer and JetBlue announced a partnership to bring the newly canned Sam Adams on board.

Read more Acitelli on History posts.

Tom Acitelli is the author of The Audacity of Hops: The History of America’s Craft Beer Revolution. Reach him on Twitter @tomacitelli.

3 Comments
  • Wade Wallinger says:
    August 5, 2014 at 10:54 pm

    United is now carrying Urban 312

    Reply
  • Randy P. says:
    January 24, 2015 at 6:57 pm

    Good article. One possibility to add, and perhaps it was not craft beer, is that Northwest Airlines had canned Augsberger in 1994 (http://www.thefreelibrary.com/AUGSBURGER+SEASONALS+BECOME+FIRST+OFFERED+ON+NORTHWEST+AIRLINES-a015269607). I enjoyed the double bock.

    Reply
  • Tim says:
    January 27, 2015 at 11:18 am

    Alaska Airlines doesn’t just serve beers from Alaskan Brewing Co. They rotate beers from all over the NW and Alaska. One of the reason it’s hands down my favorite airline.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow @allaboutbeer

Beer in your inbox

More Like This

  • Stone Releases Stone Go To IPA
  • Recalling Beer’s Stock-Offering Wave 20 Years Ago
  • Night Train to Lublin Export Lager

Most Popular

  • All About Beer to Acquire Draft Publishing LLC
  • Funky Buddha Sweet Potato Casserole Strong Ale Arrives Sept. 1

The Magazine

  • Advertise with Us
  • Subscribe
  • Give a Gift
  • Staff
  • Subscriber Services
  • Retailer Services

Learn Beer

  • Reviews
  • Back Issues
  • Articles
  • Writer Guidelines
  • Internship Program

Events

  • World Beer Festival
  • Craft Beer Events
  • News

All About Beer

  • P.O. Box 110346
  • Durham, NC 27709
  • CONTACT