• 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

All About Beer Magazine January 2017 Issue

Volume: 37 - Issue: 6

Issue Title

Features

Foreign Exchange: American Beer Styles, Brands Capture Attention of Drinkers Abroad
Brewing Features

Foreign Exchange: American Beer Styles, Brands Capture Attention of Drinkers Abroad

by Bryan Roth

Ben Beinhardt has lived in Germany all his life, surrounded by hundreds of years of brewing tradition and some of the most iconic brands the world has known. He still fondly recalls his first Ayinger Celebrator Doppelbock, made at a brewery that’s been around since 1877, and his excitement at drinking a beer steeped in... View Article

The Perfect Address: Breweries Passing Along Buildings Makes Opening, Scaling, and Creating Communities Easier
Brewing Features

The Perfect Address: Breweries Passing Along Buildings Makes Opening, Scaling, and Creating Communities Easier

by Sarah Annese

Imagine starting a brewery on a shoestring, cobbling together a small system, making just one barrel of beer at a time. Then, after working tirelessly to reach a point where demand exceeds capacity, miraculously being able to move into a new location already outfitted with the exact equipment needed to expand. Improbable? Not quite. In... View Article

10 of the Country’s Most Interesting Breweries
Brewing Features

10 of the Country’s Most Interesting Breweries

by - -

How does a brewery stand out in the market these days? First, the beer needs to be unimpeachable. Second, there needs to be an ethos followed, a commitment to practices combined with that je ne sais quoi. So we asked a simple question of brewers, magazine contributors and fellow drinkers: Name a brewery doing interesting... View Article

Vietnamese Sirloin Beef Sandwich on Rosemary Potato Bread
Chefs' Pairings - Food

Vietnamese Sirloin Beef Sandwich on Rosemary Potato Bread

by Patrick Feury

This is a sandwich that has it all. The sweet, hot, sour, garlic and umami ingredients in the vinaigrette atop this sandwich make a perfect ally for mint-infused beers. The cool crunch from the vegetables with the combination of the herbs creates unparalleled freshness. And, of course, the warm sirloin with the rosemary potato bread... View Article

Ralph Steadman: Flying Dog Artist and First Amendment Crusader
People Features

Ralph Steadman: Flying Dog Artist and First Amendment Crusader

by Nate Schweber

It is good to see Ralph Steadman in America. Because had the venerated painter of beautiful grotesqueries made good on his threat to never return, the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution would be weaker for it. In the early 1970s the Englishman Steadman, now the go-to artist for Flying Dog Brewery, found himself in... View Article

The Bittersweet Taste of Tradition
Culture

The Bittersweet Taste of Tradition

by Randy Mosher

Tradition is everywhere in the world of beer, from the labels to the glassware to the names and the whole of the beer experience, including the beer itself and the many ways we consume it. Of all the things you might find on a store shelf, beer is among the most tradition-drenched. As beloved as... View Article

Ultra Rare Unless You’re There
Culture

Ultra Rare Unless You’re There

by Brian Yaeger

Beer educator and Beer Judge Certification Program master judge Bill Schneller isn’t at Widmer Brothers Brewing for the Soursop Hefeweizen or Wit Noir IPA. Those are sexy yet ephemeral one-offs from Widmer’s 10-barrel innovation brewery. He’s here for a pint of Widmer Alt, the altbier that launched this Portland, Oregon, brewery in 1984. “As Doug... View Article

Columns

Don’t Settle for Flawed Beer
Behind the Bar

Don’t Settle for Flawed Beer

by John Holl
Where the Road to Hoppiness Crosses Main Street
Industry Insights

Where the Road to Hoppiness Crosses Main Street

by Christopher Shepard

Departments

Münchener Dunkel
Home Brewing - Recipes

Münchener Dunkel

by Keith Klemp

Lager to most means the ubiquitous pale golden brew that arose from the original pilsners of the 1840s. But by that time, the Bavarians had likely been honing bottom-fermentation and cold-conditioning since at least the 14th century, and possibly as early as the 11th century. Those original lagerbiers were dark, as pale malted barley didn’t... View Article

Reviving Thomas Hardy’s Ale
What's Brewing

Reviving Thomas Hardy’s Ale

by Roger Protz

This article appears in the January issue of All About Beer Magazine, in newsstands now. Subscribe today to have the magazine delivered to your mailbox, computer, smartphone or tablet. Thomas Hardy’s Ale has come back from the dead. A famous British barley wine that went out of production in 2009 has been restored as a result... View Article

