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Brewing Features

10 of the Country’s Most Interesting Breweries

All About Beer Magazine - Volume 37, Issue 6
February 27, 2017 By aab

Ale Apothecary Tasting Room photo by Patrick Weishampel

(Photo by Patrick Weishampel)

The Ale Apothecary
Bend, Oregon

Barrel programs are common at breweries across the country these days, with all kinds of beer resting and aging inside the wooden vessels.

Then there’s The Ale Apothecary, which actually brews all its beer in them. From mash-in to bottling, beer made by Paul Arney spends little of its 14-to-18-month journey not touching wood, including about three hours in a copper boil kettle and a few days resting in a stainless steel tank before being hand-packaged in 750-mL glass bottles. Along the way, beer is made in a variety of personalized creations, including two oak barrel mash tuns. For Arney’s Sahati beer, he also uses a lauter tun made from a 200-year-old spruce tree with branches as a filter bed.

“The first thing people often ask when they meet me is if I’m the dude that ferments in a tree,” Arney jokes. There’s a fitting truth to it, however. His brewery is located just outside Bend, Oregon, on the footprint of the Deschutes National Forest.

Ale Apothecary family photo by Patrick Weishampel

(Photo by Patrick Weishampel)

Each batch of beer takes about 40 hours to brew, from grinding the grain to pitching yeast, every step focused on the intimacy of the manual labor involved. Arney starts at 4 or 5 p.m. one day and will let his wort sit for 12 hours before it goes into open fermentation the next day in oak puncheons or a Douglas fir tank. It then rests for more than a year in one of 120 barrels, each bearing the first name of a person who has influenced Arney or his family over the years.

“Patience is a value I hold pretty dear,” Arney says. “I don’t want to let go of what the word ‘craft’ means.” –Bryan Roth

10 of the country’s most interesting breweries.

Pages:Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11Next

6 Comments
  • Anne Reed says:
    February 28, 2017 at 8:09 pm

    Norey’s, Newport RI has OEC on tap on a regular basis. Right now Plumtastic is on tap. It is rare to find OEC on tap outside the brewery. If you are in Southern New England, stop by. Look for a Tap Takeover featuring OEC this summer. http://www.noreys.com/craft-beer-bar-newport-rhode-island/

    Reply
  • Nic Dacey says:
    March 1, 2017 at 11:48 am

    You should probably change that caption on the OEC pic to Tony Pellino, OEC’s master beer snob 😉

    Reply
    • Daniel Hartis says:
      March 1, 2017 at 1:44 pm

      Our mistake, Nic. Thank you for letting us know!

      Daniel Hartis
      Digital Manager
      All About Beer Magazine

      Reply
  • Mike Egan says:
    March 3, 2017 at 7:30 am

    I know it’s difficult to name every brewery,
    when compiling a ten best anything. Yet, you omitted one excellent local brewery in “Mad Tree Brewery”, in Cincinnati.

    Reply
  • Ben B says:
    March 6, 2017 at 1:22 pm

    OEC!! TONY PELLINO!!!!!

    Reply
  • Anonymous Person from FL says:
    March 6, 2017 at 10:53 pm

    Cigar City Brewery top 10 interesting places??? Are you kidding me their service Sucks yes with capital S, avoid at all costs.

    Reply

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