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Craft beer: Though it has been around for decades (or centuries, arguably), it has only recently become a true phenomenon and a major part of cultures across the globe.
With new craft breweries popping up every day, it has never been easier to imbibe high-quality, well-made beer from all over the world.
But just what is craft beer? The answer to that question is far more involved and interesting than you might expect – and the subject of a raging debate in America (and around the world).
The Brewers Association, craft beer’s nominal governing body in the United States, is responsible for various beer events and festivals throughout the year (most notably October’s Great American Beer Festival), and also provides a frequently updated list of beer styles – most recently changed to include various iterations of the hazy New England-Style IPA.
The BA does not define what a craft beer is per se, but it does outline that most craft beers come from a craft brewery, which it defines by the following criteria (per craftbeer.com):
That’s the technical definition of a craft brewer as defined by a craft beer-related organization, and as such, craft beers are any beers that are created by those small, independent and traditional breweries.
However, craftbeer.com and the Brewers Association are perhaps not the most reliable source when it comes to information regarding the definition of craft beer, as they are first and foremost a lobbying group meant to drum up interest and support for the craft beer movement (which they have certainly done a good job of in recent years).
That must be said because after the BA defines craft beer, they immediately go into a discussion of their “Independent Craft Seal,” which launched in the summer of 2017 and has already been adopted by the majority of craft breweries in the U.S.
Its purpose is to “send a clear message” that the beer being imbibed is made by a small, independent craft brewer, according to Brewers Association Director Paul Gatza.
That “message” is meant as a direct response to macro breweries that have been purchasing or investing in craft breweries in an attempt to tap into the impressive growth the craft market segment has enjoyed over the past few years. Though that surge of acquisitions has slowed since 2017, it is still a major talking point among attuned craft beer-heads.
Craft beer, while a growing and thriving market segment of fermented beverages, still only makes up a tiny sliver (12.7% of beer sales volume in 2017) of beer sales worldwide, which are still mostly dominated by immense, multinational brewing conglomerates such as AB InBev, Heineken NV and Carlsberg Group.
There is a fierce debate going on between independent craft breweries (those that qualify for the BA’s seal) and breweries that have been sold to or purchased by members of “big beer” – and it is a skirmish that is being framed as a battle for the heart and soul of “craft beer.” What is the true definition of craft, if there is one?
After the debut of the Independent Craft Seal in the summer of 2017, members of The High End, AB InBev’s stable of breweries that had formerly been a part of the accepted craft beer scene, responded with a video of their thoughts on the seal:
Clearly, the veteran craft brewers quoted in this video are not thrilled by the BA’s decision to separate them from their fellow brewers because they decided the right decision for their business was to become part of a macro brewing conglomerate.
Many of the brewers featured describe the coming war between the beer industry and the wine and spirits industry, which Wicked Weed Brewing Founder Walt Dickinson describes militaristically:
“We’re all making beer, we’re all brewers. I’m pretty sure Pernicious IPA was a craft beer two months ago [when Wicked Weed was purchased by AB InBev], and I think it’s still a craft beer now. We’re all doing the same thing, and we’re now fighting this bigger battle, which is wine and spirits, and we’re losing margin every year. This is a civil war [between the BA and Macro], and there’s this armada [wine and spirits] coming across the Atlantic to crush us, and we’re shooting each other with muskets and slingshots.”
Garrett Wales of 10 Barrel Brewing Co. was more blunt:
“The beer does the talking, not the label on the package. The consumer makes up their own mind.”
Ultimately, the Independent Craft Seal and macro vs. craft argument are mostly matters of semantics. At the end of the day, members of both the BA and The High End want the same thing: high-quality beers made by passionate people who care about the liquid they are creating for consumers. And those who enjoy drinking beers of all kinds (craft, macro or anything in between) have full faculty to decide what they want to drink – no matter how it’s labeled.
Craft beer is a malleable term – as the BA changing its definition to support The Boston Beer Co.’s inclusion on multiple occasions would suggest – and in the end, as long as beer drinkers are happily enjoying a flavorful, well-made beer, doesn’t everyone win?
Photo Courtesy Highland Brewing Co.
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