Beer Weekend: Boulder, Colorado
Beer Weekend

Beer Weekend: Boulder, Colorado

by Dan Rabin

With the opening of Boulder Beer in 1979 as Colorado’s first microbrewery, Boulder established itself as an early leader in the country’s beer renaissance. Beer culture is deeply ingrained in the town’s active, outdoor-oriented lifestyle. Today, 20 breweries and brewpubs ranging from large packaging operations to little mom-and-pop gems operate within the progressive community. Add... View Article

Recapping the Business of Beer in 2016
What's Brewing

Recapping the Business of Beer in 2016

by Christopher Shepard

Just over a year after announcing it, Anheuser-Busch InBev (A-B InBev) closed its deal to acquire SABMiller on Oct. 10, 2016. The more than $100 billion deal captured a great deal of the world’s attention on beer during that time as a top-10 (by some counts, top-5) global merger and acquisition transaction of all time.... View Article

Hops to Watch in 2017
What's Brewing

Hops to Watch in 2017

by Bo McMillan

Beer is in a constant state of evolution, and hops, as an ingredient, trend according to shifting tastes and novel varieties. Proprietary hops are owned by the private companies that develop and patent them. You can recognize them by their trademarked names (Citra, Simcoe, Amarillo, Mosaic, etc.), which are often plastered on the side of... View Article

Brewing Local: American-Grown Beer
Book Reviews

Brewing Local: American-Grown Beer

by John Holl

Brewing Local: American-Grown Beer By Stan Hieronymus $19.95, Brewers Publications Once upon a time beer was made from just a few humble ingredients. Today, thanks in large part to the ingenuity of American brewers, there is a multitude of adjuncts going into ales and lagers. From horseradish to turkey tail, every kind of flavorful fermentable... View Article

The World Atlas of Beer: The Essential Guide to the Beers of the World (2nd Edition)
Book Reviews

The World Atlas of Beer: The Essential Guide to the Beers of the World (2nd Edition)

by John Holl

The World Atlas of Beer: The Essential Guide to the Beers of the World (2nd Edition) By Tim Webb and Stephen Beaumont $30, Sterling Epicure Given the speed at which breweries are opening across the globe, creating an impossible-to-count number of beers, one should not envy the authors of this project. But you will. Flipping... View Article

Complete IPA: The Guide to Your Favorite Craft Beer
Book Reviews

Complete IPA: The Guide to Your Favorite Craft Beer

by John Holl

Complete IPA: The Guide to Your Favorite Craft Beer By Joshua M. Bernstein $19.95, Sterling Epicure The three letters that have catapulted the global beer industry into heights unimaginable two decades ago now have a guide that helps cut through the lupulin madness. In his customary conversational style, Joshua M. Bernstein highlights IPA by styles,... View Article

Great Pubs of London
Book Reviews

Great Pubs of London

by Daniel Bradford

Great Pubs of London By George Dailey and Charlie Dailey $39.95, Prestel When thoughts turn to ale, images from London pubs spring to mind. Embodying that rare quality of romance combined with heritage and “oblivion of care and freedom from solitude,” (from Dr. Samuel Johnson, as quoted in Great Pubs of London) a London pub... View Article

Charitable Breweries
Beer Travelers

Charitable Breweries

by Brian Yaeger

I like to think of brewers as liquid philanthropists. They benefit their fellow man and woman via the simple act of producing beer for us, which in turn makes us feel good. For many brewing companies—dare I say most—their benevolence goes beyond plying us with malts and hops, which, obviously, isn’t exactly an act of... View Article

Pull Up A Stool With Ian Burnett
Pull Up A Stool

Pull Up A Stool With Ian Burnett

by John Holl

Editor’s Note: This story appears in the January 2017 issue of All About Beer Magazine. Click here to subscribe. The brewery had only been open for nine months when Brown Truck Brewery was named the best very small brewing company and Ian Burnett best very small brewing company brewer of the year at the Great... View Article

Beer Talk

Follow @allaboutbeer

Beer in your inbox

More Like This

  • May 2013
  • March 2010
  • May 2007

Most Popular

  • Will New Belgium Brewing Land in NC or PA?
  • Samuel Adams Introduces Rebel Rouser Double IPA, Rebel Rider Session IPA

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